Showing posts with label Rice Twp Sandusky County Ohio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rice Twp Sandusky County Ohio. Show all posts

Saturday, March 15, 2025

Ohio Nature Journal - January - April 1994

Guest Post by Barbara Paff 

Some thirty years ago, Barbara Paff began keeping a nature journal, detailing the pleasures of rural living in Rice Township, Sandusky County, Ohio. During those years, Barb was a librarian at the Hayes Presidential Library/Archive, while her husband, the Rev. Richard Moe, was pastor of Trinity Lutheran Church, then located at 3077 County Road 170 in Rice Township. They lived in the parsonage on the south side of the church. In 2004 they moved to Barb’s home town of East Lansing, Michigan, where she continues to enjoy gardening, albeit in a much smaller urban space…but still with plenty of wildlife.

An enthusiastic observer of nature, Ohio's changing seasons, and the wildlife around her, Barb has graced us again with some of her insightful journal entries recorded during her time in Ohio, describing quotidian events, plants and creatures that interested and delighted her.  Once again, they are accompanied by some splendid photographs -  plus, feathered friends courtesy of  that wonderful research site allaboutbirds.org  Enjoy!


Jan 1, 1994 - Ah, yes, Black Swamp winter…grey, dismal, damp…it snowed, sleeted, and rained today.  Saw hundreds of geese, and heard even more.  When I woke up, the sun was not quite up…lovely red cloud, pink glow, clear sky above…but by the time it rose, massive clouds submerged it for the rest of the day! 


Rice Twp. Sandusky County, 1994
                                                       

Jan 5 - Cold and SUNNY today, first time in a week of otherwise leaden skies.  More snow yesterday, with a heavy snowstorm predicted for tonight and tomorrow.   Still seeing lots of geese, and still have cardinals at the feeder, but haven’t seen woodpeckers since 12/25.  Should hang a suet feeder.  (Add that to my list of shoulds!)


Jan 6 - Gorgeous snowfall today and tonight, with almost no wind, so it settles on all the branches and makes a magical fairyland.  This is the kind of night when Mom would have said “Let’s go for a walk!”  Funny how I remember this kind of snow from childhood…it is memorable.  I miss the quietness (it was before snowmobiles, and without plows).


Jan 10 - COLD these past days, zero and below at night.  Quite a bit of snow, real winter.  Last night was lovely:  some ground fog…you could see it billowing in the lights…clear cold sky above it, with millions of stars, so clear that the star colors were obvious…orange Aldebaran (I just found it for the first time), others blue or white.  Heavy crystals formed on the trees and everything else.  This morning at sunrise everything sparkled.  The sky was pink, and even the air glittered pink with frost crystals.  Tonight it is above 20 degrees, cold wet wind, and snowing vigorously.  I’m tired of having to wear multiple layers to keep warm, but still really enjoying the snow, especially when it’s so beautiful.  I’ve not even minded driving in it.


Jan 12 - Forgot to mention a couple of weeks ago that the “toilet ants” were back, tunneling under the floor and coming up to build anthills at the base of our toilet.  They disappeared when the weather turned bitter cold, but I expect them back in a warm spell.  Today and yesterday 30’s, gloomy, damp.  Last night heavy fog.


Jan 13 - Another cold gray day…snowing tonight, supposed to be super-cold tomorrow.


Jan 16 - Third day of bitter cold, minus 15 the last two nights.  Snowing.  Pretty, but I’m too tired to go out and enjoy it!   Didn’t I just say last week that I prefer cold and sunny to warmer with gray skies?


Jan 17 - More snow and subzero.  I filled the snowblower and was just about to start it when Keith pulled in with the tractor snowblower.  It takes him all of five minutes to clear our driveway and the church’s parking lot.  Perfect timing!  The tractor really moves the snow, especially when it’s light like this.  You don’t want to be close by or downwind, because it’s instant whiteout!


Jan 18 - At 10 pm it’s already 23 below, and probably still dropping.  Windchill must be about 70 below.  Even walking to the mailbox needs a face mask.  I scattered 2 big cans of birdseed this morning, but they didn’t eat it all…I suppose they can’t stay exposed to the wind long enough to eat.  Or maybe a lot of them didn’t make it through last night…and what about tonight?  This weather will surely thin the wildlife population.  I’ve not seen weather like this since the first year we lived here [1983-84], and even then, it lasted only a couple of days.  To us it didn’t seem too bad, because we had just come from Iowa.  This is life-threatening stuff.


Jan 19 - Minus 26 this morning, 16 in the garage.  Birds looked rumpled and slow, poor things.  At least some of them came to the feeders today, but the tube feeder is still full, so the cold and wind must prevent them from using it.  Maybe they can’t hang on to the perches.  Gabe’s paws get packed with ice…it must be really painful, because it stops him cold (so to speak) and he just lies down in the snow.  Haven’t seen bunnies raiding the birdseed this last two evenings, either.  I hope they can find cover.  I have seen them with their ears frozen off, just little stumps left.  I really don’t know where the birds go…don’t see how they can survive roosted as usual in the pine trees.  Stars were spectacular last night…


Jan 25 - Blizzard tonight…tiny, biting little pellets, almost like sleet.  Lots of drifting.  Supposed to get real cold again, windchill already bad.  Worried about ice on lines and power going out…


Jan 26 - Bitter windchill again, freezing rain predicted, so it will have to warm up for that…better we should have cold and snow.  And maybe we will…it snowed all day today.


Jan 27 - 40 degrees today, rain…no freezing rain here.  Glad I didn’t bother shoveling the big drift by the back door…it’ll soon be gone unless it turns  cold again.  And perhaps it will.

NO SIR…they don’t make winters like they used to.  NOT !!!!


Jan 29 - A branch broke off the violas in the big pot outside the back door…those plants are still green, and with two mostly-intact blooms on that branch, after minus-26 temperatures!  

Gabe got  very interested in one of the frozen “drifts” still remaining after 2 days of rain.  He began to dig, and a little vole ran out, none too fast.  I distracted Gabe and he missed seeing it.  Later he found a woodchuck huddling in a corner on the front of the church.  It didn’t try to run, just hunkered down and looked cold and miserable.  I think it may have been flooded out of its burrow, poor thing…the creek is overflowing way up into the fields.  This guy should be hibernating.   Don’t know whether it can survive like this.  Besides, it'll be discovered tomorrow when people come to church, and someone will surely shoot it.  Maybe better tonight (out of its misery), but I can’t do it.






Snowed all morning…not much of it stuck, but at least it dusted over the brown and gray crud, and was lovely while it was falling.


Feb 6 - Almost 40 today, stiff wind, but it didn’t feel terribly cold.  The finches were just a-chattering away as if spring had arrived.  No cardinals, sunflower seed hadn’t been touched.  Saw a heron flying.


Feb 7 - COLD again, 15 with NE wind, freezing rain predicted.  Another woodpecker near the feeders, a downy.  I’m sure the other one was a redbellied…never saw its belly, but the red pattern on its head matched the photo in the book.  I made a little “suet cake” of seeds in peanut, oleo, and lamb grease…hung in a net bag inside a plastic berry box.  Smeared a little on the tree bark…probably will attract raccoons, though!  Winter blahs have got me…  Feel so beleaguered and depressed.  Claustrophobic, almost.


Red Bellied Woodpecker


Feb 9 - This winter is beginning to feel like an endurance contest.  At least the days are longer, if not warmer, and we got sleet yesterday instead of freezing rain.  Lovely light snowfall tonight…if it were Christmas Eve, we’d love it!  But we’re sick of worrying, shoveling, and being old!   The redbellied woodpecker was back again…haven’t seen anyone touch the suet cake yet, though.  Cardinals, finally…2 males and 4 females at the feeder.  Wonder where they live?


Feb 12 - The downy woodpecker has been hanging on the bottom of the suet-seed cake, and the starlings eat off the top, though not at the same time!  When I went out yesterday to bring more seed, there were mourning doves lined up on the ridge of the house roof…a kestrel was swooping about, chattering and bitching (like a blue jay!) but the doves seemed not to care.

Freezing rain tonight…there was some sun during the day, though.


Downy Woodpecker


Feb 14 - Yesterday, outdoors at 7 AM, I heard a familiar yet strange-sounding bird call…after a few seconds I realized it was a robin, complaining…probably about the 15-degree cold and the glaze of ice on everything!  Later on, I saw a horned lark at the feeder, first one I’ve seen there this year.  I think I’ve seen some in the fields, but not sure.  Might have been seeing killdeer (do they winter over?)



Horned Lark


Feb 16 - Sunny and 35 seems almost spring.  Snow melting, muddy, gritty, salty, icing over again at night.  But the sun is wonderful.


Kestrel

Feb 19 - Almost 60 degrees today…dried towels on the clothesline…most of the ice is gone.  Starflower leaves are peeking out.  Should be seeing redwings pretty soon.  Found mouse parts on the bedroom floor today…when did THAT happen?  I do faintly recall Twerp bounding off the bed early this morning…that’s probably when she nailed it.  Ah yes, country life!  Christmas cactus is still blooming, but nearly finished.


Christmas Cactus


Feb 22 - Have seen several flocks of geese, but not the more unusual birds that were at the feeder earlier…though with the cold, wind, snow, and sleet we’re supposed to get tonight, they may come back!


Mar 3 - Still cold this past week, but some brilliant sunny days, and snow…    Today there were hundreds of geese around…the redwings are back and we have a sudden influx of grackles and starlings.  I see that more trees have been cut along the creek NE of us…that may be why we’ve had the woodpeckers and so many cardinals…their homes are gone.  It does grieve me that most people seem to know and care so little about the creatures with whom we share the earth.


Canadian Goose

Mar 13 - Four days’ vacation in Arizona, visiting Rich’s parents…missed 5” of snow here.  Home two days ago, heard and saw a meadowlark in the yard…spring’s coming!  Quite a few robins.  Delphinium nubbins up.

New birds in Ariz….Gambel’s quail, boat-tailed grackles, cactus wrens, and a hummingbird I can’t find in the bird book.  It was so nice to just sit in the sun with a cup of coffee, listening to the birds, and have nothing else to do!


Mar 14 - Still winter:  juncos at the feeder, and cold, damp wind.  But grape hyacinths are up, and daffodil leaves are 6” tall…cowbirds are here…


Dark-eyed Junco


Mar 16 - Have heard song sparrows the past few days.  It’s 20 degrees with bitter north wind tonight, but there are buds on the daffodils…

  

Grape Hyacinth


Mar 22 - The “Age of Rubens” exhibit at Toledo Art Museum was a real lift…I would never have guessed how powerful those paintings are when seen “live”...and 400 years old, at that!

Sunday was warm enough (50) to be outside and cripple up my shoulders with yard work…but I can’t stay indoors and I don’t seem to be able to ignore the cleanup waiting to be done (although I can certainly ignore a LOT of it!)

Today it was 60 and beautiful…I pulled half the straw off the strawberries and enough off the roses to uncover the daffodils planted in front of them.  Wish I didn’t have to spend tomorrow at work!

Daffodils

Mar 23 - The first truly warm and gorgeous day…glorious 70’s and sunlight.


Mar 26 - After 2 warm days, 2 cold ones again, but delphinium shoots are up.  Somebody’s eating tulip leaves…  More neighbors are taking down trees…


Delphinium


Mar 28 -  Put up the wren and bluebird houses yesterday.  Hope it’s early enough!


Mar 31 - Spring is happening…still cool, though.  Plants from Gurney’s came yesterday, too early to plant.  If it doesn’t rain too much on Saturday maybe I can get them at least into pots, until I can figure out where I want them, and dig holes for them.


Apr 7 - Snow on Easter (April 3) and again yesterday, about 5.”  Really cold and icy this morning, but sunlight melted things quite a bit.  I didn’t realize it was in the teens till I tried to open the back door and the frozen snow on it cracked like ice.  Yesterday was warmer…roads slushy and covered with robins hunting for worms.  Gulls too, but dozens and dozens of robins.  I’d put Gurney’s dormant plants in pots, not thinking it would get so cold…hope they live (well, they’re South Dakotans, should be tough!)


Apr 9 - The sun is so high now, it looked stunning on the snow Thursday after our 5” blizzard, and pretty much melted it that day and the next.  When it disappeared, the grass seemed quite suddenly green again.  Not quite LUSH, but certainly healthy!


Apr 11 - Started some seeds in little pots: stock, sweet peas, morning glories.  Want to start tomatoes, too, but need more pots.

Feeding Jim’s cat while he’s in Minnesota…she’s pretty pregnant and very friendly…she’s roosting up in the loft.

Cold wet wind all day, heavy rain predicted for tonight.  Snow?  Decided not to empty gas out of the snowblower yet!

Yesterday we saw a kestrel land in the big sycamore…it blew all the starlings away!  (How can we bribe it to stay?)  Gabe found fur and a rabbit leg behind the church…coyote? hawk? Owl?  Blue scilla blooming…if I don’t check the flowerbeds every day, I’ll miss something!  All of the peony roots planted last fall are alive, with tiny red leaf-buds showing.  Two of the remaining Simplicity roses kicked the bucket, broken off below ground…rotted or eaten, I suppose.  Can’t tell whether the other two are alive.


Scilla


Apr 12 - Lots of rain…finally remembered at 5 PM to set the rain gauge out!  Cleared off then, warm and sunny, beautiful new moon and adjacent star/planet tonight.  Saw a toad, can hear frogs singing tonight…beautiful sunset clouds and Black Swamp haze.


Apr 14 - New moon was so lovely last night, with the whole circle faintly visible by earthshine.  Creek level receding.


Apr 15 - Storms threatening, but so far all we’ve had are high winds and thunder, and 70 degrees.  Scilla in Jim’s pasture are beautiful.


Apr 18 - Went to Crane Creek…bursting with life: lots of geese, coots, tree swallows, ducks, herons, egrets, redwings, robins…and leaves budding everywhere.  It was cool, and the lake was calm…far out in the haze was a broad pinkish band…then it lit up at one end, and we watched the light travel slowly across to the opposite end as the sun found a hole in the clouds.  Sky, water, light…always affecting and beautiful.  We also watched a muskrat chasing a goose in the marsh.  Evidently the goose was too close to something the muskrat considered its own!  I think every OTHER goose in the park was honking and squabbling, but this one was gliding peacefully among the lilypads until the muskrat started swimming around it and at it, and finally drove it away.  It is so peaceful sitting out in the middle of the marsh.  For the first 10-15 minutes I look everywhere, trying to see as much as I can…then I find myself just listening.  That’s the more peaceful pleasure.

I just re-read entries from last April.  By that calendar, lunaria should bloom before May.  They don’t look big enough yet, but might surprise us!  Christmas cactus is still blooming, and has unopened buds.


Christmas Cactus

Apr 23 - At least one meadowlark around, with piercing sweet song.  Saw a flicker in the yard yesterday.  Today discovered the robins are nesting again in the New Dawn climbing rose on the east side of the house.  Lovely sunny day, but windy, drying the soil for planting.  Tulips had green buds yesterday, which today are red and opening.  Found one dogtooth violet.

Meadowlark

Apr 27 - Still hearing meadowlark(s).  Lilac buds opening.  I think the beebalm is coming up…don’t know what it is, if not that.  Three 85-degree days really shot us into summer.  Cool tonight, though, with NW wind bearing eau de hog manure.


Apr 28 - Winter again!  Windy, rain all day, 38 degrees tonight.  Bunny under bird feeder for a long time, eating seed.  Dad says they like millet, but they don’t have “grinding” teeth to chew it.  You’d think there would be plenty of greens available to them now.  Lunaria short, but beginning to bloom on schedule.


Lunaria





Thursday, June 13, 2024

Ohio Nature Journal - 1993, May-September


Guest Post by Barbara Paff 

Some thirty years ago, Barbara Paff began keeping a nature journal, detailing the pleasures of rural living in Rice Township, Sandusky County, Ohio. During those years, Barb was a librarian at the Hayes Presidential Library/Archive, while her husband, the Rev. Richard Moe, was pastor of Trinity Lutheran Church, then located at 3077 County Road 170 in Rice Township. They lived in the parsonage on the south side of the church. In 2004 they moved to Barb’s home town of East Lansing, Michigan, where she continues to enjoy gardening, albeit in a much smaller urban space…but still with plenty of wildlife.

An enthusiastic observer of nature, Ohio's changing seasons, and the wildlife around her, Barb has graced us again with some of her insightful journal entries recorded during her time in Ohio, describing quotidian events, plants and creatures that interested and delighted her.  Once again, they are accompanied by her splendid photographs.  Enjoy!

May 1 -  A few lovely warm days, everything bursting into bloom, or at least leaf—flowerbeds looking great (after all, what’s a little quackgrass?!)  Perennials doing fine, also transplanted wildflowers and the baby trees.  Looks like one red bud on the little redbud.  And there ARE still pure white violets around the well!  The peace and sense of belonging to the earth brings me close to tears.


Rice Twp. Sandusky County



May 3 - Watched Mama Robin feeding her babies in the nest outside our bedroom window—their feathers are barely there, as fine as milkweed silk, long but sheer.  They can’t be long out of their shells.  The nest is not well-hidden, but it’s up against the siding, under the overhang, and the barrier of climbing rose branches is ferocious though still leafless.  Pretty well-protected!

Twerp found a toad tonight—I was happy to see it in my flower bed, and drew her attention away from it.


May 5 - Planted some red geraniums and verbena in a pot near the kitchen window, for hummingbirds.

Gabe found out about toads yesterday.  I saw him slopping his tongue around as if he had something stuck to the roof of his mouth…then pretty soon I saw a little toad wending its way through grass…he looked at it closely, but carefully avoided touching it!  Today he found a dead possum in the cornfield and rolled on it—so he got his 2nd bath in just 5 days!  Grrr.


Wild Geranium




May 7 - The wrens are back!  And Gabe had his 3rd bath in a week (creek mud)…   I picked newly-bloomed lilacs, but think I’m allergic…the scent is overwhelming when indoors.  The robin nestlings are growing, but still have sparse, silky strands of down on their heads.


May 12 - This week’s weather has been truly perfect, 70-80 degrees, sunny…then today, the wind suddenly changed from SW to NE.  Temperature dropped like a rock, about 20 degrees in a half hour, most of it in the first 5 minutes.  Wind is howling now, tearing new leaves off the trees.  Poor baby birds…

Lilies of the valley bloomed today.  They smell so sweet, downwind, I keep finding excuses to walk by them.  When the wind changed, it started twisters of dust—so many people are plowing and planting, and the air was so filled with dust that it looked like ground fog.

  
Red Geranium


May 13 - Baby robins left the nest today, maybe blown out by the wind!  


May 15 - John found two of the baby robins in the big pine tree.  Today Mama Robin was feeding one in the garden, newly-tilled, lots of worms.  We saw a baby killdeer on the road…round little body on stilts!


May 17 - Mrs. Hummingbird showed up today—or at least I noticed her for the first time!  I put the hummer feeder out posthaste, and she was back at suppertime.  I almost walked my head into a cardinal’s nest in the pine tree…she flew up in a panic and scared me too!  When Jim tilled the garden he snipped the foot off a toad—I carried the poor thing up to the house and made mud in the flowerbed for it to burrow into—it did.  Still alive today but looks pretty sad.  Wonder if it can survive?  I suppose it was burrowed in the garden for moisture.  It’s been so windy and dry!  Hard to believe 2 weeks without rain.  Young robins have doubled in size since Friday.  So far, have planted tomato plants and buttercup squash, lettuce, beets, kale, kohlrabi, and some herbs.  And a few beans—need to get more seed for those.


May 18 - Still no rain. Little toad still alive—don’t know how to feed him —sure he must be hungry if he’s healing at all.  Found the other one Jim hit with the tiller—lost both hind feet—squashed (or crawled?) under a bag of manure.  I feel so bad.  Maybe should’ve known they’d be burrowed in the garden—but how to chase them out?

Saw the wren take out after the hummingbird tonight—the wren was definitely outclassed!  Cardinal’s nest doesn’t seem to have nestlings yet—nest is just a tad too high to peek into.


Persian Cornflower



May 19 - Still no rain.  Cool, breezy.  Planted onions alongside squash.  They won’t bother each other much.


May  20 - Two bunnies playing out back—they would leap into the air, flip end for end, then chase each other in a circle—wheee!  Also, Mama Robin trying to teach her teenager to find worms:  she’d pull one and flip it onto the grass while the kid danced up and down and squealed—then she’d grab it and flip it again, but the kid just kept dancing and yelling!  They must learn sometime…

Little toad still alive and up out of the burrow—don’t know if he(?) is getting anything to eat—I hope maybe an occasional mosquito.  Planted rest of onions and more flowers—had to water new tomato and flower plants—strawberries have blossoms and look good.


Peonies



May 22 - Rain!  Gentle, light, less than ¼” but should help things sprout.  The columbine I grew from seed scavenged from the pink one in the ditch in E.L. is blooming, and it IS pink.  Toad disappeared yesterday—hope he’s OK—   Twerp found a little snake in the lawn–it skittered toward the sidewalk—no doubt lives beneath.  Never saw the snake, just the grass moving—maybe 8” long?

Columbine


May 27 - Life is burgeoning.  Even my lettuce seeds are sprouting, despite so little rain.  Finches nesting in (otherwise useless) coconut birdfeeder!  Hummingbird showed up at feeder again while I was filling a bucket at the faucet right below.  Not shy!  It’s been so enjoyable watching our cardinal pair—haven’t heard any noise from their nest yet.


May 29 - A bit more rain last night after a hot, windy day—purple phlox are beautiful—patch of brilliant purple on south and east side of the house—and the peonies opened yesterday, brilliant pink next to the phlox.  After the rain last night I hurried out to check the gauge (<0.1”) and nearly stepped on a toad so big I thought it was a baby rabbit!

Peony



June 2 - Forgot to mention the young robin that was sitting on the edge of the birdbath—turned around to preen his tail, and fell off!  Recovered before hitting the ground, though…

Planted more flower seedlings tonight—tiring, but good therapy.  Bought a bunch of marjoram just for the smell of it.  Some thyme and oregano, too…


Lavender



June 7 - Hallelujah!  Rain!  Over an inch, plus ½” Saturday—pretty soon it’ll be time for 2nd planting of beans and lettuce.  Warmer, too—things can really grow.  Put violas on Cannon’s grave, and more creeping phlox, with a couple  of red geraniums for contrast.  Need to get more lavender in there.


June 8 - The phlox and the clover smell like heaven—phlox all along south end of house and east side—SW breeze brings it indoors—flocks of it!  😊  Clover scent is strong in the humidity and warmth.  Another ½” rain last night and a 10th of an inch today.  Perfect growing weather.  Simplicity roses burst forth (like popcorn!) yesterday and today—New Dawn bloomed its first today.  Saw Mr. Hummingbird for the first time, but only for a moment—I almost never see them at the feeder.  Put in another row of beans today and 3 morning glory seedlings.




New Dawn Rose



June 9 - Another 0.8” rain last night—thunderstorms.  Water standing in fields, but it’ll soak in.  We haven’t had too much rain yet!



June 12 - Perfect weather, though NE wind is too cool and aggravates my joints.  Clover still sweet-scents the fields where it’s abundant.  Roses coming on—delphinium bloomed today—honeysuckle vine will soon be out—that always smells so sweet.  I pruned some of the forsythia—found 2 more branches had taken root in the tangle at the bottom.  We have a toad guest in the garage—I find toad poop there—should be plenty of bugs for it to eat, but it’s dry in there when the days get hot…

June 14 - Purple bellflowers are blooming.  First firefly showed up tonight.  Yellow feverfew budding (the white ones are out, and lots of them!)   Persian cornflower from John looks a bit limp when it’s hot and sunny, but perks up in the cool of evening.  Pretty dramatic flowers—it was fun figuring out what it was.  Bought lavender and 2 more perennials.  Flower gardens really nice this year—always something blooming, ever since early spring beauties, violets, etc.


Purple Bellflower



June 19 - Perfect growing weather, hot, humid.  Coreopsis beginning to bloom, red and gold next to purple bellflowers!  3/10”rain tonight, badly-needed.  New Dawn roses are gorgeous—honeysuckle blooming, scents the yard, along with clover.


Coreopsis



June 21 - Pheasants!  We’ve heard them everywhere this week.  Sweet peas by back door are blooming—lettuce is about 2 days from eating size—it just exploded this past week, with the 

rain and warmth.   Martins must’ve been teaching their kids to fly tonight—they buzzed Gabe and me, and chittered and clicked like dolphins.  Obviously pissed.  But we couldn’t see young ones…


Gloriosa Daisy



June 25 - Gloriosa daisies beginning to bloom…saw a meadowlark down the road…it was a shock, since I’ve seen fewer of them each year, and haven’t heard them very often this year.  We used to have them in the back yard, but no more.  Delphiniums looking great, feverfew still looking good until rain tonight bent them down.  First lettuce from the garden tonight.  Memo to self:  maple-flavored bacon doesn’t do much for wilted lettuce, but it was good anyway!  Early lettuce is so nice, before the bugs get into it.


Delphiniums



June 30 - This has been the sweetest-smelling June I can remember…clover, honeysuckle, phlox, lilies of the valley…roses, peonies, lilacs…and the big pine tree smells so good in the sun, even though its pollen makes me sneeze!  Planted more beans and lettuce, fertilized squash and tomatoes.  Planted a few Romas (left over from Bible school project), mainly because Walt said it was “too late” to plant tomatoes!


 Gloriosa Daisies in Abundance!



July 11 - Hot, humid, HOT!  Since July 4 weekend.  Walt and Foxy put in our window A/C Thursday–it does help for sleeping, though (luckily) both of us prefer fresh air if it’s cool enough to breathe.

Birds dying, probably from heat.  Watched a 2-foot garter snake eat, the other day…might’ve been either a toad or a mouse…whatever it was, it was still kicking, but all I could see was a glimpse of 2 tiny toes.  Gross, but interesting!

Delphinium still blooming but mostly done, foliage browning.  Gloriosas great.  New Dawn roses finished.  Morning glories growing, but a long way from blooming.

Jim seems to have decided to keep the stray kitten that showed up at his doorstep.

Nice gift from a church member–3 qts raspberries!  We are blessed indeed.


July 14 - Today as I was hanging out laundry, a young mourning dove, flying with minimal skill, tried to land on the clothesline, got flustered by the sheets, and ended up in the pocket of one of the fitted sheets!  There it settled down happily as if in a nest, and seemed content to stay there until I boosted it out.  Imagine if I’d come to take down the sheets, not knowing the dove was in there!


August 5 - Home from vacation a week.  After 3 weeks of no rain, everything was brown or at least wilted.  Garden looks awful, but ever-faithful beans are still producing!

Praying for rain…got 0.15” a couple of days ago.  Have watered some things to salvage them, but don’t want to risk the well going dry.  Roma tomatoes starting to produce…the rest a disaster.  Need to get about 4” layer of manure on that garden and worked in by next year.

Cardinals gone.  I heard and saw the male once.  Not sure if the 2nd batch of young fledged.

Crickets have started singing, but not many.  Mosquitoes thinned out immensely by the dry weather.  It’s been mostly cool, too, 50’s at night.  Why do people think August is the hottest month?  It almost never is as hot as July!


August 11 - Got 2/10”  of rain yesterday–hot today, good growing weather if we had more rain.  Foggy nights, but clear enough tonight to see the Perseid meteor showers.  Went out about 10:00 and saw one meteor, the second biggest I’ve ever seen.  No mosquitoes (no rain!)  The ironweed in the south flowerbed is blooming.  Morning glories not glorious, but at least alive and blooming…


Ironweed





August 15 - Still no rain.  Hot and humid.  Turned on the attic exhaust fan tonight just in time to blow eau de skunque through the house.  Very efficient fan!

Beans still coming, especially on new plants, and a few Roma tomatoes…


August 20 - A sprinkle of rain last night, not even a tenth of an inch.  The wind did one of those sudden about-face maneuvers tonight…now it’s comfortably cool and no longer humid, after a NE breeze before dark.

Coyotes squealing some nights–funny how eerie they sound if I’m outside in the dark–but if I’m indoors, they just sound interesting!  Insects noisy at night, but they don’t disturb me at all…it’s a peaceful sound.

More Ironweed


August 22 - Made peach jam–also plum jam with plums from Gertie.  Jim left a bag of corn out front, and it was fun guessing who might’ve left it.  Walt is trying to help fix the sheared gear on Rich’s scooter-lift, cheaper than Medi-Care Orthopedic would.  We are counting our blessings.

COLD in the house this a.m.--woke up freezing in NE wind, all windows open!  Beautiful, perfect weather yesterday and today–it’s so nice to have a real weekend now that I have Saturdays off.

Butterflies and hummingbirds busy…must be migration time.  Four o’clocks in bloom, goldenrod almost, no asters yet.  The brown-eyed Susans from Jim’s fencerow have finally taken hold.  They’ve been blooming for weeks and weeks.

Monarch



August 31 - Finally a little rain…only a faint drizzle, but it wets the leaves and gives us hope.  Maybe Hurricane Emily will stir up some rain for us.  It’s been so baking dry that I’ve begun to realize anew how dependent the earth is on water for life.  Seems as if even my soul feels parched.  

Today I saw 2 hummingbirds, appearing to have a discussion about which one would visit the feeder.  The one who did was executing little can-can and hula maneuvers between sips, chattering at the other one.  Then they both flew straight up and circled each other…and finally came to rest about 14” apart on top of the wire fence.  There they sat for several minutes, one twitching and looking around, the other calm.

Rich saw a coyote cross our road this morning, on his way to work.

There have been monarch butterflies everywhere the past couple of weeks.  I’m sure I saw DOZENS today.

Planted lettuce in containers last week…tonight transplanted some of the stunted lettuce plants that never made it in the garden.  Amazingly, the beans are blossoming again…some blossoms drying up, but maybe rain will save them.  Several tomato plants mostly dead, but a couple of the Roma plants have given us quite a few.  Defrosted the freezer tonight…we have plenty of fruit and vegetables in there…


Morning Glory Vines


Morning glories more glorious each day.  Hauling wastewater (and hose water) keeps me busy evenings.  Trying to save kitchen water…worried about well drying up…even defrosting the freezer filled a bucket.  Freezing fruit and vegs requires a lot…washing, blanching, etc.  Got more plums, made more jam (thank you, Gertie!)


Morning Glory

Sept 2 - What a glorious show this evening!  We got 0.4” of rain and it was misting a little when the monarch butterflies began to congregate around the maples in the back yard.  Dozens and dozens fluttered around for about an hour, and one by one came to rest in clumps on the leaves.  As each one came in for a landing, those already landed opened their wings so the branch fairly shimmered!  Sometimes one would leave, then come back and re-negotiate for a landing space.  Wonder if I’ll be up early enough to see them off in the morning…

Also saw 5 egrets flying, white translucent-looking wings against the rolls and billow of black and gray clouds.  We don’t usually see them flying in groups.

The rain has really perked up my spirits.  Wonder if I could dig up the Rose of Sharon next to the shed and move it near the house?  Worth a try…


Monarch on the Petunias




Sept 4 - Lots of blond woolly-bear caterpillars this year.  Gabe’s fan club (kids from church) had a whole jar of them.  I should find out what they metamorphose into.

Sick kitty today…won’t eat.  I’m worried about her.

We got 0.7” of rain altogether this week.  Today was lovely (except for Twerp being sick).  Mosquitoes bad at night…lots of them get in the house, not to be discovered until the lights are out at bedtime!


Sept 9 - Woolly-bears are all over—in Gabe’s water dish, climbing up the garage door, in the road—there are so many on the road it’s impossible not to hit them.  They hustle across in small armies, all on the same diagonal course—toward a common destination?  But what?

I miss our cardinals…

Garden seems pretty well finished, even though we got another 1.3” rain.

Have been worried all week about Twerp…today she’s finally showing more spunk, and actually eating again.  Vet says some bacterial infection.  She’s usually so healthy, but I was scared for her this week.  Tonight she is burrowed under the sheets on the bed, with good reason…it’s about 45 degrees outside.  Feels like winter.


Sept 13 - Saturday Hank and Jeannette brought a huge truckload of bullshit mixed with sawdust, 2 yrs old, for my garden.  I worked my buns off yesterday and today digging crabgrass out of the garden, so I can spread the stuff and Jim can till it in.

Summer yesterday and today after cold 40’s night last week.  Feels like rain tonight..

Still worried about Twerp, not eating right.  Rich, like most other people, doesn’t understand my attachment to her—if he doesn’t feel it, I can’t explain it to him.  He just doesn’t get close to animals.


Sept 18 - This is the week all the bean fields are turning gold—they glow, especially at sunset.  Reminds me a little of aspens in the Rockies.  A little more rain, ¼”, then some warm days like today.  Lettuce I planted in July has sprouted.  I put some seedlings in pots to take to Mom tomorrow for her patio.  Tried to dig up 2 Rose of Sharon plants, but ended up with tiny 6” pieces.  Put them in a temporary location to see if they’ll grow…worth a try!

Made more jam today.  Almost finished digging crabgrass out of the garden.  

Twerp is fine again…appetite returned and she seems healthy as ever.  

Today for the first time I could notice the sweet scent of alyssum.  It’s as if they are finally able to really bloom.  When I first smelled, I knew it was familiar, but it took another sniff to realize what it was!


Sept 23 - Bean fields have turned from yellow sun-gold to golden toasty-brown.  Some drizzle most of today (3/10”) but clear and starry tonight.

So happy my cat is healthy again!

Unearthed some old writing tonight, including a poem I wrote to my parents about 25 years ago and never gave them.  Maybe it’s time.


Sept 25 - More rain and 55 degrees.  I’m tired of hearing people say it’s no good, because it’s too late for the crops (although I understand that).  The ground still needs it, and plenty of plants and trees!

I think the hummingbirds are finally gone.  It’s supposed to turn cold this week.  Lots of geese around.  Wild asters bloomed this last week…goldenrod nearly finished…somehow I thought they bloomed together, but no.  Potted lettuce doing great.   Lettuce on the south end of the house is growing, but seems slow…days are shorter!


Sept 30 - Near frost last night, 33.  Thus begins the nuisance of carrying in or covering plants at night in the hope that we’ll have another warm spell and the flowers might last a few more weeks!