Weather | 6/15, sunny, 50°, 75° | 6/16, p. cloudy, 0.01" rain, 58°, 73°
| 6/17, cloudy, 57°, 83° | 6/18, 0.01" rain, cloudy, 60°, 75° | 6/19, sunny, 56°, xx° | 6/20, xx°, xx°
| 6/21, xx°, xx° |
- Monday, 6/15:
- Katie called and talked to us for about an hour. She made it back to Anchorage. Katie enjoyed her trip to Italy.
- Mary hoed out the weeds in the second row from the west in the near far garden.
- She then mowed the west yard, putting grass clippings on the row she hoed.
- Using a ladder and a pole with 8' and 10.33' cuts into it, I cut walnut and cedar branches that were intruding into any place in the lane that was in a space of 8' wide by over 10' tall. These branches grew inward so that even our pickup was hitting them. My measurements equaled the width and height of a UPS or FedEx delivery van. Some cedar branches were big and heavy, requiring me to use the small Stihl pruning saw.
- I mowed the lane. I keep beating back small poison ivy plants growing in the grass on the east side of the lane.
- Mary ran into enough poison ivy plants while mowing to produce a slight red rash with bumps on her neck that started to move to her face. She soaked infected areas with a comfrey-laden cotton ball that greatly decreased these symptoms. I walked Cooper alone on his final outing of the night, giving Mary a reprieve from walking down the lane where I cut several poison ivy plants with the mower.
- During a couple breaks from mowing, we noticed online that a major fire broke out at a gas station in West Quincy, MO. It completely burned down the building. HERE is a WGEM report. We drive by this location when we go to Quincy. The Missouri side of the Mississippi River in West Quincy is full of gas stations with cheaper prices than in Illinois.
- Each evening I wash chicken waterers, then dump the wash water around apple trees in the south orchard. Cooper sniffed up a rabbit while I dumped water today and chased it into tall grass. Once in the tall grass, Cooper leaped high in the air with each stride, looking like a kangaroo dog.
- Tuesday, 6/16: Chicken Yard Poison Ivy
- I clipped a huge bunch of poison ivy vines that have been climbing the east chicken yard fence for years. This year's spring rains made the vines climb way above the old wooden posts and sway down to the ground like so many snakes, getting too close to your face when mowing the chicken yard. I probably snipped off 50-100 vines with the big loppers, then tossed the poison ivy over the north chicken yard fence with a pitchfork. Once finished, I cleaned the loppers with soap and water, then wiped it down with alcohol.
- While cleaning out the poison ivy, I smelled a skunk. The whiff arrived on the west wind, but I never saw the skunk as it probably passed through the west field.
- I mowed the chicken yard. Again, I eliminated a bunch of new poison ivy starting on the ground inside the east fence. Mowing helps to keep the weeds and grass low. Otherwise, we lose chickens in the thick and tall growth.
- Along the lane and in tall growth of the east yard is the great aroma from common milkweed blossoms (see below). They don't look like much, but they smell wonderful.
- In the evening while picking strawberries, Mary heard a yellow-billed cuckoo. This is the last of our spring bird arrivals.
- We watched two movies, which were Justice League (2017) and The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel (2017).
- Wednesday, 6/17: New Modem
- I installed the new T-Mobile modem that arrived yesterday when the UPS delivery driver ceremoniously dumped the package into poison ivy leaves at the base of the mailbox post. The sticker on what T-Mobile calls a gateway (fancy name for a modem) announces a set up in just 15 minutes. Ha, ha, ha...that was really funny. It took hours. We're rural, so what happens in a city is slower out here in the country. Plus, one isn't supposed to use the old modem to start the process. Instead, you take the old US Cellular modem offline, power up the new T-Mobile modem, then follow their directions. Unfortunately, the instructions on their sticker reads to just use the QR code. It takes your phone to a T-Mobile app that gives you a constant whirling circle and gets you nowhere. When I ventured online on my laptop, I figured out my mistake and powered on the new modem and started getting somewhere.
- The 5G equipment T-Mobile uses involves signals off their towers that reaches out at greater distances, which helps us immensely. Websites that took ages to download are popping up instantaneously. We now have very good internet service.
- This afternoon, I cut downed a tall, but skinny, mulberry sapling that fell onto the lane after I cut away cedar tree limbs yesterday that held it into place. I also cut out some autumn olive trees blocking our view to the east when we pulled to the end of our lane.
- Our chicks grew about four times the size that they were since arriving a week ago. We have never operated a heat lamp so much for baby chicks in our history of raising them. It's been cooler than usual this past week, so the heat lamp that usually gets turned off during the day is on most of the time.
- A line of thunderstorms developed just south of us and rolled into Illinois and beyond (see video, below). After dark, I watched live coverage of tornadoes throughout Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio. This is where the seeds of tornadoes are planted, and they move on.
- Mary discovered the sound of two new birds while using the Merlin app on her phone. They are a yellow-throated warbler, and a white-eyed vireo. The Merlin app is a product of Cornell University and identifies the photos and sounds of birds.
- Mary also saw a summer tanager. It was picking off insects from its perch on an electric wire in the north yard. The sunlight off dark storm clouds caught its feathers in such a way that they seemed fluorescent orange.
- Even though there were fewer fireflies tonight, we saw more than in recent days. A big squadron of lightning bugs were swarming near the forsythia bush just before dark.
Thunderheads developing south of us and moving east.
- Thursday, 6/18: Oh, Deer!
- I put a new flag on our mailbox. The old one was jury-rigged together several years ago after it fell off the side of the mailbox. We'll see how long this new flag lasts! The parts that hold the aluminum flag in place are made of plastic...not so great for something that sits out in the weather full-time.
- Mary watered the garden for the second day in a row. We haven't been watering gardens until recently, due to consistent rains.
- I sharpened a hoe we've had since we lived in Red Lake Falls, MN, in 1991. Our elderly neighbors there gave it to Mary. He took the wooden handle of a Christian Brothers hockey stick thrown out at the ice arena just next door and made it into a handle for the hoe. Mary loved the feel of that hoe and borrowed it so many times that our neighbor gave it to her.
- I hoed the western row of the near far garden. There were lots of vole tunnels along the edges of that row.
- Mary washed the sheets she uses to cover couches and stuffed chairs. When she put the newly cleaned sheet back on the chair in the living room that Cooper lays on, he wagged his tail. He liked the idea that she was fixing his bed. He has interesting traits. Cooper hoots each time that Mary dishes up his food, so she calls him a "hooter hound."
- We have one hen, a barred rock chicken, who hops over the fence near the gate to peck fresh clover in the yard. She is the our only "escape" chicken. She often returns to the chicken yard on her own. Mary calls her "Houdini Hen." Today, Mary noticed that she was in the brush between the chicken coop and the machine shed. Mary decided to handle her when she finished putting the chicks to bed for the night. When done with the chicks, Mary got all of the adult chickens inside the coop and counted them to discover all chickens were present and accounted for. Houdini jumped into the chicken yard while Mary's back was turned.
- We watched a nice buck through the house windows browsing on green vegetation in the east yard (see photo, below). It munched on horse weed along the near garden fence until it touched an electric wire and received a shock. The deer jumped a couple steps away and looked around to try to see what nipped him. Then, it wandered off to the northeast.
- When I went to look at the chicks through the coop's south windows prior to going to bed, I aimed the flashlight to the west while walking to the coop. A deer standing next to the Porter's Perfection crabapple tree jumped and ran into the west field. Mary thinks it's the mother to the twins she saw a few days ago.

















