Weather | 4/13, p. cloudy, 61°, 81° | 4/14, 0.15" rain to cloudy, 65°, 86°
| 4/15, 0.09" rain to cloudy, 60°, 76° | 4/16, 0.85" rain overnight, sunny, 58°, 80° | 4/17, sunny to thunderstorms, 1.96" rain, 58°, 81° | 4/18, sunny, 39°, 55°
| 4/19, sunny, 34°, 55° |
- Monday, 4/13: Ongoing Issues
- Today is Katie's 34th birthday, so we wished her a happy birthday online.
- Fedco answered my email. We'll send the plants back to them, after we repair their box. I asked how to handle the label, but didn't hear back from them, today.
- Mary turned over a bit of the near garden soil and weeded the garlic plants that were filled with wild buckwheat.
- A guy from the Lewis County Rural Electric Co-op showed up and did nothing, because he says they need to bring in a bucket truck and the ground is too wet to move the heavy truck onto our lawn in order to be close enough to the pole. They could climb the pole, but he said he would let one of the younger guys do that. "Call us back if there are any changes," he said. I guess we wait until the pole and the transformer catches on fire before they actually fix the issue!
- I ordered new checks from walmartchecks.com about 10 days ago. Unfortunately, I forgot that a central Illinois banking company bought our bank and the routing number changed. We were allowed to use our checks until they ran out. I failed to put the new routing number on my order for new checks. When I called the, I was put on a holding pattern at about 12:30 p.m. and they would call me back. The call-back came in at 3:30 p.m., but I had the sound off on my phone and missed the call. I'll try again, tomorrow.
- I picked four dozen dandelion flowers. I'm at 50.1 grams and need 270 grams of dandy blossoms for a one gallon batch of wine, so I've got a long way to go!
- The new o-rings and air filters for the old lawnmower came in today's mail. These o-rings fit and oil and gas caps of the big Stihl chainsaw perfectly.
- Bill called. He's doing well at his new job. He was invited to a St. Louis Cardinals baseball game that was against the Boston Red Sox. Boston won. Bill's friend from high school, Craig, has a job where the office is just one block away from Busch Stadium. So, they drove to the parking lot where Craig works, then walked to the stadium, which was nice. Bill said the Cardinals have a big guy who looks huge when seen with the rest of the team. This guy hit a home run on his first up-to-bat.
- Tuesday, 4/14: Transplanting Plants We Didn't Order
- We woke at 3:15 a.m. with the sudden loud cracking of thunder overhead. Mary and I jumped out of bed and unplugged appliances.
- While walking Cooper around the north field around noon, I noticed that water was puddled up everywhere.
- The dog ends up sloppy after splashing through all of the puddles on trails, so Cooper gets a complete wash down on the front porch each time he goes outside. Today is the three-month anniversary of driving up to Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, to get Cooper.
- I successfully called walmartchecks.com and changed the routing number on our check order. Calling first thing in the morning helped. When you call during midday hours, it takes forever to get through.
- An email from Fedco came with a label to print out and directions that a FedEx truck will pick up the package tomorrow. The problem is that we don't own a printer. I sent an email back that I'll drive to Quincy and have FedEx print out the label and asked if they could compensate me. A return email told us to keep the contents of the box and plant everything. That news totally changed our plans for today.
- Mary and I planted three Blue Moon woodland phlox plants in woods north of the machine shed near a pond that only fills when we get big rains. We also planted three corms of Jack-in-the-Pulpit plants at the same location. I marked each planting with tall sticks. We planted a Frances Red Basket willow in the north yard between the Four Brothers (two pin oaks, an American Elm, and a pecan tree) and the McIntosh apple tree. We don't care if deer eat it, so we're not putting a fence around it. We planted a Miss Canada lilac near other lilac bush in the west yard. Finally, we planted yellow coneflower roots west of our livingroom's west window, near where we have a yearly stand of purple coneflowers that Mary planted in 2010. Not including dahlias that are planted later, we have four more items to put in the ground. Cloudy conditions and nighttime rains mean you couldn't ask for better transplanting weather. We hope the plants survive. Most all have pale yellow leaves. They've been in a dark box too long.
- I found two morel mushrooms in the woods where we planted the phlox and Jack-in-the-Pulpit plants. We left them behind. These mushrooms are very treasured by locals who bread and deep-fry them. We know that years ago, people grabbed them out of these woods, so we want to leave them alone to build up their population.
- All of the strawberries that we planted on Sunday are looking very good, with nice green leaves.
- Mary harvested several asparagus spears. Some shoots were already too large to eat and she left them to grow. She lightly cooks them in garlic wine...very yummy!
- With a high reaching 86°, it's a bit hot for living without an air conditioner. However, we have predicted lows in upcoming days in the 30s, so it's still too early for running an AC. We cooled the house down like my grandfather used to do in Maryland, with open windows and a big fan.
- Before any AC goes in, we'll need to insist on the electric company fixing the short at the transformer, which we heard and saw at night while walking the puppy.
- Wednesday, 4/15: Yellow Violets & More Transplanting
- I walked Cooper around the west field and down Bobcat Trail, where the yellow violets have really multiplied (see video and photos, below). Mary got seasick watching my video and went back to take the photos.
- I picked blossoms off eight dozen dandy flowers. I have a grand total of 75 grams and I need 270 grams to make a gallon of wine. Is it any wonder that I hate this time-consuming job?
- Mary transplanted most of the rest of the plants we didn't order, but received on Saturday from Fedco. She put the Old Fashioned Bleeding Heart in middle of the four brothers trees in the north yard. I need to add protection around that plant. Mary planted the Wild Columbine in a pot located in the shade next to the woodshed. She also put the Victoria heirloom rhubarb in a large pot. It will be there until we can dig up a place for it in the middle of the far garden. The five Royalty Purple Raspberry plants went into ground south of the far garden, near the compost bins and next to other wild raspberry plants. The only set of plants yet to put in the ground are three different kinds of dahlia bulbs. Mary plans to plant them after May 1.
- A thunderstorm rolled through after dark, with a strong downpour of rain, giving us 85 hundredths of an inch of precipitation.
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Yellow violet close-up taken by Mary. |
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Spring Beauties along our Bobcat Trail. |
Yellow violets and an active puppy dog on Bobcat Trail.
- Thursday, 4/16: Ticks & Dandelions
- We picked a lot more ticks off Cooper after his noontime walk. It amounted to about 40 ticks. We've entered the height of the tick season right now.
- The conditions on the north loop trail are very wet with water in the trail about everywhere. The silly National Weather Service has us in a moderate drought. I beg to differ with their assessment! We've had 5.32 inches of moisture since April 1st.
- Mary sorted and tossed bad items from stored acorn squash and garlic bulbs. She reports that they are storing amazingly well. She tossed six squash and about a bucket and a third of bad garlic bulbs. Squash should only last three months after picking. They were picked in October, so they should all be bad by January. Garlic should last six months after harvest. They were harvested around May/June. We always get some of our garlic to last until July of the next year, or 13 months.
- I picked dandelion blossoms. I'm noticing low numbers of dandelion flowers this year. I now have just over 100 grams of blossoms. I'm contemplating making just a half-gallon batch of dandelion wine this year.
- I changed a magazine subscription away from Fine Homebuilding to The Journal of Light Construction. The former magazine is all about high-priced ideas for construction companies and doesn't fit my interests.
- Friday, 4/17: WOW! The Thunderstorms
- I picked dandelion blossoms and now have a total of 122.6 grams. I only need to get 12.4 grams to get enough for making a half gallon of wine.
- We did chores very early in the mid-afternoon with severe thunderstorms arriving.
- I was throwing a ball for a game of fetch with Cooper when thunder was banging in the west. Needless to say, our game didn't last long.
- When I put Cooper inside, skies were very dark to the west and I watched seven turkey vultures riding the currents and circling right over the house. They always ride the wind currents ahead of an approaching storm.
- Mary took a few things out of the freezer in case power went out with our poor transformer connection and we didn't want to open freezer doors and lose cold temperatures in the freezers. Our power stayed on.
- From 4:00 until 11:30 p.m., a long chain of thunderstorms rumbled through us. At times, the skies were green with dark clouds. Funnel clouds were recorded west and north of here. One-inch hail fell in Lewistown, just five miles north of us. We only had a little bit of marble-sized hail. We experienced very strong winds and a continuous roar of thunder. Our total rainfall was almost two inches. We now have 7.28 inches of moisture this month.
- When we walked Cooper for his last outing, we were sloshing through water everywhere. It's a good thing we haven't planted seeds, because they would drown in our present swampy conditions.
- A big, yet thin, tree frog parked on our east-facing kitchen window when we finally went to bed around midnight.
- Saturday, 4/18: Flooding Wood Duck Pond
- In a check of the new plantings from the Fedco box of plants that we never ordered, Mary discovered that the wild columbine is dead. I noticed that three of of the five Royalty Purple Raspberry plants are greening. The basket willow and pink lilac bushes have leaves that are a bit greener.
- Meanwhile, all of our newly planted strawberry plants are growing nicely. The garlic took a big jump in height. All of our fruit trees look great. There are new green leaves on the top of the newly planted Carpathian walnut sapling.
- We walked Cooper to Wood Duck Pond around noon. It's flooding and the dry creek bed is very wet and under water (see photos, below). I'll have to rebuild my deer blind after the floodwaters subside.
- I picked enough dandelion blossoms to get a total of 137 grams, which will make a half gallon of wine. I'm guessing that this spring's 3° low, along with some days in the 80s, reduced the dandelion blossoms. All that's out there are tiny flowers.
- I watched Game 1 of the Minnesota Wild/Dallas Stars playoff hockey game. The Wild won, 6-1. That's who I was rooting for.
- When Mary put the chickens to bed for the night, she discovered that the west fence of the north chicken yard blew down overnight, yet all of the chickens stayed inside of their yard, even though they could have marched right over the fence into the west field. They're good chickens!
- Mary and I read books in the evening hours.
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| Wood Duck Pond flooding the dry creek bed and the forest floor. |
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Wood Duck Blind on 4/2/26 with slight flooding. |
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The same blind in today's higher floodwater. |
- Sunday, 4/19: Fixing Mary's Mower
- There was spotty frost in shady places when I walked Cooper down the lane this morning.
- We repaired the west chicken fence by pounding into the ground a couple metal fence posts at the base of fallen wooden posts and then leaning up the chicken wire fence and securing the wooden posts to the metal posts. I also drove two rebar stakes in the ground and tied a tomato cage surrounding a blueberry bush to the stakes. That cage keeps falling down in the wind, allowing rabbits to chew on the blueberry branches.
- I made a guard out of a piece of three-foot high half-inch hardware cloth and put it around the newly transplanted Bleeding Heart plant to protect it from rabbits.
- I fixed Mary's push mower. I removed the air filter housing and used a small screwdriver to dig out oily dirt built up around the throttle mechanism and linkage. I changed the air filter. The old one was smelly with gas. I think it was choking down the engine. I removed the recoil pull starter assembly from the Kohler engine on a mower that died a few years ago and installed it on this mower. The recoil on the old mower we use wasn't retracting the pull starter rope all of the way. There was a nut missing of the three nuts that holds the recoil assembly on the mower we use, so I borrowed a nut off the dead mower. Once everything was put together, the mower started with just one pull, a new event for this mower. I tested it by mowing the lane to the rain gauge. It worked great. Mary is back in business for mowing the lawn, which is good, because the grass is now tall.
- Mary dusted books to get rid of leftover dead ladybugs. Fortunately, they've finally dwindled down from invading the inside of our house windows.
- Mary did a tour of recently transplanted plants. Most are doing well. So far, all that we've lost is one blue phlox, a wild columbine, and two of the three yellow coneflowers.
- Mary says that the garlic plants doubled in size from the last deluge of rain.
- A house wren showed up and is doing its "yickity, yack" song, claiming every bush and tree in our yard. A Carolina wren is telling the house wren to scram. We heard a screech owl when we walked Cooper on his nighttime outing, along with two barred owls to the east.