Weather | 4/6, cloudy to sleet, 39°, 55° | 4/7, snow to rain, 0.35" moisture, 30°, 47°
| 4/8, p. cloudy, 40°, 73° | 4/9, p. cloudy, 49°, 77° | 4/10, 0.51" rain to cloudy, 45°, 53° | 4/11, cloudy, 43°, xx°
| 4/12, xx°, xx° |
- Monday, 4/6: Dandy Wine Collection & Near Garden Prep
- I looked online whether using whole dandelion flowers that included the green base (calyx) of the blossom is okay for making dandelion wine. It's not, because too much green makes the wine too bitter. However, a tiny bit of green improves the wine's taste. So, I don't need to be so touchy about keeping absolutely any green parts out of dandelion petal collection.
- I picked six dozen dandy flowers in about an hour's time. Several more days of picking are in my future, but it goes a little faster, now.
- I cleaned dead weeds and grass out of part of the chicken wire fence line that keeps rabbits out of the near garden. It amounted to about a third of that fence. I then mowed the weeds up and threw them away...too many weed seed heads to compost that stuff.
- While Mary was hanging out laundry to dry, she heard the tapping of a yellow-bellied sapsucker. Today's Cornell Ornithology online newsletter showed how to identify woodpeckers by their tapping rhythm as they peck tree branches, giving Mary the opportunity to identify this bird that migrates through our property.
- For a portion of this afternoon, weather websites showed that we had the worst air quality of anywhere in the world. I looked up where testing sites are located and for us, the nearest facility is a lake north of the Iowa/Missouri border. Our air was just fine. Maybe someone idled a diesel truck next to the sensor's air intake.
- Mary heard turkey gobbles in property west of us when she walked Cooper around the west field.
- Every spring, narcissus flowers bloom north of the machine shed near the north wood's edge. They were planted by someone who lived here before we arrived on this property. Mary took a photo of one of the blossoms (see below). The brown tips of the leaves indicate when our low temperature hit 3° on March 17th.
- When I walked Cooper at night, rain and sleet were falling. Fortunately, Cooper walks very fast, so time spent walking him goes quickly.

An old-fashioned Poet's Narcissus blossom.
- Tuesday, 4/7: Ordering Clothes
- Mary and I ordered some clothes. We're finding the best prices by ordering directly from the manufacturers. For instance, I bought my current Dickies coveralls in 2009 from JCPenney. Today I ordered from Dickies for significantly less money than the price quoted at Penneys.
- Mary cross stitched while I looked for socks online to no avail. I refuse to pay $30-$60 for one pair of socks!
- I checked the water meter, since our water bill has been exactly the same for the past three billing cycles and unusually high for this time of the year. Since I checked it the first week in February, we used about 5,000 gallons over two months, yet we're being charged for using 4,000 gallons each month. The rural water folks obviously don't read their own meters and just estimate usage on the high side. I'm calling them tomorrow.
- Every spring, a phoebe builds a nest in the wood shed, which is a metal Quonset hut. Summer heat from sun hitting the metal is usually too hot for young chicks. The bird nests fall down each winter, yet each spring a new one appears. For the past few days, mud and moss were brought in to build this phoebe nest. It's located lower on the angle iron roof support, so maybe it will miss the heat from the metal surface above it.
- We watched two movies that we haven't seen in years. They were Hidden Figures (2016), and Men in Black: International (2019).
- Wednesday, 4/8: Water Agreement
- Southwest wind gusts blew to over 40 mph, today.
- I called the Knox County Public Water District #1 office. They supply us with our water. They are fine with us calling in the meter reading each month. They determine bills on the 24th of every month, so I'll call in the reading on the 23rd of the month.
- I picked only two dozen dandelion blossoms today.
- The o-rings I ordered a couple days ago arrived in today's mail. When I replaced the o-ring on the oil cap of the large Stihl chainsaw, I discovered that my new o-rings were too small. I ordered the wrong size, so I reordered the correct size.
- I ordered two new air filters for older push lawnmower.
- Mary is pretty sure that a bluebird is nesting in a hole that was drilled into the weeping willow tree stump by a downy woodpecker this winter.
- With Cooper, I can point and say "We're going this way," after walking out the front door and he runs off in the correct direction. He's the first dog to understand directions with the pointing of my finger. Former pups that we owned would go off in any direction. Klondike was almost certain to run in the opposite direction.
- Mary prepared a shopping list for tomorrow's visit to Quincy.
- Thursday, 4/9: Interesting Books
- We shopped. The highlights are:
- The Quincy Friends of the Library held their semi-annual book sale. Mary had to attend, of course. We only filled two canvas bags with nine books and paid $4 at 50 cents an inch. Most books were very large and heavy.
- I made copies of the application to Florida for my birth certificate at Staples. Later in the day, we sent it out at Quincy's main U.S. Post Office.
- On our Walmart visit, we noticed that they are making additional changes, which seem to be good improvements. For instance, they've expanded their crafts area and the sporting goods department. There are also more pet supplies. It's a better store, now.
- Today was a test for Cooper. We left him alone at home for just over six hours and he didn't destroy anything. He did move Mary's hand cream container kept under the chair near our bed, but he didn't bite into it and only moved it to the hallway just outside our bedroom. He was a good boy. Although Gandalf was swatting at Cooper at dinnertime. We're guessing that Cooper ran around the house all day in a fuss while looking out windows and by evening, Gandalf was sick and tired of the dog.
- We heard loud music to the south, this evening. We also heard four-wheelers roaring around. The city folks from St. Louis are here and David Marquette, who lives to the south of us next to where the visitors camp, is playing his music loud to annoy them. This weekend is the youth turkey hunting season.
- During the evening, we looked at the books that we bought today. A book about canoes looks very interesting, as does the Heritage of America Cookbook. Mary spotted a recipe in it for a black walnut filling bread called potica that her father's mother used to make. Mary says it tastes wonderful. Two other interesting books were Wildflowers of Illinois Woodlands and the Missouri Breeding Bird Atlas: 1986-1992.
- Friday, 4/10: Bug Bite & Katie at Palmer Career Day
- Mary was bit four times on her left arm by a small assassin bug. She immediately took Benadryl and put ice on the area. The bites raised a big welt on her upper arm, putting her out of commission for the day. She repeated the Benadryl and ice treatment in the evening hours.
- On my walk with Cooper around the north field, we stopped at Bass Pond where a little blue heron took off. Cooper acted different today. He came back to me regularly, checking to make sure I stuck around, a result of leaving him home alone with four cats, yesterday. Cooper ran a squirrel up a tree when we returned home and then looked up several trees to try to find the squirrel.
- I make waffles every Friday, which was great today, because it meant Mary didn't have to spend time in the kitchen.
- I picked blossoms from four dozen dandelion flowers.
- Mary and I watched the Artemis II splashdown.
- Katie was at the Palmer Career Day and was filmed by two news organizations. She said that she was demonstrating how to operate a circular saw in the KTUU News video (1st video, below) and she was showing how to lay out studs on the top and bottom plates for framing in the Alaska News Link video (2nd video below). Here are the video links:











