Weather | 5/18, cloudy, 0.63" rain, 61°, 67° | 5/19, cloudy, 0.58" rain, 51°, 61°
| 5/20, p. cloudy, 46°, 68° | 5/21, cloudy with sprinkles, 50°, 69° | 5/22, cloudy, 57°, xx° | 5/23, xx°, xx°
| 5/24, xx°, xx° |
- Monday, 5/18: Hockey
- We experienced rain in the morning that quit in the late morning hours. We were cloudy in the afternoon. A severe thunderstorm roared through right when we went to bed, giving us wind and heavy rain.
- There was a wet baby robin in the middle of the lane next to the Sargent crabapple tree. It sat in the same spot all day. I used a leash on Cooper to keep him away from the bird. The baby robin was moving around in the late afternoon with an adult robin chirping from a nearby tree, so the baby bird's parents are feeding it. We didn't see it after dark.
- I watched Game 7 of the Montreal Canadiens/Buffalo Sabres NHL series. Montreal won in overtime, 3-2, advancing to the third round of the playoffs. Buffalo dominated in the second and third periods, but Montreal's goalie, Jakub Dobeš, kept the Canadiens in the game. The overtime goal was by the same guy, Alex Newhook, who scored the Game 7 winning goal in the earlier series, featuring Montreal against Tampa Bay. Bill texted me that Dobeš played high school hockey in St. Louis. I looked it up and Dobeš is Czech and moved to St. Louis at age 16 and lived with a family friend while attending De Smet Jesuit High School and playing for the St. Louis AAA Blues youth team. The family friend was Ľuboš Bartečko, a former St. Louis Blues forward. It's interesting how St. Louis is becoming more and more of a hockey magnet of former NHL players who help to develop new talent.
- Tuesday, 5/19: Wine Inventory
- Light rain fell throughout the day, keeping us inside.
- Mary tossed a dead sweet potato that she used for creating slips. She has three others that are moving along very nicely, so there will be plenty for planting in the garden. Instead of developing roots and new shoots, this one just started rotting.
- Mary cut a several more garlic scapes. These plants are nice and big this year.
- I did a new inventory of all of my wine, since I discovered recently that I somehow missed writing down on the inventory chart in the pantry the results of a big cherry wine bottling that I did this past winter. Here are the numbers of bottles of some of the larger collections of wines that we have: cherry-80, blackberry-23, jalapeño-35, pear-44, parsnip-24, garlic-22, and various apple wines-29.
- Wednesday, 5/20: Shopping
- I went shopping in Quincy, IL. The stores were very quiet with a minimal number of shoppers. The cheapest gas in both Missouri and Illinois was at Sam's Club in Quincy at $4.19 a gallon.
- Katie sent photos of her trip to Italy (see below) for the Air National Guard. It sounds like she's having fun. The food is great. Her team is in Venice.
- Mary watched the baby phoebes take off flying from their nest inside the woodshed. She said they did pretty well on their first attempt at using their wings to fly. Fortunately, we've been cool this spring. Some years the phoebe nest gets too hot where its located, just under the woodshed's Quonset hut metal roof. The nest falls down every autumn, but phoebes always built a new nest each spring. It worked for them this year.
- Mary checked all of the fruit trees. All pear trees are absent of any fruit. There's maybe a dozen cherries on all of those trees. Some apples are developing on the Empire, Granny Smith, and the Liberty apple trees. Single digit temperatures on fruit blossoms killed off most fruit this year. However, wild blackberry and raspberry plants are putting out abundant numbers of green berries. That crop looks promising.
- I watched Game 1 of the NHL Western Conference Final, where the Vegas Golden Knights beat the Colorado Avalanche, 4-2, in Denver.
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Katie took a shot of the Alps from the jet's window. |
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| Katie (front, left) and her fellow Guard members with a toast. |
- Thursday, 5/21: Big Wild Turkey
- Around noon while Mary was picking scapes off garlic plants in the far garden, she heard what she describes as a "whop, whop" sound and looked up to see a huge wild turkey flying away to the east of her. She said it was big, with a bronze coloration, rather than the normal darker brown color that we usually see. Mary guesses that it probably weighed at least 25 pounds.
- I walked down to Wood Duck Pond because I thought I could cross the "dry creek bed" and look at our east property line. That area is still flooded from high water in Wood Duck Pond and my deer blind continues to be in flood waters (see video, below). We heard engine noise to the east and wondered if our neighbor was ripping out the fence between our properties. After getting back home, I drove east. There was no activity at the fence line. The engine noise was from a neighbor about a mile east of us who was mowing his postage stamp lawn with a big zero-turn lawnmower.
- A fledgling American robin is still moving around on our lane near the Sargent crabapple tree. We have to be careful walking past that area, or driving a vehicle through there.
- I watched Game 1 of the NHL Eastern Conference Finals. The Montreal Canadiens won by the score of 6-2, over the Carolina Hurricanes. The Canes scored 33 seconds into the game and then Montreal scored 27 seconds later. I think the main TNT game announcer, Kenny Albert, is horrible, so I turned off the sound on the TV and listened to the game via the NHL app on my cell phone while watching the video on TV. It was a much improved experience. I mentioned it to Bill and my son texted back that he does the same trick, often.
- I watched 35 minutes of a board meeting for the folks who supply us with water. A video of their meeting is almost two hours long. They have a new board member who is raising a stink over how they operate. The rest of the board is full of old fuddy duds (Mary says be careful...old fuddy duds might be the same age as me!) who are obviously upset with this younger upstart who is questioning everything that they do. It's interesting.
Stagnant flood waters fill what once was the dry creek bed.



















