Weather | 6/8, cloudy, 0.46" rain, 71°, 83° | 6/9, p. cloudy, 0.02" rain, 71°, 87°
| 6/10, 1.21" rain, 67°, 83° | 6/11, 4.19" rain, 65°, 85° | 6/12, sunny, 57°, xx° | 6/13, xx°, xx°
| 6/14, xx°, xx° |
- Monday, 6/8: Backwards Meat Whistle Fly
- We received an email that our chicks shipped out today from Cackle Hatchery in Lebanon, MO. We should see them on Wednesday morning.
- We've come to the end of gnat season and we are now in the middle of deer fly season. They swarm around you the instant you venture outside. Sometimes they come in on us or the dog. You'll notice one in the window, but it isn't wise to swat them on the glass, because the end result is blood spattered on the inside of glass. Fortunately, a squirt of Dawn dish soap solution kills them quickly.
- Our forecast calls for rain throughout the day. While washing dishes after the noontime meal, I looked out the window and said, "It's not raining at all." The very next second, a downpour drenched our property. It made Mary laugh.
- I made a meat whistle fly (see photo, below). Unfortunately, I put the rabbit fur backwards on the hook. We'll see if my mistake works when I try it on the end of a fishing line.
- Mary was working on a cross stitch pattern when she declared that she did two froggings in a row. Frogging is cross stitch speak for "rip-it, rip-it," meaning you have to tear some stitching out due to a mistake. She decided on setting that pattern aside for later.
- We decided to celebrate two straight days of hobby activities and enjoyed a bottle of 2025 spiced apple wine. It was really good.
- We had the best night yet on the numbers of fireflies lighting off after dark. Their numbers keep on growing, making all of the trees sparkle with their flashes.
- Tuesday, 6/9: A Clean Chicken Coop
- Mary and I cleaned the chicken coop, which took a big chunk of the day. I worked inside the coop shoveling out old hay and chicken manure while Mary moved and emptied wheelbarrow loads into the compost bin. She and I installed the wall the separates the chicks from the hens. While I stapled plastic bags to the top of that wall, Mary hauled in wheelbarrow loads of new hay. We hung the heat lamp and added unfilled chick feeders. Everything is ready for tomorrow's arrival of chicks.
- During the time I swept dust from the inside ceiling and walls of the coop prior to digging out chicken manure, Mary trimmed tree branches at the chicken run gate and around the forsythia bush. That bush had branches reaching out and partially eating the pickup.
- Mary checked the blackberry bushes at Bramble Hill. The berries are all very green.
- We saw the conjunction of Venus and Jupiter in the eastern sky after sunset.
- Wednesday, 6/10: Chicks Arrive Along with Big Rains
- After eating breakfast, we received a call from the Ewing Post Office that our chicks arrived. I drove to Ewing and brought them home.
- We have 26 new chicks. Two are Barred Rocks and the rest are either Buff Orpingtons or some kind of white chickens. They were all slow to move and huddled under the heat lamp for about 15 minutes, then slowly warmed up and started feeding and drinking water. Through the day they seemed very fine.
- A thunderstorm started banging away at 11 a.m. Over several years of raising chickens, this was the first year we received a thunderstorm on Day 1 of the arrival of new chicks. This storm lasted until 3 p.m. We just at a snack around noon to stave off hunger, then ate our midday meal around 4 p.m.
- After chores and while Mary picked black raspberries, we heard thunder rumbling to the west. We had a train of thunderstorms travel through us starting in the late afternoon that continued until 1:30 a.m.
- We watched quite a bit of live weather material online, such as Max Velocity on YouTube, as tornadoes, hail, and high winds were evident west, north and east of us. We didn't get hail or tornadoes, just a lot of water.
- After the thunder finally quit, I checked the chicken coop. The chain link fencing at the gate was leaning slightly to the south, due to a thick post breaking at the ground. Small maple trees growing through that fence held it from falling all of the way to the ground. I looked through the coop window and the chicks were fine. Standing water was everywhere. We really got a huge dumping of rain, making frogs and fireflies really happy.
- Thursday, 6/11: More Rain
- First thing this morning, I used several strands of baling twine and tied the top of the section of chain link fencing, which includes the gate to chicken yard, to a maple tree branch, to hold it upright. It's a temporary fix until I do some permanent work on the fence. The chicks look great, even though the west wall of the coop got enough rain to soak through to the inside.
- Local media sources reported flooding and washout areas on several area roads. HERE is a video from WGEM in Quincy of flooding in our area, including Highway 156, the route we take to drive to Quincy.
- On the noontime walk with Cooper down the lane and back, I noticed that some of the gravel at the end of the lane washed away. Gravel even washed away on the gravel road.
- We did evening chores around 3 p.m., due to weather radar that showed a thunderstorm front on its way to us. Fortunately, the white section of the radar, which usually involves hail, moved by to the north of us. We just received another downpour of intense rain, amounting to 0.75" of moisture. With 3.44" from the night before, we got a total of 4.19" today.
- We watched online as severe tornadoes ripped through towns in Illinois where Mary lived when she was young, including Streator, Dwight, and Wenona. Later in the night, tornadoes were seen in South Bend, IN and into southern MI.
- I finished reading Alexander Kent's 23rd British Navy novel, Sword of Honour, and started the next book, Second to None.
- Right before we went to bed, Mary spotted a horsehair worm on the kitchen floor near cricket legs. Apparently, a cat ate a cricket. The worm looked like a nightmare. HERE is information about a horsehair worm.













