Weather | 2/2, cloudy, 27°, 37° | 2/3, cloudy, 19°, 30°
| 2/4, sunny, 9°, 29° | 2/5, cloudy, 19°, 47° | 2/6, sunny, 37°, 46° | 2/7, sunny, 16°, 36°
| 2/8, p. cloudy, 21°, xx° |
- Monday, 2/2: Warmer Temps & Fly Tying
- Most of the snow that's covered the ground for several days melted with warmer temperatures.
- Mary and I walked Cooper around the west field and down Bobcat Trail. Under a tall oak tree halfway down Bobcat Trail, we found bits from honey comb on the snow. Some animal found and tore apart a beehive.
- We cut back Cooper's food to three cups a day. His ribs aren't showing so much and we're probably more at a maintenance feeding amount, now.
- I sharpened one of the chains of the big Stihl chainsaw. I also greased the clutch bearing on that saw. We bought that saw in 2009. Steady maintenance keeps it going strong.
- I heard trumpeter swans and saw four cackling geese fly overhead while doing evening chores. Mary heard Canada geese to the north.
- I attended the eighth and final online fly tying class where we tied three flies. They were the zug bug, the case caddis, and the midge. The last fly was extremely small! TJ, one of the instructors, went through all of the flies we created through the eight classes, detailing how to fish each one. This series of classes was the best in all fly tying classes I've attended.
- Mary started an extremely rough sketch of a future house. I looked up charts for various size lumber to use as floor joists to gain strong floors.
- Tuesday, 2/3: High Water Bill Shock
- The water bill that came in yesterday's mail was a shocker. They claimed that we owed over $1200 and used 81,000 gallons of water in one month. The date listed of when they read the meter was June 4, 2025. I looked it up and if you put 81,000 gallons in a tank, it would be 36 feet in diameter and 21 feet high. Mary said, "I wonder when we installed the Olympic swimming pool in the midst of subzero temperatures...polar bear dip, anyone?" I opened the cover to the underground meter near our outdoor hydrant and recorded the reading, then called the water district office. The woman I talked to said the reason for the goofy bill was that our monthly readings have been estimated for several months and someone would have to come to our place and get a reading. I gave her today's numbers off the meter. She thanked me and said she would call me right back once she figured out the correct amount. That call was at 11:30 a.m. Since I never had a call back, I called the office at 3:15 p.m. asking if she figured out the correct bill amount. She said it's been a very busy day, which indicates they had a major goof up in all of the bills that were sent out and most all customers were calling the office. The correct amount was a two digit number, instead of a four digit figure. I've suspected for about a year that the new readers that they installed a couple years ago, which were supposed to be read automatically at their office, weren't working. Amounts of water that we supposedly used each month remained the same, even though we use significantly more water in summer months for watering gardens. This billing snafu proved that point.
- While Mary finished dusting books, I sharpened the second chain of the big Stihl chainsaw.
- I started reworking house plan drawings, drawing a 24x78 foot rectangle. It looks like a mobile home. We'll see how this looks with rooms drawn into the plan. We've worked and reworked house plans for over a decade. We need to get beyond the "plans" stage!
- Wednesday, 2/4: Jassid Fly Tying & Garlic Wine Decision
- Mary and I did accounting things this morning. I balanced the checkbook and she paid the bills.
- I walked Cooper around the west field and Bobcat Trail at noon. He already knows the trails very well. Bobcat is a vague trail that was cleared years ago, but Cooper stopped where we always stop and turned to retrace his steps. He's a quick learner. Mary and I walked Cooper in the evening on a loop around the north field.
- I tied two versions of the Jassid dry fly (see photo, below). In one I used a hen chicken's breast feather and light brown thread. The other involved a white feather and white thread. After tying them, I looked online. Jassid is a family name for leaf hoppers. A correctly tied Jassid fly has much smaller wings than what we were taught in the fly tying class. The Jassid fly was first developed in 1952. Mary worked on a cross stitch project while I tied these flies.
- Since I'm late at making garlic wine, and from past experience, when I make this wine by this time of the year, its taste isn't as good, we decided to forgo making garlic wine this year. We figured out that we need 26 bottles for cooking purposes until I make a batch in early December, which is the exact number of garlic wine bottles we currently have in stock.
- Thursday, 2/5: Chainsaw Sharpening & Splitting Firewood
- A fly tying order I placed a few days ago with J. Stockard in Connecticut showed up in California this morning. It's the second time this has happened. An former order went to Florida. Someone or some machine in the Springfield, MA post office needs an education in U.S. geography.
- I sharpened both chains of the small Stihl chainsaw and greased its clutch bearing. I also checked the chain on the Stihl chainsaw pruner. It's still sharp. All three Stihl saws have different sized chains. I need to get proper sharpening equipment for the two smaller saws.
- I split the rest of the firewood sitting next to the woodsplitter in the machine shed. All of the red oak was damp, so it went into a crisscross stack on the inside of the machine shed's north wall. One wheelbarrow load of ash firewood went into the woodshed. The rest was damp and went into a quick heap in front the the splitter. I'll stack it tomorrow.
- Outside temperatures are higher, so we're back to vacuuming bugs in our house...yuck!
- Cooper had a good day, today. He sometimes veers back to poor behavior, but then he thinks about things after corrections and gets better. Chasing cats is a major no-no. Biting human hands is another. Knocking food bowls out of kilter prior to eating is a really big mistake. But today there was none of that. He learns fast.
- Friday, 2/6: Wind, Waffles, & Tying Flies
- With a strong north northwest wind Mary filled the clotheslines with laundry.
- When we walked Cooper around the west field, we found bright yellow feathers on Bobcat Trail. Mary thinks they are from a yellow-shafted northern flicker. She thinks it was killed by a Cooper's hawk.
- Trumpeter swans are still with us, but in lower numbers.
- I put split ash firewood in a crisscross stack along the inside northern side of the machine shed.
- I cooked waffles for our midday meal.
- I added rooms to our recent house plans.
- I ordered two used fly tying books through Thrift Books. They are The Orvis Fly Patterns Index by John R. Harder and The Book of Fly Patterns by Eric Leiser.
- I tied two versions of the Zug Bug fly that we learned in the recent class. This fly pattern was created by Cliff Zug of Pennsylvania in the 1930s. Its tail is made of three strands of iridescent green peacock swords that shimmer similar to a green bug. It's supposed to resemble a caddis larvae. I changed colors of feathers, tinsel, and thread in the flies I tied today (see below). I think the fish in Bass Pond will really chomp onto these flies.

Zug Bugs tied in class (left) & today (center & right). Feathers on today's flies
came from our chickens. Shiny tinsel in today's bodies came from a JoAnn closeout sale.
- Saturday, 2/7: Bill Has a New Job
- We walked Cooper to Wood Duck Pond. We could hear ice on the pond creaking and groaning as it expanded with the sun's heat. There were deer tracks going across that ice.
- We suspect that Cooper is actually growing a bit taller besides filling out. If that's the case, he's a lot younger than two years old. He still eats like a Tasmanian Devil, but Mary has him holding a sit for 30 seconds while the full dog food dish is sitting in front of him prior to eating.
- Mary heard and saw three different red-shouldered hawks at the same time when she let chickens out of the coop around 10 a.m. It seems to be a type of bird we're seeing with greater numbers.
- Mary vacuumed a bunch of bugs. Higher temperatures brings out more Asian ladybugs and flies.
- Bill called around noon after he took a tour of the facility with the owner of DCRS Solutions, a company in Maryland Heights (a St. Louis suburb) that sells point of sale card readers. He was offered a logistics specialist position which involves being in charge of incoming and outgoing shipping, keeping track of inventory, along with other duties. Bill is going to okay the offer by Monday. The position fits his prior background perfectly. Bill's last day with his prior job was on Jan. 9th. It only took him 29 days to find a new job.
- I looked for firewood in the west woods southwest of the house and found several dead trees. I found two dead mulberry trees and went back with the tractor and trailer. I cut up one of these mulberries. This yellow wood is extremely hard and produces excellent heat in the woodstove. My new small lithium battery driven chainsaw pruner is great at trimming off branches I missed with the big chainsaw that are protruding off pieces of firewood.
- An order came in today's mail to Mary from 123stitch.com with a bunch of cross stitch stuff. Included in it were three bead storage containers where I can store beads I use for fly tying.
- I watched a bunch of videos from the Winter Olympics on YouTube. I like this viewing much better than seeing it on broadcast TV, because I can pick what I want to watch instead of seeing figure skating ad nauseam. I watched several women's hockey games, women's speed skating (won by an Italian in record setting time), women's ski jumping, women's cross-country skiathon (gold and bronze went to two Swedish women who come from the same town), and men's downhill (insane speeds).
































