Weather | 5/11, sunny, 46°, 78° | 5/12, sunny, 53°, 80°
| 5/13, sunny, 51°, 71° | 5/14, sunny, 45°, 74° | 5/15, p. cloudy, 55°, xx° | 5/16, xx°, xx°
| 5/17, xx°, xx° |
- Monday, 5/11: Turned On Electric Fence
- Mary heard the deep buzzing sound of the wing beats of a ruby-throated hummingbird when she took the tomato starts outside. She knows that distinct sound from past years of hummingbirds flying nearby. It was the first of the season.
- Mary started cutting garlic scapes. She cut four. More to come
- Mary weeded half of the strawberry plants in the near garden.
- A couple days ago, gnats started appearing. They really love me. Mary says she doesn't notice them until I show up next to her outside. I'm wearing a headnet, now.
- I checked all fence posts in the near garden. I thought they would be loose, but they were solid. I replaced one gate wire that was rusty. I then pulled the 11 electric fence wires tight, cutting off lengths of excess wire in each case. I plugged in the electric fencer unit, made a couple small adjustments, and saw the unit go to full strength.
- I watched Game 4 of the Avalanche/Wild playoff series. Colorado won 5-2. They now lead the series three games to one. I rooted for the losing team, again!
- Tuesday, 5/12: Near Garden Work
- Mary finished weeding the strawberry containers. She found a walnut that sprouted in one of these buckets. The strawberry plant had one leaf that touched the walnut plant. It was yellow and crispy, as if it was slightly burnt. It's from the power of walnuts. They give off a chemical that kills other plants.
- Mary mowed the east yard for grass mulch, which she put around all of the strawberry plants.
- I mowed up the tall dead grass and weeds that I pulled and cut next to the chicken wire fence of the near garden and then mowed inside and outside of that garden.
- I also cleaned tall grass and weeds from around all of the strawberry tubs and buckets.
- Mary watched the arrival barn swallows that were playing around in the wind. She then turned south and saw a turkey hen looking at her from near the Sargent crabapple tree. When the turkey realized she was spotted by Mary, she flew up and over the hazelnut bushes and to the west.
- Wednesday, 5/13: Mowing & Mowing
- Mary mowed the chicken yard. It was a dusty mess. We're drying out. The clay soil is either soggy, with water sitting on top, or cracked and dusty. There is no in between.
- I mowed the lane. A quarter-mile lane plus six roundtrips with the mower equals a three-mile hike. The newer mower I operate has its own power, which makes mowing easier.
- We both mowed down emerging poison ivy plants. Each mowing drops back the number of plants until they are finally killed off.
- I watched the Colorado Avalanche beat the Minnesota Wild, 4-3, in overtime, knocking the Wild out of the playoffs. The Wild led 3-0 at the end of the first period, but that was the end of their energy for the rest of the game. The winning overtime goal was scored by a former Edmonton Oiler, Brett Kulak. Right after the game ended, Bill texted, "Well, poop." If you want a team to lose, just let me root for it. I can kill off any team's chances.
- Thursday, 5/14: Mowing, Again
- I originally was planning on going to town, mainly to buy apples that we slice up and put on our oatmeal breakfast, but then I realized that we have frozen applesauce made from our own apples. I decided to stay home.
- Mary mowed the north yard and the trails to the gate at the top of Bramble Hill. Mary reports that the blackberry patch between Bass and Dove Ponds is full of blossoms.
- I mowed the south yard and the south orchard, collecting grass clippings that went around three smaller apple trees. The south orchard's ground is extremely bumpy. Mowing it feels like bouncing across a newly plowed field full of huge lumps. Actually, I plowed that area in 2010 with the Ford Jubilee tractor that we no longer own and the plow ridges are still showing...what was I thinking?
- The swamp dogwoods along our lane are blooming early. They're usually blooming in June.
- Mulberry fruits are starting to turn pink, which will be appreciated by the birds.
- Only three cherries are showing on the big cherry tree, which normally is filled with fruit. Absolutely no fruit is on the sweet cherry tree. All blossoms froze at 3° on March 17th.
- Mary spotted the ruby-throated hummingbird defending his comfrey territory, which is too big for the frenzied bird to patrol.
- The bleeding heart plant that we put under the Four Brothers trees in the north yard is growing big and beautiful. It has no bug bites and no animal munch marks. It's perfect for the location, where the insects and the nasty bunnies roam (see photos, below).
- I viewed multiple images on Facebook showing the horrible dust storms throughout the Hi-Line of Montana.
The first of the bleeding heart blossoms. |
![]() |
| The bleeding heart plant fits right in under the trees. |




















