Weather | 5/4, 0.16" rain, p. cloudy, 57°, 78° | 5/5, 0.06" rain, cloudy, 47°, 53°
| 5/6, p. cloudy, 43°, 58° | 5/7, sunny, 37°, 65° | 5/8, cloudy, 011" rain, 45°, 63° | 5/9, sunny, 49°, 78°
| 5/10, sunny, 45°, xx° |
- Monday, 5/8: Gardening, Day Two
- When I walked Cooper around the west field, I saw the bright blue of an indigo bunting at the end of Bobcat Trail. The north woods is wide open through the winter, but now, leaves on bushes fill the woods so that you can't see far. Some oak saplings have huge leaves that are 9-10 inches long.
- I mowed the inside and the outside of the near garden and deposited grass clippings on the south row of that garden to finish mulching it.
- I pounded persimmon stakes in the middle of 12 sections of the north chicken wire fence of the near garden to secure it to the ground. There are 10 sections left of that side of the garden, then all of the east, south, and west sides. I also used soil from an old ant hill and filled a few holes under the chicken wire fence.
- Mary planted lettuce and radishes in tubs where we normally plant winter greens. I guess we should call them summer greens, not winter greens tubs. This will hopefully be a way for us to have salad makings all summer long. Then, we'll plant winter greens in those tubs in the late summer.
- At evening chore time, Mary heard a summer tanager, so she reached for the Merlin app on her phone that identifies bird calls. From it, she identified an eastern kingbird, a red-eyed vireo, a rose-breasted grosbeak, and a northern mockingbird. These are all new birds for the season.
- We had thunderstorms briefly roll through after dark. On Cooper's last walk, we really noticed a continuous show of lightning flashing south of us.
- Tuesday, 5/5: A Day Off
- Mary wrote checks for outstanding bills and we marched them down the hill to the mailbox. Then, I balanced the checkbook.
- We took the day off, since we had a prediction of rain for today.
- We received a tiny dribble of rain equaling 0.01 inch.
- I watched Game 2 of the Avalanche/Wild NHL series. Colorado won, 5-2, and lead the series, 2-0. This year, every team is root for seems to be on the losing side...BOO...HISS!
- When we walked the puppy, Mary and I saw a firefly, which is early and odd. For for the next couple of days, we will experience cool temperatures. According to weather information, we're 10-15 degrees colder than normal temperature averages for May.
- Wednesday, 5/6: Mowing, Fence Repair & Deer
- Mary and I saw a female Baltimore oriole trying to grab fish line that we once used to surround the a small cherry tree in the west yard.
- Mary mowed between the woodshed and the machine shed and the west yard. Grass mulch went under two pear trees and four blueberry bushes.
- A great blue heron flew over Mary's head in the mid-afternoon. Usually these birds dodge away from us when they spot us. This one didn't seem to care.
- I cleaned grass and weeds from the two-foot high chicken wire fence and staked down middle sections, reaching the halfway mark of the near garden.
- Several deer arrived in our yard this evening and decided to run around and play (see videos, below). We think they were young bucks, since doe deer are busy with newborns right now.
A deer spooked a rabbit next to the near garden.
Several deer playing through the trees near the far garden.
- Thursday, 5/7: Woodpecker & Wren
- Mary mowed just north of the house. Grass mulch went under blueberry bushes to finish them off, under two apple trees, and a cherry tree.
- I cleaned grass and weeds at the chicken wire fencing of the near garden and staked down eight more sections of that rabbit fence. There are 19 sections left to finish.
- I took in a Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) Webex on orioles. It was good. We have an ideal location for these birds, which is why we see them regularly through summer months.
- Mary and I watched a red-bellied woodpecker dig wood bits out of a hole in the weeping willow stump. After a short time, a house wren perched on a nearby branch to cuss out the woodpecker (see video, below). The woodpecker ignored the wren and kept on "pat-hooing" sawdust out of the hole. It was an interesting activity to witness. (Tap the square box at bottom of the video to bring it to full size.)
Female woodpecker (middle, left) removes sawdust as wren (upper, right) yells at it.
- Friday, 5/8: Thoreau Documentary
- While drinking our morning coffee, my phone sounded off with a message that a UPS package was delivered. It turns out the package was a Mother's Day DVD gift to Mary from Katie of Ken Burn's documentary on Henry David Thoreau.
- While walking down to the get the UPS package left next to our garbage bin in a plastic bag under the big cedar tree, Mary heard the call of the first common yellowthroat warbler of the year.
- I walked Cooper around the west field and down Bobcat Trail. Below is a photo of a huge leaf on an oak sapling along that trail. Each spring, it's amazing how fast a wide-open forest transforms into a very enclosed woods with the emergence of all of the leaves on trees, saplings, and shrubs. What was once sunny and open becomes closed-in and intimate.
- While I walked Cooper, Mary took another video of the red-bellied woodpecker performing more excavation work on the weeping willow stump (see below).
- After I made a midday waffle meal, rain began falling, thereby halting our outdoor plans. Oh, darn!
- We watched the Thoreau documentary. It's quite good.
Our woodpecker friend excavating a bigger cavity in the weeping willow stump.
- Saturday, 5/9: Chimney Swifts Return
- Mary was loading a bag of hen food into a wheelbarrow to take to the chicken coop when she heard the twitter of chimney swifts. She looked up and saw one flying above our house. In the afternoon, she saw two of them. Mary ran inside to tell me that the chimney swifts are back home. She was worried about them, since we saw other birds that return about the same time as swifts, but that was several days ago. She was very happy!
- Mary mowed the thicket of grass in our front lawn. Grass mulch went on two cherry trees, and she started putting mulch on a third one. A path east of our house gains access to these trees. Runaway comfrey plants fill this area of our property and they're filled with purple blossoms that are in turn buzzing with bumblebees.
- I continued on cleaning grass and weeds from the chicken wire fence in the near garden and adding new stakes to anchor the bottom of that fence. I did 11 sections today, with eight left to finish this garden. I had to cut new persimmon saplings from the far far garden to use as stakes.
- Mary noticed the first green shoots of a couple radishes and few lettuce plants starting in the tubs.
- I watched Game 3 of the Avalanche/Wild NHL playoff series. Minnesota won, 5-1. Colorado leads the series, two games to one.




















