Weather | 5/25, sunny, 54°, 84° | 5/26, sunny, 56°, 84°
| 5/27, sunny, 59°, 86° | 5/28, p. cloudy, 61°, 86° | 5/29, cloudy, 63°, 84° | 5/30, cloudy, 67°, 82°
| 5/31, cloudy, 67°, xx° |
- Monday, 5/25: Bill Leaves
- Bill spooked a deer while walking our lane and checking for birds on the Merlin app on his phone.
- Bill left around 2 p.m. for his apartment in St. Charles.
- I pulled all of the totes (I call them tubs) that I got yesterday out of the back of the pickup. There are actually 50 of them. I dumped out all of the dead Asian ladybugs in them and let several dry in the sun. I stacked similar sized tubs together to form three high columns and moved them with a hand truck to the machine shed, where I stored them out of the sun.
- I watched Game 3 of the NHL Eastern Conference Finals. Carolina won 3-2 in overtime. They lead Montreal two games to one.
- Mary received several photos from Katie of her visit to northern Italy. Below are a couple photos from the mountains.
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Katie with the Italian Alps in the background. |
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| Another photo of Katie in the mountains. |
- Tuesday, 5/26: Gardening & Butterflies
- Mary cut the last of the garlic scapes and announced that all of the garlic plants are ready to be harvested. She plans to start that chore tomorrow.
- Mary weeded about 3/4 of the onion plants in the near garden.
- I mowed the inside of the near far garden where the garlic grows. It was full of very tall grass and required at least two passes to effectively cut it. Mulch went on the eastern row that is currently empty.
- We now seem to be in a dry cycle with no rain predicted in the next 10 days. The air almost felt tropical while working outside.
- We're seeing several Tiger Swallowtail butterflies. Mary took a photo of one in a comfrey plant (see below).
- We heard the first green frog while walking the puppy at night. HERE is their call.
- Wednesday, 5/27: Garlic Harvest Begins
- I mowed areas outside of the near garden.
- Mary harvested two garlic varieties. They were Music Pink and German Extra Hardy. They were all in great shape, with large bulbs. Growing conditions were perfect for garlic this year. This amounts to a third of the garlic, based on variety types.
- Mary and I hung the garlic in the machine shed rafters to dry.
- We're noticing that the Porter's Perfection crabapple tree is dying. It's leaves are turning brown. The bark around its trunk was excessively chewed this spring by either a ground hog or rabbits. We want to replace it, because the apples from it are tart and very tasty.
- I watched Game 4 of the NHL Eastern Conference Finals. Carolina won, 4-0, and lead the series, 3-1. It was an extremely one-sided game. Montreal didn't get a shot on net in the third period until the last three minutes of the game.
- When I walked Cooper for his last outing, fireflies were putting on a great show over the tops of grass seed heads in the south field.
- Mary turned 60 today. I told her she now gets to see mail in the next decade trying to sell her hearing aides. She said, "WHAT?!?"
- Thursday, 5/28: Mesh Tube Darter Fly
- Mary and I took the day off from doing outside work, to let our bodies heal. We ain't the young pups we once were!
- We watched barn swallows flying to within a foot of the west living room window this morning.
- While watering the onions in the near garden at noon, Mary heard a wild turkey gobble to the east of her.
- She found our first ripe strawberry. I had the pleasure of eating it...what a wonderful taste!
- Tiny parsnip plants are popping through the ground.
- In the evening, while walking Cooper back from the mailbox, I noticed that Cooper was stalking something. Then I saw a big turkey fly from the lane and to the west.
- I took in a monthly fly tying session on making streamer flies, featuring Matt Murray, a Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) educator from the St. Louis region. Streamers are used to catch larger fish, such as bass. He tied a Clouser minnow and a Mesh Tube Darter. The second fly involves several steps that results in a very realistic minnow. Flashy dubbing goes on the hook shank in a football shape. It's covered with 3/8" wide white mesh web tubing (HERE is a link to it) that is usually used by crafty folks to make wreaths. A strip of rabbit fur goes over the top, pushing the webbed tubing down to resemble a minnow's belly, with the mesh looking like fish scales. The rabbit fur is fluffed up to resemble the dorsal fin of a fish. Two small round feathers are tied at the front to resemble pectoral fins. A plastic fish mask (HERE is a link to one), which resembles a fish head, is glued to just behind the hook's eyelet. Fake fish eyes are glued to fish mask. I bet a bass would gobble it up!
- Mary and I enjoyed a bottle of 2024 parsnip wine while we read books tonight.
- Friday, 5/29: Half of Garlic Harvested
- Mary harvested the Siberian garlic. It was a long row that filled the wheelbarrow with garlic plants and huge bulbs. After she was done and we took a drink break, we hung that batch of garlic in the rafters of the machine shed. Half of the garlic plants are harvested.
- I made a noontime meal of waffles and added mothballs to all of the bottles we keep in the pickup, riding lawnmower, and wood splitter...not at the same time, of course!
- I watched NHL hockey for last time this season. The Carolina Hurricanes beat the Montreal Canadiens, 6-1, to win the Eastern Conference Championship. The Canes play the Vegas Golden Knights in the championship series. I don't care who wins that matchup, hence the reason NHL hockey won't be on our TV, now.
- The Porter's Perfection crabapple tree is definitely dead. All of its leaves are brown. We wonder if wind from one of our thunderstorms didn't break off major roots underground. Of course, critter chewings on the trunk didn't help.
- Saturday, 5/30: Two More Garlic Varieties Harvested
- We had a FedEx package of vitamin pills coming from Swanson in Fargo, ND, today, so I cut a dead tree and branches hanging out on the lane. One is an old, thin ash tree that died and is covered with a wild grape vine that was slowly pulling down to about head height over the east side of the lane. There were also dead walnut branches that I dodge when I mow the lane, along with two green elm branches. They're gone. FedEx, who didn't use to deliver on Saturdays, arrived today.
- When I walked Cooper around noon, we encountered a snapping turtle near Bluegill Pond that was in the middle of the lane. It had a shell that was about a foot in diameter. I put Cooper on a lease immediately. On the way back home, the turtle was gone.
- Mary picked eight nice ripe strawberries...yum, yum! She's also picking black raspberries every day.
- Mary harvested two varieties of garlic. They were Georgian Crystal, and Samarkan. These are both varieties that last a long time and taste good. Mary threw away the first bulb of the whole harvest, which is amazing. Some years, she throws away four or five bulbs. This year, there are huge bulbs with all varieties. Mary and I hung them in the machine shed rafters. There is just one more variety to pull out of the ground and we're done harvesting garlic.
- I mowed tall grass partway down the east side of the far garden, adding grass mulch to the eastern row of the near far garden. It takes two passes to completely knock down this tall grass.
- Rain clouds came and went away all day, without a drop ever falling on us. We're in the dry cycle, now, when predicted rain just dries up before getting to us.
- Beautiful birds, such as Baltimore orioles, summer tanagers, rose-breasted grosbeaks, cardinals, and various woodpeckers, are eating mulberries and stealing what little we had this year of cherries. We really have a ton of colorful birds raising their young this year. Plus, three chimney swifts are heard and seen chittering about as they catch bugs in the air.
- Speaking of bugs, I noticed gnats hitting my head net while walking Cooper. Then, a dragonfly showed up to catch the bugs. Good for it!





















