Weather | 6/22, 0.02" rain, cloudy to sunny, 57°, 74° | 6/23, sunny, 53°, 79°
| 6/24, p. cloudy, 60°, 80° | 6/25, 0.11" rain, cloudy, 65°, 80° | 6/26, 0.76" rain, 63°, 67° | 6/27, 0.02" rain, 64°, 75°
| 6/28, 0.16" rain overnight, sunny, 69°, xx° |
- Monday, 6/22: Near Garden Planting is Done
- I mowed the exceedingly tall grass growing around the compost bins. Then I mowed outside of the electric fence on the east and north sides of the far garden. Two passes were required in tall grass.
- Mary planted 17 pepper plants, 10 hills of sweet potatoes, and four hills of cucumbers to finish all planting in the near garden. She planted in an industrial method...dug all holes at once, added all compost, all wood ash, then planted to finish it up. It makes planting go faster.
- She reported that there are lots of earthworms in the near garden.
- I took in a Missouri Department of Conservation Webex about butterflies in Missouri. The naturalist presenting this piece is Austin Lambert, from the Runge Conservation Nature Center in Jefferson City. I've listened to him before. He's very good. He had a little test at the beginning of the talk in identifying whether different specimens were butterflies or moths. Some were very tricky. From my elementary school years, when I delved into entomology in 4-H, I remember the difference between moth and butterfly antennae, so I got a perfect score. Austin showed how numbers of certain types of butterflies have dropped in recent years. He then outlined how to boost numbers, such as being a lazy gardener by leaving plants after they die. We're really good at that! It was a good session.
- After the webex, I went outside with Cooper to put the mower away. Three bunnies took off in three different directions at the machine shed. He didn't know which way to go. When he saw the tip of a fallen tree branch on the ground that still had leaves on it, Cooper was so worked up he pounced on the branch, thinking it was a live animal.
- I had a small glass of autumn olive wine made in 2022. It once had a strong alcoholic taste. It's quite good, now, after aging for four years. Mary had a small glass of jalapeƱo wine. She likes it as a slow sipping wine.
- We heard a barred owl calling from the electric pole just southeast of the house while reading books, tonight.
- Tuesday, 6/23: More #@%! Mowing
- Mary mowed the east yard just beyond the lane and used the grass clippings to mulch what she planted yesterday. Now the near garden is ready for the heat, which is predicted starting on Sunday.
- Mary ran into a lot of poison ivy on the east edge of the east lawn that has moved further into the lawn. She dumped those clippings around the Granny Smith apple tree, where we won't be rifling through it with our hands to plant or pick anything. If we mowed more often (ha, ha, ha...what a funny thought), the poison ivy would die back in all of our lawns.
- Mary kept seeing "Houdini Hen" in the west yard.
- I clipped tree branches and some small saplings that were invading into the path between the near and far gardens and along the west side of the far garden. I took about six wheelbarrow loads away and piled the branches just south of the compost bins.
- I mowed the west area outside of the electric fence of the far garden. Then, I mowed between the electric and chicken wire fences at the north end of that garden, or what we call the far far garden. This is an area that wasn't mowed yet this year, so the grass was tall and thick with old dead grass from last year. It also has areas where the chicken wire fence is leaning outward, requiring me to hold that fence up with one hand and push the mower forward with the other hand...a sure method for gaining sore and tired muscles. The next order of business is fence work, activating the electric fence, and tightening up the chicken wire fencing.
- Wednesday, 6/24: A Hair Cut for Mary
- I cut Mary's hair, today. It was overdue. Her last haircut was in February.
- I straightened the southwest and southeast corner posts of the far garden. The southwest post only needed a new brace wire, because the old one rusted off at the bottom. The southeast post needed all new brace wires and repositioning of the support poles. The ground is extremely wet. When I wiggled the metal posts, a squishy sound came from the earth.
- I noticed that the small Sargent saplings that I transplanted last year into the south orchard are booming with new growth.
- When we walked Cooper on his final outing, the tree frogs in the oak trees around Bluegill Pond were in full chorus.
- Mary put together a shopping list for tomorrow.
- Thursday, 6/25: Shopping in Quincy
- On Cooper's first walk of the day, we saw a doe and fawn deer run off across the south field and into the west woods. Cooper also flushed a Bob White quail from under a cedar tree.
- Mary and I left for Quincy, IL, around 10:30 a.m. to go shopping. We got back around 4:30 p.m. and not a single thing was disturbed in the house. Cooper was a good boy while we were gone, so he got three treats.
- I bought more more fly tying stuff...some popsicle sticks from Walmart to help me make transparent dragonfly wings, and several colors of mesh tubing from Dollar Tree to make mesh tube darter flies. At Aldi, we were stopped and told we can't buy more than one case of canned beans, because they are limited on quantities from their supplier. The Aldi store was our second shopping stop. Before leaving town, I dropped back into Aldi and bought a second case of beans. I'm a bad boy.
- A vast improvement in Quincy is a newly paved stretch of Broadway. Quincy has some exceedingly rough streets. The latest mayor of Quincy campaigned on fixing street potholes and beat the then incumbent mayor. She's fulfilling her promise, making for a much smoother drive around town.
- I took in a Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) Virtual Vise online class on tying jigs. This was taught by Sarah Gaines, a new MDC employee in the Ozark area. She's been tying flies since she was a teenager and showed three very simple jigs she makes commercially and sells to fly fishing people who fish the trout streams in the Ozarks. The initial part of her discussion detailed how to use powdered paint in coloring jig heads. Fishing lures and jigs painted with powdered paint is more durable than those painted with liquid paint. Her jigs were extremely simple. Sarah says they're proven as excellent at attracting fish. She had simple descriptions for fly tying actions, such as the initial wrapping of a bed of thread on the hook shank in a clockwise direction. Sarah would say, "put the thread on like you're eating a bowl of cereal," in other words, use the same clockwise motion as you're lifint a spoon to your mouth. It was a great session.
- There was more moisture in the air while walking Cooper on his final outing, so more fireflies were dancing in the trees.
- Friday, 6/26: Fishing Jigs
- It rained all day, giving us about 3/4 inch of moisture. Outside is soggyville. The chicken yard is a mud pond. Mushrooms are sprouting. Weird gray shoots are sprouting atop the compost pile. It's swimmingly nice.
- Mary cross stitched for about two hours.
- I dug around in all of the lure materials I own and came up with some jigs. Most of mine have an extended lead collar to help hold a plastic tail. For fly tying a jig, I need the type without a collar...o-o-h...more things to buy! I used the wrong type of jigs, anyway, and tied the three fishing jigs that Sarah went through in yesterday's class (see photos, below). They were fun to create. I can fish these with a light spinning rod and reel.
- The Antonovka apple tree in the south orchard was flopping around in the wind, so just before nightfall, I tied it back up in three places. The baling twine wears off against the rough rebar stake. I probably need to use wire covered with a rubber hose instead of that twine.
- After some research, we bought an EcoFlow non-gas battery-powered solar generator that comes with two solar panels. Due to Amazon's Prime Days, it was on sale for 61 percent off. We bought it directly from the manufacturer's website. This gives us a way to power up various appliances, such as freezers and the refrigerator during extended power outages. I can also use it for operating corded power tools without running miles of extension cords. Plus, there is no worry of carbon monoxide poisoning by running a gas or diesel fuel generator.
- When Mary walked to the rain gauge to get the rain amount with Cooper, a doe was on the lane and approached her and the dog. Mary whistling softly and she started stomping her front feet at Mary. The deer ran off to the east when Mary whistled louder.
A tinsel jig using Kreinik thread I bought from JoAnn. |
| A rubber legged jig. The legs flutter out behind the jig in water. |
- Saturday, 6/27: First Day of Picking Blackberries
- Mary picked blackberries. She put about a third of a quart into the freezer. There are lots of red berries everywhere that are going to ripen all at once. A new berry patch now exists north of Bluegill Pond. Blueberry patches in the north field have expanded into one big patch. In years past, you walked long distances between the various berry patches in that field. Mary said in many places she had to go through poison ivy plants that were up to her hips. There are lots of different wild flowers, but not many pollinators. She thought she stepped on a yellow jacket nest in the south field. She heard buzzing and decided she wasn't sticking around to find out what she stepped on.
- Mary reported that the American lotus plants are blooming in Bass Pond and they're quite beautiful. The water level is within a foot of our canoe parked on the south side of the pond. Water hasn't been this high in several years.
- I straightened the north corner posts of the far garden that were leaning way inward after a winter and spring of deer marching into the electric fence wires that weren't hot. The ground is very wet and squishy. I had to install four new guide wires on each of these two posts. I pounded a third of a brick into the ground just inside of each post. I loosened all of the wires surrounding the garden at the garden's southwest corner ahead of time and noticed that after I was done, all of these wires pulled out the donuts at that corner post and were on the ground. My next job is tightening up all 10 of these wires surrounding the garden and securing them.
- Recently planted cucumber seeds sprouted, today.
- Mary spotted a big doe and its fawn on the south side of the near garden at dusk. She chased them into the cedars. They were too close to the garden.
- I investigated making a powder paint pot, which is the device hooked to an aquarium air pump that aerates the powder. When you dip a heated fishing jig into the powder with air bubbling through it, the paint coats the jig head equally, giving it a uniform covering. Most pots range from $25-$50. They're just made out of 2" PVC pipe, a PVC pipe union, some PVC caps, and a three-way aquarium valve. Homemade, they cost about $3.50-$5.00. I'm going to make some.
















