Weather | 3/2, cloudy, 29°, 38° | 3/3, 0.23" rain, 35°, 41°
| 3/4, cloudy, 38°, 43° | 3/5, cloudy, 39°, 59° | 3/6, 0.16" rain, 48°, 68° | 3/7, 0.60" rain overnight, cloudy, 39°, 43°
| 3/8, sunny, 33°, xx° |
- Monday, 3/2: Cooper, the Fetch Fanatic
- The bit of snow that fell last night revealed hundreds of rabbit tracks all over our yard. I also saw a large deer track halfway down our lane.
- Mary made a big batch of minestrone soup.
- She added aluminum sulfate to all of the blueberry bushes and put wood ashes underneath the sugar maple tree in the north yard.
- I put away winemaking items in the west room and set aside two cases of bottles, plus a few extra, for bottling the pear wine that was due to be accomplished yesterday. I need to remove labels off one case of bottles. I have four other cases of bottles requiring label removal.
- Katie sent a text of an article describing the Barrow Landfill project that she's heading up. HERE is a link to that article.
- Cooper is a fetch fanatic (see video, below). He would spent all day fetching a ball, if you let him.
Cooper loves to fetch a ball.
- Tuesday, 3/3: Glowing Lichen
- Mary and I walked Cooper around the west field and on the Bobcat Trail. Recent moisture is making greenish/blue lichen glow on tree trunks.
- There are a lot of cardinals singing everywhere.
- When it was time to play fetch with Cooper, we took him to the east/west part of the trail to the ponds where no mud is showing so that he didn't get as muddy as he did yesterday. A couple times when the ball bounced into the bent over grass along that trail, Cooper rolled in his hurry to get to the ball.
- I spent time reviewing soil carrying capacities of clay, which is plentiful on our property.
- Wednesday, 3/4: The First Great Blue Herons
- I took labels off 14 wine bottles. Twenty minutes of a steady boil in Mary's water bath canner containing water, a cup of vinegar, and a squeeze of dish soap seems to do the trick. A quick scrape with a fillet knife, followed by scrubbing the bottle with a green Scotch pad and baking soda cleans all label glue off each bottle.
- Mary cleaned the big fan using an artist's paint brush. Fine dust, probably from the woodstove, fills every crack and crevice when the fan sits near the stove in the living room.
- When I took the garbage down the lane to put it out next to the gravel road for pickup tomorrow, I had two instances when Bob White quail flew off. We have healthy numbers of them on our property this year. I also saw 21 cackling geese fly overhead.
- While doing the evening chores, I saw five great blue herons glide in from the south, high in the sky. The lead bird suddenly dropped significantly in elevation, then circled down. The other four birds followed the leader. They probably settled onto Wood Duck Pond. These are the first herons of the season.
- On Cooper's last walk, we heard faint sounds of spring peeper frogs at Bluegill Pond.
- Thursday, 3/5: Bugs, Birds, Trout, & Frogs
- We vacuumed bugs for most of the day, though we had to quit at times just to let the shop vac cool down.
- I spent about an hour fixing the video I placed under Monday's addition to this blog. The phone takes a .mov video and this blog uses mp4 videos, so I had to switch it over to the appropriate format, which took time to figure out.
- Mary paid bills and I balanced the checkbook.
- We watched four mallards fly out of one of our ponds when were throwing the ball in a game of fetch with Cooper. There were also several snow geese flying overhead.
- I watched a Missouri Department of Conservation webinar showing the inside of their trout hatchery at Branson. It was interesting. They stock about 1.6 million trout to lakes, ponds, and rivers throughout Missouri.
- On Cooper's final walk, we heard the full song and flight of two American woodcocks while we walked on our lane. We also heard full-throated songs of spring peeper frogs.
- Friday, 3/6: Much Needed Rain
- We vacuumed Asian ladybugs all day. For several days in a row, I can't get to the job of racking and bottling the pear wine, due to so many bugs emerging inside of the house. They surely would end up landing in the wine and spoiling it. All I can do is sigh and delay the job until there are fewer bugs.
- I cleaned up all chicken feathers that accumulated over several months underneath the cover of my rolltop desk. Whenever we spot a nice feather in the chicken yard or the coop, we keep it for fly tying purposes. I sort them into baggies according to color and type of feather.
- Cooper came with NexGard Plus, which is a combination medication that takes care of heartworm, fleas, ticks, and digestive worms. Since Cooper is such a wiggle wart, picking ticks off him is obviously impossible, so this medication is a good idea. We need to see a vet to get a prescription for this medication. After calling General Vet Clinic in Hannibal and texting Molly Brown, a former Petco coworker in Quincy, I set up a vet appointment with the Petco veterinarian. An initial vet visit at Petco is $72. Vet visits in Hannibal in 2019-20 for our cat, Mocha, were well over $100, so Petco is our cheaper option.
- I heard the first eastern pheobe of the year while emptying ashes from the woodstove this morning. We also saw lots of snow geese flying in all directions.
- There was light rain in the late afternoon. As clouds started clearing, a nice double rainbow filled the eastern sky (see photo, below).
- We experienced thunderstorms all evening. They gave us some much-needed rain.
- Saturday, 3/7: Bottling Pear Wine
- The second Orvis Fly Pattern Index book arrived in today's mail after getting sent off course several times through Hannibal, MO. It's a free copy that Thrift Books sent to replace the water-damaged copy I received last month. Originating from Atlanta, on Feb. 24th, it was sent to Joneboro, IL from Hannibal, eventually making its way back through St. Louis. On Feb. 27th, Hannibal directed it to Cornell, IL. It then traveled to Peoria, IL, then through Chicago and back to St. Louis. The third time through Hannibal, it was finally sent to Ewing, MO and onto us. The plastic spiral-bound spine has breaks in it, probably from all of the extra handling. I'll try to clean the similar spine off the moldy book and install it on this version.
- We saw the first turkey vultures of the season while walking Cooper to and from Wood Duck Pond. We also startled a flock of mallard ducks off Wood Duck Pond. A huge deer track was in the sand of the dry creek bed.
- The east and south yards were filled with robins at sunset.
- Mary startled a flock of snow geese while throwing the ball for Cooper prior to sunset. They were flying toward her and saw Mary and Cooper. There was a sudden panic in their call. They came together in a wide ribbon of geese, then moved back into a V once the snow geese were past Mary and Cooper. She thinks they've been shot at from a person with a hunting dog on the ground and took precautionary measures.
- Mary watched a red-shouldered hawk drop down and rake another red-shouldered hawk.
- I bottled the pear wine after giving bottles a quick wash in OxiClean. The specific gravity was 0.998 and the pH was 3.3. I corked 25 bottles. One was a 1.5-liter bottle. Mary and I drank the 600 mls of leftover wine. This is by far the best pear wine I've made, mainly because I used dark raisins, instead of golden raisins. The flavor is very good...richer tasting and more mellow. With aging, it should be an excellent wine.
- Katie sent videos of part of the ceremonial Iditarod Sled Dog Race start at the Chester Creek Trail in Anchorage. She said, "they called it a trailgate party."






















