Weather | 6/29, sunny, 75°, 91° | 6/30, sunny, 75°, 90°
| 7/1, sunny, 73°, 89° | 7/2, sunny, 73°, 91° | 7/3, smokey skies, 75°, xx° | 7/4, xx°, xx°
| 7/5, xx°, xx° |
- Monday, 6/29: Blackberries & Fixing Fence
- Mary picked more blackberries. She finished the first quart of the season and it's now in the freezer. Some locations are very sparse of ripe berries. Her final berry picking session took her west, south and east of the house and yielded just 19 berries. "That's a lot of heat for just 19 berries," she said.
- Mary said that wild bergamot (beebalm) is flowering on the edge of the north yard. Mountain mint is flowering between the ponds. Chicory and dayflowers are also blooming.
- A field sparrow always flies out of the blackberry plants in the north yard. Mary suspects it's nesting in those brambles, so she's not picking berries from that small patch.
- Mary says all of the staghorn sumac is blooming. We thought it was dead from deer eating it down to below our kneecaps last winter, but now it's chest high in some places and bearing berries, which is great.
- I ran supports to three of the four corner posts of the far garden. I have several short metal posts that once had about a foot of their bottom sections broken off. I drove them into the ground at an angle, then ran 4-5 strands of wire from the slanted posts to the top of the corner posts and wound the strands to tighten the tension until the corner posts were solidly in the ground. I didn't do this on the southwest corner, since it's still holding fast in the earth.
- My thigh muscles are really sore, due to too much of pulling wire tight while walking while doing deep knee bends, yesterday.
- We have a routine dog. If we get out of our daily routine of activities, things just aren't right with Cooper. While taking a rest from the outside heat and looking at my laptop in the late afternoon, Cooper was nudging my hand to remind me that we were overdue on his before-dinner walk and ball-fetching fun time.
- I did more online powder paint research. I found a guy via YouTube that mixes his own powder paint colors and has an insane amount of materials. Through him, I learned of a company in Texas that only sells lure making supplies called Barlow's Tackle.
- Tuesday, 6/30: A Day Off
- We decided to take the day off from going outside. My body hurts. Mary wants a day off from stomping through the heat. So, we enjoyed the cool of air conditioning indoors.
- Mary cross stitched.
- I put away a fly tying order that came in yesterday's mail. It doubled my thread supply with several new colors that I put away in new plastic thread boxes that Mary didn't want. It's amazing how fly tying and cross stitching share similar items. I also got cool new sparkly dubbing and crystal flash. I put several new sheets of foam away for tying bugs and dragonflies. I cleaned up my roll top desk giving me more storage space for my fly tying hobby.
- Mary added up that we got a total of 10.15 inches of rain in June. That's a lot of rain and it is why our ground is mighty soggy.
- I read that Saharan dust that blew across the Atlantic Ocean was then blown up the Mississippi River these past few days and is in our air. That explains why I see such murky air while looking off to the distance when I get mail at the end of our lane. It's also why we saw a blue moon at night.
- When we went outside for chores, we heard chimney swifts chattering as they flew about while catching bugs.
- Wednesday, 7/1: Two Dead Chickens
- When I opened the chicken coop's human door, a dead Buff Orpington hen was on the floor next to the roost. It wasn't a surprise. That chicken was acting lethargic for the past four month. Mary said it would stand on the top roost staring straight ahead while all of the other chickens pecked at sunflower seeds that Mary threw on the coop's floor. The surprise was a dead chick under a bucket in the chick area of the coop. Mary left the light off last night, due to the heat. That freaked out the chicks. They panicked and a couple got behind some feed buckets. One live chick was still there in the morning. The other one dived under a bucket and died.
- Mary picked several nice bunches of blackberries. She finished a second quart and filled two-thirds of another quart. Lots of berries are ripening and if we get a little more rain, we will have even more. There are several green berries yet to ripen. Mary took breaks between going to each blackberry patch. It's too hot to pick blackberries in one long session.
- Mary never saw it, but she heard deer stomp, then run off. Later, she heard it snorting to the east of her. It was laying down in a north blackberry patch before Mary arrived.
- I mowed the lane, performing only two round trips with the lawnmower at a time, then taking a cooling down break. It takes more time to accomplish when you need to cool down after each mile of mowing, but it's absolutely essential while working in humid heat.
- I saw a large Viceroy butterfly on the lane. It was flying about very quickly.
- While on the very first cut with the mower, a large doe deer ran off and then appeared a few feet further down the lane. She looked very healthy in her summer reddish-tan colored coat. The deer really didn't like that noisy machine I was pushing.
- On our moonlit nighttime outing with Cooper, we could hear four types of frogs yelling loudly from Bluegill Pond.
- Thursday, 7/2: Feathers
- I took in a Missouri Department of Conservation online session on plumology, or the study of feathers. Some interesting facts...1) There are 30 million chickens in the world, making them the largest population of bird varieties; 2) Birds see UV light, so black feathers might appear different to them; 3) Black feathers are stronger than white feathers, so the black feathers on a white pelican's wings are stronger; 4) Blue colored feathers aren't actually blue, but black, and their color is due to a structural feature that makes them appear blue.
- Mary picked blackberries to the northeast and the north areas of our property. She's almost done filling the fourth quart of this year's berries in the freezer. It was another hot day out on the berry trails.
- Mary saw a buck deer that was sporting a nice pair of developing antlers. It knew how to hide. The buck snorted, then trotted to a bush to hide itself and looked at Mary. When she didn't move, the buck jumped the fence dividing the north woods from the north field and disappeared into the north woods.
- Mary discovered five Shrubby St. John's Wort plants growing in the north field. They're in full bloom. "They're the prettiest things," she said.
- I mowed around the near garden and between the electric and chicken wire fences. Mulch went under the Granny Smith tree. I noticed that all of the elderberry leaves growing under the cedars south of the near garden were eaten by deer.
- We received two solar panels that are part of our new solar generator. The generator hasn't shipped, yet.
- I finished 24th Alexander Kent British Navy novel entitled Second to None.














