Weather | 7/6, sunny, 65°, 85° | 7/7, sunny, 65°, 85°
| 7/8, sunny, 63°, 87° | 7/9, cloudy, 68°, 87° | 7/10, cloudy, 66°, 88° | 7/11, 0.81" rain, cloudy, 65°, xx°
| 7/12, xx°, xx° |
- Monday, 7/6: Berry Picking & Mowing
- Mary picked 2.5 quarts of blackberries. We now have a total of 7.5 quarts of this year's blackberries in the freezer. The north field berry patches are developing into a big berry producing area.
- Mary noticed today as the first day of dog day cicadas, or annual cicadas, that come out at the start of the dog days of summer.
- Mary heard chimney swift babies peeping as she walked by the chimney on the second floor landing.
- Mary's Merlin app on her cell phone picked up a great-tailed grackle call. She said it's rare for this bird to be here.
- Blue vervain is blooming in the north field.
- I mowed up a bucket of clover and poured it out over about half of the floor in the chick side of the coop. By late afternoon, the chicks polished off all but a couple leaves of that green clover.
- I mowed between the far garden and the compost bins, outside of the far garden, and between the far garden fences. My next chore is trimming grass under the electric fence wires so I can turn on the far garden electric fence. Mary has tomato and tomatillo plants that are turning into vines and need to be planted. Grass mulch went around the planted raspberries and under the Empire apple tree.
- A small fawn, which could barely look out over the grass, jumped up just east of the far garden when I first starting mowing. It looked at me for a few minutes, then bounced off to the east.
- Every evening Cooper is outside with me when I wash up chicken waterers. We walk to the south orchard where I dump the waste water around apple trees. Cooper loves tagging along and usually finds a bunny to chase.
- Tuesday, 7/7: Berries & Frustrated Trimming
- Mary picked more blackberries, which is a hot job. She froze an additional 1.5 quarts, giving us a total of 8.75 quarts in the freezer.
- Mary counted 15 Shrubby St. John's Wart plants in the north field. It's going to be quite an area of bushes.
- Our sky was bright blue today.
- Mary heard a wood thrush in the north woods. It's the first of this year.
- I used the string trimmer to take down weeds and grass under the far garden electric fence. When the nylon string sits all winter in the trimmer, it dries and becomes brittle. I restrung the trimmer several dozen times, only getting about three-fourths around the outside of the fence. At one point I only moved six inches between string breaks. In frustration, I quit after several cuss words. I read online that the nylon trimmer string is hygroscopic and should be stored in a sealed bag with a wet sponge. I threw the coil of trimmer string in a bucket of water to soak.
- The stars were brilliant when we walked Cooper on his last outing. The Milky Way looked like steam in the night sky.
- Wednesday, 7/8: Shopping, Picking & Whacking
- Mary picked about 1.5 quarts of blackberries from four of the five locations on our property. We now have 10 quarts of new blackberries in the freezer.
- She saw a doe deer in the south field. Mary said wild petunias and partridge peas are now blooming.
- I drove to Quincy, mainly to pick up two of my prescriptions. I bought a few other supplies that were running low.
- I worked on the Stihl trimmer. I had to rev it all of the time to keep it running yesterday. I checked the spark plug. It looked fine, but I cleaned it with a wire brush, nonetheless. I removed the spark arrestor screen in the muffler. It was clogged with carbon. I cleaned it with a torch and a wire brush. After I greased the head, I added new nylon string that soaked overnight in a bucket of water. The trimmer started and idled like normal. It ran much better. The string only snapped of four times, which was much better than the 24 times it broke off yesterday.
- I whacked more of the weeds and grass from far garden's electric fence, finishing all of the outside and trimming the inside of the south end and halfway down the east side.
- Bare ground is cracking everywhere. We're drying out. It means daily watering is required to sustain garden plants.
- A new hatch of fireflies flashed just overhead of grass as twilight fell.
- Cooper can count. He loves any orange product. Mary and I each ate two mandarins this evening for dessert. Cooper usually gets one slice per mandarin. After Mary tossed the second slice to the puppy, he came right over to me. I only gave him one slice, because I was a pig and ate all of the first mandarin. Cooper stared at me for the longest time. I finally laid down in his stuffed chair with a big sigh.
- Thursday, 7/9: Berries & Whacking
- Mary was back on the berry trail and picked an additional quart of blackberries. There are now 11 quarts of 2026 berries in the freezer.
- While picking berries near the ponds in the northeast berry patch, Mary heard the sound of great blue herons, then she saw two of them flying low over her head. "I've never seen one land in a tree," Mary said. It did quite a balancing act before the tree top settled down under its weight. The other one flew real low over Mary's head.
- Contrary to what we see in all of the news reports, we are not seeing as many ticks as during other summer seasons. On Mary's first berry-picking venture today, she came back with no ticks, even though she heard nearby deer.
- I whacked the rest of the tall weeds and grass under the electric fence wires in the far garden. The trimmer's nylon string broke about 10 times, usually when taking out thick stalks on plants such as thistles. I also mowed the inside of the near far garden and dumped those grass clippings under the Empire apple tree. Empire is a very wide tree, so a large amount of mulch is required to cover the ground under it.
- Rabbits are taking over our yard. Everywhere you look, you see two or three bunnies at once.
- I watched a video of a meeting in Hurdland (35 miles west of us) of concerned users of the water district we get our water from. Hurdland residents are mad. The water district acquired the Hurdland sewer system with the promise of upgrading it to proper standards. They received grant funds, moved that grant money over to help pay for water district needs, and have never performed Hurdland sewer upgrades in the past 10 years. When the residents asked for financial records, they were denied. A newly-elected board member was also denied financial records access. The Hurdland group is gathering signatures to petition the state auditor for a complete audit of the water district. They're also complaining about bills that are guesses on water usage, a practice that we've suspected for a couple years.
- Friday, 7/10: Blackberries, Bobwhite & Cleaning Fence
- It was another blackberry day for Mary. We now have 12.5 quarts of new berries in the freezer.
- About 12 to 15 northern Bobwhite quail youngsters flew out of the tall grass near the Macintosh apple tree in the north yard when Mary walked back home from picking her first round of berries. She said they burst from the grass like popcorn, flying in all directions. Mama was calling them back immediately.
- The Merlin app on Mary's phone picked up the song of a cliff swallow and blue-gray gnatcatcher. These are the first of these two birds for the year.
- Ironweed is starting to bloom.
- I sharpened a pair of old pruning shears that I use for cutting grass, weeds, and persimmon saplings. The shears must be completely disassembled in order to use a file on the blade, then put together in the correct order. I goofed up on assembling it initially and had to take it apart a second time before I got it right.
- I cleaned weeds and grass from the inside and outside of the rabbit fence made of chicken wire on the south end of the near far garden. By cleaning this all up, I can prop up sections of this fencing that were stomped down by deer and add stakes to keep the bottom of the fence tight to the ground. Without this fence secured, rabbits invade and eat garden plants.
- Rain started falling at around 5:30 p.m., when we ended our evening chores. It's the first rain we received in July.












