Weather | 4/20, sunny, 32°, 66° | 4/21, sunny, 54°, 77°
| 4/22, cloudy, 57°, 78° | 4/23, p. cloudy, 54°, 83° | 4/24, 0.55" rain, 54°, 68° | 4/25, sunny, 42°, xx°
| 4/26, xx°, xx° |
- Monday, 4/20: Mowing, Mowing, Mowing...Keep Those Mowers Rolling!
- There was widespread frost on the ground this morning, with a low of 32°.
- I noticed an oak tree that blew down near the beginning of Bobcat Trail that would make good firewood.
- Mary and I both mowed. I mowed the lane, the east yard between the house and the lane and most of the south yard. Mary mowed between the sheds and the west yard.
- Mary put grass mulch around the two new bushes, the rhubarb, and the raspberry transplants. I added grass mulch to the south row in the near garden.
- I noticed rabbit chewings on the new strawberry plants, so Mary added old laced curtains over the strawberry containers and held them in place with several clothes pins.
- We heard a wild turkey gobble to the east northeast in the late afternoon. Today is the first day of spring turkey hunting season.
- I watched Game 1 of the Edmonton Oilers/Anaheim Ducks NHL game. The Oilers won 4-3.
- Tuesday, 4/21: Mowing & Birth Certificate
- On the noontime walk with Cooper around the north field, I noticed the spring green color of the leaves on the honey locust trees (see photo, below). This tree's pea-like leaves arrive with a distinct yellow-green color.
- Mary mowed the area directly north of the house, which is the worst lawn to mow, due to mounds built up by moles digging in the earth. She also mowed the east lawn across the lane from the house. I mowed the rest of the south lawn and the south orchard. Mary progressed with grass mulch on the south row of the near garden and I put mulch around five of the eight small apple trees in the south orchard.
- I also added baling twine to the Antonovka and the Colville trees to keep them more upright through heavy winds.
- My birth certificate arrive in the mail from Florida. I'm now legal. For over 69 years I've been an alien blob. Now I'm a legal human. I feel better already.
- It was windy all day, but especially after dark when we heard a maple tree that's growing too close to the southwest corner of the house scratching on the outside wall. I need to cut that tree down before it damages the house.
- I finished Alexander Kent's 21st novel, For My Country's Freedom. The later novels by this guy are getting very predictable.

The bright spring leaves of a honey locust tree.
- Wednesday, 4/22: Mowing, Body Mad at Me
- Mary mowed east of the machine shed and around the grain bins. Since poison ivy is trying to take over that part of the lawn, she didn't collect any grass clippings. I mowed the western orchard path, then inside and outside of the near garden, minus between the fences.
- My body is screaming at me for pushing a mower for three straight days.
- Something ate on the newly transplanted pink lilac bush. I'm suspecting a rabbit. There are nice green leaves on the top of the Carpathian walnut sapling and the basket willow, along with all five of the transplanted raspberry plants.
- I watched two hockey games at once. They were the Oilers/Ducks and the Wild/Stars games. I'd switch between the games as one or the other went into intermission between periods. The last game went into double overtime and ended at close to 1 a.m. I was rooting for the Wild. They lost 4-3. I rooted for the Oilers in the other game. They lost 6-4. I guess I jinxed both teams.
- Thursday, 4/23: Shopping & Fly Tying
- I noticed that Circle, MT is under a blizzard warning. In texts with Mom, she said it's true, and that it's snowing and blowing. Mom said that yesterday's high was close to 90 and she had windows open with the fan on. This morning, she has the heat on.
- I drove to Quincy, mainly to pick up two prescriptions. I grabbed a few other items while in town.
- After cleaning the house, Mary finished mowing the far north yard.
- A couple rain drops fell after I returned home, but that was the end of it.
- Mary and I did a quick tour of a few transplanted items, such as the bleeding heart, basket willow, and the Carpathian walnut. All are progressing with nice green leaves appearing.
- I took in a fly tying Webex. This one featured Pat Rigby, a tech specialist at the Missouri Department of Conservation office in Kirksville, who has tied flies for over 20 years. He keyed in on making soft flies that sink. They're made with chicken hen feathers...hey, I have tons of free hen feathers! These are flies with a slim profile that are easy to make. He used yarn in the place of dubbing, "because I'm lazy," he says. The flies he makes look great and in some cases, it took him just seconds to make them. I left a comment about how his fly tying speed blew me away and he said, "Tie 10,000 flies and your speed increases." He winds the thread backwards on the hook (counterclockwise) from the way we were taught to wind it. Pat promoted trying all kinds of colors. He notices that dark patterns work better in muddy water, compared to bright and flashy flies. He uses flashy stuff in super clear water.
- I ordered a fly tying book recommended by TJ, who hosts the monthly fly tying Webex.
- Friday, 4/24: Hobby Day & Watching NHL
- We had over a half an inch of rain just after midnight. We heard it pouring on the roof while we were in bed.
- After several days of pushing lawnmowers, we decided that today is hobby day and not a work day.
- I walked Cooper on his noontime walk to Wood Duck Pond. As we were getting close, I could hear a lone turkey gobbling to the east. The normally dry creek bed was flooded and the gobble sound was coming from across the water, from the slope on the east side of the woods. I called Cooper and we went back up the trail as to not disturb the turkey. Bass Pond is full of muddy water.
- Mary cross stitched a Halloween pattern entitled, Scarie Sadie, of a black cat and bats in front of a full moon.
- I tied two soft flies (see photos, below) based on the Webex I attended yesterday. One involves red thread, one of our rooster's feathers for a tail, Kreinik (metallic thread I bought when JoAnn's went out of business) used as ribbing, and a Rhode Island red feather tied on a #12 hook with a 1X shank. The other fly involves olive thread, a turkey feather tail, Kreinik ribbing, a body of two peacock hurls, and a barred rock feather tied on a #10 hook with a 2X shank. I tied these flies in an hour and a half. Pat, who I watched on Webex, probably could have tied both of them in two minutes.
- Bill texted that he received a raise today after only two month on the job. He also was named Problem Solver of the Quarter and won a $150 gift card to the restaurant of his choice on Wednesday. His new job is an obvious good fit for him.
- An online search revealed that by typing a certain number (*3001#12345#*) on an iPhone, you can get detailed information on 5G signal strength received from the cell tower. I went around the house searching for the strongest signal and found it in the upstairs south bedroom near the top of the south wall. At that point, it was equivalent to three bars of 5G. I leaned a six-foot step ladder against the inside of that wall in the bedroom and put the modem on it. This gave me an uninterrupted signal to the laptop hooked to the TV located downstairs in the living room. This is the modern version of wiggling a rabbit ear antenna on top of your television, circa 1972.
- I watched Game 3 of the Ducks/Oilers Stanley Cup Playoffs. Anaheim won, 7-4. They deserved to win. Edmonton played the worst game I've ever seen them play. They're not going to make it beyond Round 1, if they continue on their current path. The Ducks are ahead in that series, two games to one.
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Soft fly with red thread & dark feathers. |
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| Soft fly with olive thread and white feathers. |
















