The sweet potato plants were set in rather heavy clay soil. Taking a cue from earthworms, they produced potatoes that got into a tight knot.
This one was especially challenging to untangle.
In ground-breaking surgery lasting seven hours, six gardeners successfully separated these conjoined tubers. Now, all are free to make their way to the dinner table, unencumbered by siblings.
Monday, November 9, 2015
Sunday, October 11, 2015
The Rest of the Honey
The supers that we extracted weeks ago were filled again by the bees. Some partially capped ones went back for the bees to finish up for their winter stores.
Lissa did all the uncapping with just the scratcher comb, finding it works the best for a few supers. She uses it to lift off the tops of the cells. In a big operation, that would be too time-consuming, but we are, mercifully, a very small operation. I once was urged to have more hives and the whole thing became no fun at all. Now, one hive is plenty to manage and provides more honey than we need.
We got another thirty pounds of wildflower honey, bringing the total for the season to seventy pounds.
My method of raising bees is to disturb them as little as possible and let them get on with their lives. They know what they are about and do not need pharmaceuticals to do what they have been doing for ages.
They run the hive in very dark conditions, so pulling the frames out and checking their progress is the equivalent of shining bright lights on the poor things. They don't have eyelids to squint.
Some beekeepers evacuate the honey supers by using a fume board that drives them from the frames. I feel that's sort of like using tear gas. Perhaps the bees feel abused and look for a nice hollow tree where they will be able to breathe. Call me radical, but using the one-way bee escape seems much kinder.
Leaving a super of honey on the hive for the winter seems sensible. It appears greedy to take too much and leave them just enough to barely survive. This approach is definitely not mentioned in the beekeeping literature.
If I'm wrong about how to treat the bees, I will try another track, but this seems to work for now. I have plenty, they have plenty. What they do is miraculous, so who am I to try and manage that?
Lissa did all the uncapping with just the scratcher comb, finding it works the best for a few supers. She uses it to lift off the tops of the cells. In a big operation, that would be too time-consuming, but we are, mercifully, a very small operation. I once was urged to have more hives and the whole thing became no fun at all. Now, one hive is plenty to manage and provides more honey than we need.
We got another thirty pounds of wildflower honey, bringing the total for the season to seventy pounds.
My method of raising bees is to disturb them as little as possible and let them get on with their lives. They know what they are about and do not need pharmaceuticals to do what they have been doing for ages.
They run the hive in very dark conditions, so pulling the frames out and checking their progress is the equivalent of shining bright lights on the poor things. They don't have eyelids to squint.
Some beekeepers evacuate the honey supers by using a fume board that drives them from the frames. I feel that's sort of like using tear gas. Perhaps the bees feel abused and look for a nice hollow tree where they will be able to breathe. Call me radical, but using the one-way bee escape seems much kinder.
Leaving a super of honey on the hive for the winter seems sensible. It appears greedy to take too much and leave them just enough to barely survive. This approach is definitely not mentioned in the beekeeping literature.
If I'm wrong about how to treat the bees, I will try another track, but this seems to work for now. I have plenty, they have plenty. What they do is miraculous, so who am I to try and manage that?
Saturday, October 3, 2015
A Trained Chicken
We left off in our tale of two chickens (April) with Buffy the Buff Orpington spending her days on top of the nest box, to avoid the randy rooster. She would only come down for food and water when I was standing guard. Rupert the Rooster was obsessed with her blondness. The other two hens, out of their tiny minds with jealousy, were not kind to her.
The neighbor dog, Sandy, had snatched her tail feathers off when Buffy got out of the run. Sandy understood that I was not happy with her behavior. Still, I didn't know if she would find the loose hen too hard to resist.
Well, it just wasn't much of a life, even for a chicken. She no longer laid whole eggs, just the occasional round yolkless one. Deciding that it was the only thing I could do, I shooed her out of the fence to spend her days in freedom. She had her own water and feed and plenty of greens. She could go under the coop to escape Sandy.
Chickens are notorious dumb clucks, but surprisingly, over about a month, she became trained with bread bits to get out the gate first thing and come in the gate at dusk. She is so dim that now she has forgotten there was a treat involved. Such a bird-brain.
When I come with the afternoon treats (over-ripe tomatoes) she comes running for her share. There is something terribly comical about a hen running; power-walking thighs and drumsticks..
Now, she is adding her egg to the others in the nest box before leaving for the day. She stays near the run and has a nice spot in the shady tall grass behind the coop fence.
Sandy stays well away from the chicken coop now. She is rewarded with rather a lot of dog biscuits for such a small dog.
My experiment with letting the rooster and two other hens out for greens was not so successful. Looking out, I saw he was leading them on what amounted to a cross-country trip for chickens. I had to lure them back at dusk with a trail of bread crumbs.
Meanwhile, Buffy is enjoying her life on the outside.
The neighbor dog, Sandy, had snatched her tail feathers off when Buffy got out of the run. Sandy understood that I was not happy with her behavior. Still, I didn't know if she would find the loose hen too hard to resist.
Well, it just wasn't much of a life, even for a chicken. She no longer laid whole eggs, just the occasional round yolkless one. Deciding that it was the only thing I could do, I shooed her out of the fence to spend her days in freedom. She had her own water and feed and plenty of greens. She could go under the coop to escape Sandy.
Chickens are notorious dumb clucks, but surprisingly, over about a month, she became trained with bread bits to get out the gate first thing and come in the gate at dusk. She is so dim that now she has forgotten there was a treat involved. Such a bird-brain.
When I come with the afternoon treats (over-ripe tomatoes) she comes running for her share. There is something terribly comical about a hen running; power-walking thighs and drumsticks..
Now, she is adding her egg to the others in the nest box before leaving for the day. She stays near the run and has a nice spot in the shady tall grass behind the coop fence.
Sandy stays well away from the chicken coop now. She is rewarded with rather a lot of dog biscuits for such a small dog.
My experiment with letting the rooster and two other hens out for greens was not so successful. Looking out, I saw he was leading them on what amounted to a cross-country trip for chickens. I had to lure them back at dusk with a trail of bread crumbs.
Meanwhile, Buffy is enjoying her life on the outside.
Labels:
trained chicken
Tuesday, September 15, 2015
The River Settles Down
After high water, off and on, mostly on, all summer, the Grand River finally got over itself and dropped to normal levels.
The river bank was steeper, and still muddy when my son Chris and I cautiously made our way down to Fishing Beach. Just a few rocky feet of beach, actually, but enough to use.
Wish I could say I caught this blue catfish all by myself. The truth was Chris first caught the bait at a lake. Then he made the rigs and baited my hook and even cast it out for me. I felt like the girl. Here's another glamour shot of me.
The funny thing about sandy mud is it gets more slippery with each footstep. So getting back up the bank was even more of a challenge. We used the bank sapling trees to brace our feet.
Here, I'm waiting in the trees for Chris to hand me up some of the fishing gear. He brought two of his really fine rods and reels. Once again, I slipped and got a muddy bottom.
When Chris was about six years old, I took him jigging for smelt. We lived in Seattle, and the smelt were running up a river to the north. We left in the chilly dark, a real feat for me. We were on the dock at dawn with our tree branches with line and three treble hooks. We snagged plenty of the small, silvery, very tasty fish. Chris didn't want to stop. I practically had to pry his little cold hands from the pole and drag him away.
What had happened was he was infected with the fishing bug, smaller than a b.b. After that, we often fished from the Seattle dock, where we mostly caught colds. When I bought the farm here in Missouri, I was glad to have my own river. Each year, Chris's catfish catch got bigger, as did he.
When he was in high school, Chris stayed with his dad and caught some really big fish there in wild Alaskan waters. His biggest catfish here in Missouri was a fourteen pound one. My biggest is in the photo, three or four pounds.
Chris is now a grown man who knows how to fish, despite my totally inept example. He is patient, showing me how to hold the rod and when to reel in. Catfish do not come quietly in to shore. Channel cat actually make a noise. I must say, it was easier to just snag smelt when they swam upriver.
The best part of fishing with my best fishing buddy is that he filets the catch.
After dinner, I buried the fishy remains in the garden, in an unmarked shallow grave that will have the best veggies ever, next spring.
The river bank was steeper, and still muddy when my son Chris and I cautiously made our way down to Fishing Beach. Just a few rocky feet of beach, actually, but enough to use.
Wish I could say I caught this blue catfish all by myself. The truth was Chris first caught the bait at a lake. Then he made the rigs and baited my hook and even cast it out for me. I felt like the girl. Here's another glamour shot of me.
The funny thing about sandy mud is it gets more slippery with each footstep. So getting back up the bank was even more of a challenge. We used the bank sapling trees to brace our feet.
Here, I'm waiting in the trees for Chris to hand me up some of the fishing gear. He brought two of his really fine rods and reels. Once again, I slipped and got a muddy bottom.
When Chris was about six years old, I took him jigging for smelt. We lived in Seattle, and the smelt were running up a river to the north. We left in the chilly dark, a real feat for me. We were on the dock at dawn with our tree branches with line and three treble hooks. We snagged plenty of the small, silvery, very tasty fish. Chris didn't want to stop. I practically had to pry his little cold hands from the pole and drag him away.
What had happened was he was infected with the fishing bug, smaller than a b.b. After that, we often fished from the Seattle dock, where we mostly caught colds. When I bought the farm here in Missouri, I was glad to have my own river. Each year, Chris's catfish catch got bigger, as did he.
When he was in high school, Chris stayed with his dad and caught some really big fish there in wild Alaskan waters. His biggest catfish here in Missouri was a fourteen pound one. My biggest is in the photo, three or four pounds.
Chris is now a grown man who knows how to fish, despite my totally inept example. He is patient, showing me how to hold the rod and when to reel in. Catfish do not come quietly in to shore. Channel cat actually make a noise. I must say, it was easier to just snag smelt when they swam upriver.
The best part of fishing with my best fishing buddy is that he filets the catch.
After dinner, I buried the fishy remains in the garden, in an unmarked shallow grave that will have the best veggies ever, next spring.
Labels:
catfish fishing
Sunday, August 16, 2015
Second Year Honey Harvest
Lots of hot sweaty work, but I brought in the first honey. There were more bees still on the frames, but an offer of help from my daughter Lissa made me decide to not wait another day for them to make their way through the escape screen. The supers were brought into the laundry room, otherwise known as the main door that everyone comes through. Then came the process of escorting the hitchhikers outside, brushing them off the screen with the bee brush. I kept my bee suit and veil on for the process, being a big sissy about stings. I don't think the bees would have stung me, since we were away from the hive.
The claustrophobic veil and sweat dripping down my glasses sent me in to the kitchen a few times to get out of it and put a cold bandanna on my face.
The following day, Lissa came up to help me with the extracting. She really enjoyed the process, so much so that mostly I watched as she uncapped the frames and spun them around in my fabulous little extractor. The honey then went into the strainer on the bucket. The whole setup was a package from Brushy Mountain Bee Farm, and a huge improvement over how we did it at the farm.
Notice my bare feet, a good way to find the spots of honey on the floor before we tracked it all over the carpets.
Later, I showed her how to fill the jars from the honey gate on the bucket, which was set up on the freezer. There was much more honey in the bucket than I had last year. I guess that resulted in more head pressure. The honey surged out and ran down the outside of the jar and onto the floor, all in a whoosh. We had a good laugh over that. Lost about a quarter of a cup of the precious honey.
Lis made a discovery when she suggested that the two pound honey jar seemed much less than the quart jar. Looking online, I found that the quart of honey weighs 48 ounces, so my honey estimate for last year was more than the 27 pounds I got figuring "a pint's a pound the world around."
Here is the honey. The bees evidently got some of the basswood, although rains during most of the bloom confined the troops to their quarters. It was mixed with the wildflower honey, quite a delicious blend. Pay no attention to the beekeeper's baggy pants; they are my favorite garment. Breezy, roomy, hideous.
Forty pounds of honey so far! I am taking back the sticky super for them to clean out and the frames that had uncapped honey for them to finish filling. Makes me feel like the Grinch bringing back the presents he swiped.
The claustrophobic veil and sweat dripping down my glasses sent me in to the kitchen a few times to get out of it and put a cold bandanna on my face.
The following day, Lissa came up to help me with the extracting. She really enjoyed the process, so much so that mostly I watched as she uncapped the frames and spun them around in my fabulous little extractor. The honey then went into the strainer on the bucket. The whole setup was a package from Brushy Mountain Bee Farm, and a huge improvement over how we did it at the farm.
Notice my bare feet, a good way to find the spots of honey on the floor before we tracked it all over the carpets.
Lis made a discovery when she suggested that the two pound honey jar seemed much less than the quart jar. Looking online, I found that the quart of honey weighs 48 ounces, so my honey estimate for last year was more than the 27 pounds I got figuring "a pint's a pound the world around."
Here is the honey. The bees evidently got some of the basswood, although rains during most of the bloom confined the troops to their quarters. It was mixed with the wildflower honey, quite a delicious blend. Pay no attention to the beekeeper's baggy pants; they are my favorite garment. Breezy, roomy, hideous.
Forty pounds of honey so far! I am taking back the sticky super for them to clean out and the frames that had uncapped honey for them to finish filling. Makes me feel like the Grinch bringing back the presents he swiped.
Friday, July 31, 2015
The Wetness and the Weeds
We can't complain about dryness this year. Usually, in July, we are searching the skies for relief. Now, every couple of days, there is another rain. Sometimes, it's a downpour, sometimes it gets downright torrential. I don't want to seem ungrateful, but it has made it hard to garden. A lot of my early vegetable plantings were seriously over-watered. They responded by dying. I did get an onion and chard crop.
However, the weeds are loving it, since it has often been too wet to mow or pull them. They are growing like, well, weeds. Most of my yard is too steep for a riding mower. In those places, the weeds got away from me entirely. Usually, I use the self-propelled lawn mower there, but the weeds grew so rampant that now all that mower can do is push them over. That mower should be called Sort of Self-Propelled On Level Ground.
This is the steep hill by the garden, where Queen Anne's Lace and chicory have put down roots. Also planning to stay forever are lots of red clover and grass. I am hoping the common lilies blooming there will one day take over the slope. However, I thought that about the irises I transplanted there a few years ago. They are not seen above in the grassy upper right hand corner on this side of the fence.
The farmers were late getting their crops planted, so I didn't feel so bad to belatedly get a little patch of corn planted. With all the rain, it is growing so fast it makes me gasp. I did give it a brew made with diluted chicken manure, fish fertilizer and rain water, steeped in the sun for weeks. Corn likes that sort of thing.
It seems that even more rain has fallen north of here. The river has been up over my fishing beach for most of the summer. Last night they got five more inches upriver, which is a tad much. We have been in an almost continuous state of flash flood warnings.
The speck at the end of the bridge is Beau, to give some idea of what a fine big bridge it is. This isn't even the entire span. I took the pic from the middle. When we go down there at sundown, we have it all to ourselves.
Today, the river is noisily crashing against a tree that straddled one of the supports, limbs first. This is looking downriver. It sounds like the ocean. Lots of trees and brush float by, but very little trash . The Grand is muddy but clean.

For the time being, I am accepting that the weeds have won this season. I find it takes my mind off my defeat to sit and knit socks in the shady end of the garden. There, I admire my Primrose marigolds (Parks Inca II Hybrid). They match the daylilies along the fence.
The Juliet tomatoes are producing quantities of fruits. There are too many to eat and not enough to make Juliet Jam or can.
Every day, I yank up a big tub of weeds from the flower beds. It would be a good lesson in not planting more than I can weed, if I could ever learn it.
However, the weeds are loving it, since it has often been too wet to mow or pull them. They are growing like, well, weeds. Most of my yard is too steep for a riding mower. In those places, the weeds got away from me entirely. Usually, I use the self-propelled lawn mower there, but the weeds grew so rampant that now all that mower can do is push them over. That mower should be called Sort of Self-Propelled On Level Ground.
The farmers were late getting their crops planted, so I didn't feel so bad to belatedly get a little patch of corn planted. With all the rain, it is growing so fast it makes me gasp. I did give it a brew made with diluted chicken manure, fish fertilizer and rain water, steeped in the sun for weeks. Corn likes that sort of thing.
It seems that even more rain has fallen north of here. The river has been up over my fishing beach for most of the summer. Last night they got five more inches upriver, which is a tad much. We have been in an almost continuous state of flash flood warnings.
The speck at the end of the bridge is Beau, to give some idea of what a fine big bridge it is. This isn't even the entire span. I took the pic from the middle. When we go down there at sundown, we have it all to ourselves.
Today, the river is noisily crashing against a tree that straddled one of the supports, limbs first. This is looking downriver. It sounds like the ocean. Lots of trees and brush float by, but very little trash . The Grand is muddy but clean.
For the time being, I am accepting that the weeds have won this season. I find it takes my mind off my defeat to sit and knit socks in the shady end of the garden. There, I admire my Primrose marigolds (Parks Inca II Hybrid). They match the daylilies along the fence.
The Juliet tomatoes are producing quantities of fruits. There are too many to eat and not enough to make Juliet Jam or can.
Every day, I yank up a big tub of weeds from the flower beds. It would be a good lesson in not planting more than I can weed, if I could ever learn it.
Labels:
a wet summer
Monday, July 6, 2015
The Well-Dressed Tree
Christmas trees aren't the only ones that get to wear skirts. This one is more than a skirt, it's practically a ball gown.
When I discovered a ground cherry growing under my newest apple tree last summer, I left it to go to seed.
Had no idea it would sprout so many new plants.
First, there is the bell-shaped yellow flower.
Next comes the berry, in a lantern-like, five-sided husk.
Now the tree, a Yellow Delicious apple, looks ready to appear at a Cotillion. Dressed like Scarlett O'Hara, it's decked out in paper lanterns. Too cool.
When I discovered a ground cherry growing under my newest apple tree last summer, I left it to go to seed.
Had no idea it would sprout so many new plants.
First, there is the bell-shaped yellow flower.
Next comes the berry, in a lantern-like, five-sided husk.
Now the tree, a Yellow Delicious apple, looks ready to appear at a Cotillion. Dressed like Scarlett O'Hara, it's decked out in paper lanterns. Too cool.
Wednesday, July 1, 2015
Different Worlds
Every now and again, I leave my rural area and meet with some normal people in town.
Trying to blend in, I don't rush outside when I hear an airplane go over. I hear planes up here but they are usually too high to be seen.
The City Folk talk about reality television, which definitely leaves me out of the conversation. I keep mum about not having television reception. They would not be able to comprehend a deliberate choice to pass on that form of entertainment.
If I did mention it, there would be questions.
What did I do at night? I have a DVD player and can check movies out at the library. I sometimes get movies from Netflix. It's not like I am off the grid.
Telling them I spent hours this week looking at the moon with my telescope would not make them feel better about my life, I'm sure. In fact, there is no quicker way to clear the room than to bring up astronomy, gardening or knitting.
However, when the conversation got around to iced coffee, I jumped in. I said, "I love it, with plenty of half and half." The response floored me. "You mean you make it yourself?" I tried to cover my eccentricity by saying it is twenty miles to any fast food place. Feeling like I wanted to have them get a tiny glimpse of my life, I mentioned that the WalMart there has a hitching post for the Amish customers' horses and buggies. Dead silence and averted glances greeted that announcement.
They are very nice people. I'm sure they prefer their lifestyle and would consider me deprived, or depraved.
That would not have been the time nor the place to mention how happy I was to find a clutch of black snake eggs in the compost pile. I failed to show them this picture of critters that may help with the grasshopper situation. Incidentally, I raked the compost back over the eggs and left them to hatch out.
Pointless to take a bouquet of flowers to gatherings with City Folk. I tried that and the blooms were examined as if they were samples of moon rocks. They elicited queries as to what they were, indicating that they had never before seen daisies and lilies. No one said they were beautiful, which they were.
When my youngest granddaughter, Molly, came to stay for a few days, we had plenty of entertainment. She's only ten, but quite smart. Her family doesn't watch TV. She loved hearing all about astronomy. She understood Universal Time, which I thought was astonishing. She quickly learned how to find Jupiter and Venus with the astronomy binoculars. They are on loan from my son, who has light pollution in town. Molly used my telescope to locate Saturn and we found M4, a favorite globular cluster in Scorpio. We looked at star charts and that little kid grasped Right Ascension and Declination.

We also picked mulberries along the road, snacking on them right there. On rainy days, we worked a big puzzle and Molly crocheted, learning new stitches. She helped me figure out a Fair Isle pattern for a vest. She picked strawberries while I mowed. We made a batch of freezer jam. Another day, we made strawberry ice cream in the Donvier ice cream maker. We gave Beau a bath out in the yard. We made Sun Oven bread. Molly helped me herd three calves back inside the fence down the road. She took pictures of butterflies on the butterfly weed flowers with my telephoto lens camera.We also went to the nearby Amish town so she could enjoy seeing all the horse-drawn buggies.
We cooked our own food. Molly made us delicious French Toast for breakfast and I made dinner. It never occurred to us to watch a movie on TV. We were too busy experiencing reality.
Trying to blend in, I don't rush outside when I hear an airplane go over. I hear planes up here but they are usually too high to be seen.
The City Folk talk about reality television, which definitely leaves me out of the conversation. I keep mum about not having television reception. They would not be able to comprehend a deliberate choice to pass on that form of entertainment.
If I did mention it, there would be questions.
What did I do at night? I have a DVD player and can check movies out at the library. I sometimes get movies from Netflix. It's not like I am off the grid.
Telling them I spent hours this week looking at the moon with my telescope would not make them feel better about my life, I'm sure. In fact, there is no quicker way to clear the room than to bring up astronomy, gardening or knitting.
However, when the conversation got around to iced coffee, I jumped in. I said, "I love it, with plenty of half and half." The response floored me. "You mean you make it yourself?" I tried to cover my eccentricity by saying it is twenty miles to any fast food place. Feeling like I wanted to have them get a tiny glimpse of my life, I mentioned that the WalMart there has a hitching post for the Amish customers' horses and buggies. Dead silence and averted glances greeted that announcement.
They are very nice people. I'm sure they prefer their lifestyle and would consider me deprived, or depraved.
That would not have been the time nor the place to mention how happy I was to find a clutch of black snake eggs in the compost pile. I failed to show them this picture of critters that may help with the grasshopper situation. Incidentally, I raked the compost back over the eggs and left them to hatch out.
Pointless to take a bouquet of flowers to gatherings with City Folk. I tried that and the blooms were examined as if they were samples of moon rocks. They elicited queries as to what they were, indicating that they had never before seen daisies and lilies. No one said they were beautiful, which they were.
When my youngest granddaughter, Molly, came to stay for a few days, we had plenty of entertainment. She's only ten, but quite smart. Her family doesn't watch TV. She loved hearing all about astronomy. She understood Universal Time, which I thought was astonishing. She quickly learned how to find Jupiter and Venus with the astronomy binoculars. They are on loan from my son, who has light pollution in town. Molly used my telescope to locate Saturn and we found M4, a favorite globular cluster in Scorpio. We looked at star charts and that little kid grasped Right Ascension and Declination.
We also picked mulberries along the road, snacking on them right there. On rainy days, we worked a big puzzle and Molly crocheted, learning new stitches. She helped me figure out a Fair Isle pattern for a vest. She picked strawberries while I mowed. We made a batch of freezer jam. Another day, we made strawberry ice cream in the Donvier ice cream maker. We gave Beau a bath out in the yard. We made Sun Oven bread. Molly helped me herd three calves back inside the fence down the road. She took pictures of butterflies on the butterfly weed flowers with my telephoto lens camera.We also went to the nearby Amish town so she could enjoy seeing all the horse-drawn buggies.
We cooked our own food. Molly made us delicious French Toast for breakfast and I made dinner. It never occurred to us to watch a movie on TV. We were too busy experiencing reality.
Sunday, June 7, 2015
A Quiet Weekend in the Country
In order to have peace and quiet outside, I find it is necessary for it to be winter.
Even though it rained in the morning, was slightly steamy and a tad too warm, every noisy critter was heard from, especially the two-legged ones.
Weekenders like the Skeeters race to the quiet countryside so they can create a din. I don't think they were shooting skeet, since they were using some sort of semi-automatic guns. The sound made me slightly uneasy, even though I've met some of the guys and they seemed nice enough.
Retreating into the house, with the AC and fans on, I hid out. Itzhak Perlman and the entire Vienna Philharmonic could not drown out the shots.
Once, there was such a boom that they apparently were either letting off some fireworks or had brought a small cannon to liven up the place.
Then there were the four-wheelers racing up and down the road, and motorbikes. This place is miles from civilization, too far to drive here on those puny vehicles. Entire families went by, each on their own noisy motorized kiddycar. This at a time when cars now have comfy seats and air conditioning.
I had to laugh when three huge tour coaches drove past, in a sort of convoy. That was a first for my narrow gravel road. I thought at first maybe they had detoured because of the high water on some back roads, but they were not accompanied by any other large vehicles. Perhaps they were lost. Perhaps they were on a See Rednecks at Play Tour. If so, they should have opened the bus windows for the full effect.
Double-checking my calendar, I confirmed that it wasn't a national holiday.
Rooster's crowing was drowned out by very loud cicadas, now at full volume.
A few days ago, I saw hundreds of the red-eyed insects perched atop grasses and weeds, I thought they were locusts. However, when they started their ear-splitting carrying on today, I knew the truth. I last heard some in 1998 when I lived in town.
Now, looking online, I found an interesting YouTube documentary about them. Apparently, the critters stay in the ground for seventeen years, then come out for their brief mating season. The video said they were one of the loudest sounds in nature. Too true.
Beau has been enjoying crunching on their many exoskeletons under the apple tree.
The hill behind the house had lots of them. Imagine their surprise when the tulip poplar that they dropped from as tiny critters had died and been made into firewood while they were incubating, lo these many years.
I should be so lucky with such an interval for the Skeeters, who come on most nice weekends. Their new cabin is not visible from the road, so I usually don't see them. Like the cicadas up in the treetops, I know when they are active by the reports.
There was another background sound that I think was frogs. We've had so much rain that they may be rejoicing in the several ponds nearby.
Then there were the cows. Recently deprived of their rather over-sized calves, they have been standing at the fence and mooing loudly. Taking their babies makes them low.
So much for the peace and quiet of the countryside. My ears are ringing.
Even though it rained in the morning, was slightly steamy and a tad too warm, every noisy critter was heard from, especially the two-legged ones.
Weekenders like the Skeeters race to the quiet countryside so they can create a din. I don't think they were shooting skeet, since they were using some sort of semi-automatic guns. The sound made me slightly uneasy, even though I've met some of the guys and they seemed nice enough.
Retreating into the house, with the AC and fans on, I hid out. Itzhak Perlman and the entire Vienna Philharmonic could not drown out the shots.
Once, there was such a boom that they apparently were either letting off some fireworks or had brought a small cannon to liven up the place.
Then there were the four-wheelers racing up and down the road, and motorbikes. This place is miles from civilization, too far to drive here on those puny vehicles. Entire families went by, each on their own noisy motorized kiddycar. This at a time when cars now have comfy seats and air conditioning.
I had to laugh when three huge tour coaches drove past, in a sort of convoy. That was a first for my narrow gravel road. I thought at first maybe they had detoured because of the high water on some back roads, but they were not accompanied by any other large vehicles. Perhaps they were lost. Perhaps they were on a See Rednecks at Play Tour. If so, they should have opened the bus windows for the full effect.
Double-checking my calendar, I confirmed that it wasn't a national holiday.
Rooster's crowing was drowned out by very loud cicadas, now at full volume.
A few days ago, I saw hundreds of the red-eyed insects perched atop grasses and weeds, I thought they were locusts. However, when they started their ear-splitting carrying on today, I knew the truth. I last heard some in 1998 when I lived in town.
Now, looking online, I found an interesting YouTube documentary about them. Apparently, the critters stay in the ground for seventeen years, then come out for their brief mating season. The video said they were one of the loudest sounds in nature. Too true.
Beau has been enjoying crunching on their many exoskeletons under the apple tree.
The hill behind the house had lots of them. Imagine their surprise when the tulip poplar that they dropped from as tiny critters had died and been made into firewood while they were incubating, lo these many years.
I should be so lucky with such an interval for the Skeeters, who come on most nice weekends. Their new cabin is not visible from the road, so I usually don't see them. Like the cicadas up in the treetops, I know when they are active by the reports.
There was another background sound that I think was frogs. We've had so much rain that they may be rejoicing in the several ponds nearby.
Then there were the cows. Recently deprived of their rather over-sized calves, they have been standing at the fence and mooing loudly. Taking their babies makes them low.
So much for the peace and quiet of the countryside. My ears are ringing.
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Tuesday, June 2, 2015
Full Strawberry Moon
Today, actually tonight, is the Full Strawberry Moon, very appropriate.
From last year's planting, I've had unbelievable success with my Cavendish strawberries. Why it is unbelievable is that shortly after I started the new strawberry patch, some bad weeds took over the bed. They were the kinds that cannot be weeded out, red clover, dock, dandelions and the occasional big bully, chicory. They dug in their enormous roots and defied me to get them out without killing the strawberry plants.
Basically, I could not fight them. It was a sad moment when I just gave up and walked away. I didn't water them in the late summer or early spring dry days. This springtime, I never expected to see a solitary berry.
It was a big happy surprise to find, in among all those rampant weeds, some prize strawberries. Every day or two I get another three to five quarts of these beauties, seventeen quarts so far.
It makes me wonder why I've always been so vigilant with weeding and watering. Even more surprising is the fact that we've had ten inches of rain in May, which usually is rotten news for strawberries.
Perhaps the weeds held the berries up out of the wetness. Whatever the case, there will be plenty of homemade strawberry ice cream, freezer jam and snacking in the patch.
Tonight, when the full moon comes up, I'll be full of strawberries.
From last year's planting, I've had unbelievable success with my Cavendish strawberries. Why it is unbelievable is that shortly after I started the new strawberry patch, some bad weeds took over the bed. They were the kinds that cannot be weeded out, red clover, dock, dandelions and the occasional big bully, chicory. They dug in their enormous roots and defied me to get them out without killing the strawberry plants.
Basically, I could not fight them. It was a sad moment when I just gave up and walked away. I didn't water them in the late summer or early spring dry days. This springtime, I never expected to see a solitary berry.
It was a big happy surprise to find, in among all those rampant weeds, some prize strawberries. Every day or two I get another three to five quarts of these beauties, seventeen quarts so far.
It makes me wonder why I've always been so vigilant with weeding and watering. Even more surprising is the fact that we've had ten inches of rain in May, which usually is rotten news for strawberries.
Perhaps the weeds held the berries up out of the wetness. Whatever the case, there will be plenty of homemade strawberry ice cream, freezer jam and snacking in the patch.
Tonight, when the full moon comes up, I'll be full of strawberries.
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