Weather | 4/27, 1.88" rain, cloudy, 55°, 75° | 4/28, cloudy, 48°, 63°
| 4/29, sunny, 45°, 57° | 4/30, 0.18" rain, cloudy, 36°, 65° | 5/1, sunny to 0.01" rain, 34°, 61° | 5/2, p. cloudy, 38°, xx°
| 5/3, xx°, xx° |
- Monday, 4/27: Flooding Here & Tornadoes in St. Louis
- Mary and I were startled awake at 6 a.m. with a very loud crack of thunder overhead. We unplugged appliances and went back to bed, since it was very wet with a downpour of rain.
- We received 1.88 inches of rain in the morning thunderstorm.
- Meanwhile, Mom sent a photo (see below) of snow that covered her car and the ground outside this morning.
- I walked the length of our quarter-mile lane with Cooper, since he gets fewer ticks on him on this walk, compared to walking him on any trail right now.
- I went to Wood Duck Pond, alone, and saw a deer bounding off to below the Bass Pond dam. As I approached the woods in the bottom south of Wood Duck Pond, I heard a turkey gobble. The water level is extremely flooded well into the woods (see video, below) to the highest point that we've ever seen here. Turn on the sound of the video below and you'll hear crows calling and then a turkey gobble in the video.
- Bill sent a text at 6:45 p.m. that the St. Louis area was experienced interesting weather. He heard the third tornado siren in a six-hour period. Luckily, he never had any tornadoes at his apartment.
- We watched two movies, which were The Secret Life of Bees (2008) and My Fair Lady (1964).
Wood Duck Pond flooded way into woods. This area is usually dry.
- Tuesday, 4/28: Cleaning Unwanted Saplings & Weeding Garlic
- Mary spotted a turkey hen that walked across the east lawn, between the house and our lane (see photo, below). It then wandered off to the south.
- Mary put mineral oil on the woodstove pipe to keep it from rusting. When we first moved here, we replaced stovepipe yearly. Since Mary started applying oil every spring, we haven't purchased any piping. This stovepipe is 11-12 years old.
- Mary weeded about 40 percent of the garlic plants.
- During yesterday morning's storm, a chunk of wood holding several green branches broke away from the weeping willow stump. Using the small pruning chainsaw, I sawed it the rest of the way off the stump, sawed up the various branches, and hauled them away. I also cut down a walnut and mulberry saplings in the south orchard and a walnut coppice in the north yard near the McIntosh tree.
- I mowed the lane. Our grass is growing quickly with all of the rain.
- I watched Game 5 of the Wild/Stars playoffs. Minnesota won, 4-2, and now lead the series three games to two. I decided not to jinx the Oilers/Ducks game 5 and stayed away from watching it. Edmonton won, 4-1. It worked!
- We heard a whip-poor-will calling to the east when we walked Cooper for his last outing, a first for the year. We didn't hear any whip-poor-wills last year, so it was nice to know that we didn't lose them.
- Wednesday, 4/29: Weeding & Cleaning
- I took the tiny pruning Stihl chainsaw and cut persimmon saplings in the far far garden. After getting a few feet into that garden, I got a migraine. These past few years, I just get the visual aura, minus the actual headache. This time it was different and I got a headache, too. After our noontime meal, I took a nap. I didn't wake up until 5:30. I guess I needed the sleep.
- Mary weeded more of the garlic plants. She only has a quarter row yet to weed. Mary says she keeps stirring up lots of earthworms that are right on surface of the soil. She also says that the heavy grass mulch that she put on last fall is almost gone, now.
- I cleaned the Stihl pruning saw. It was filled with mud from cutting saplings trunks close to the ground. The mud was partially dry, because I left the saw on the porch while I took a nap. Cleaning took two hours. I had to soak the chain in gasoline and scrub it with a soft brass brush. It took awhile to get all of the muddy grass out of the gears. When I put it away, I discovered oil leaked out of the oil cap and into the inside of the saw's case, so I had to clean that up. Stihl makes poorly built oil caps that have a tendency to leak...or maybe they install cheap o-rings that go bad quickly. The final conclusion is that I won't use the grooming saw for cutting saplings when the cut is made close to the ground. I'll use loppers, instead.
- As the sun was setting, I heard what I thought was an oriole. I checked online and it was the call of a Baltimore oriole. Mary said she thought heard one this morning, so it probably flew in today.
- Thursday, 4/30: Almost 10" of Rain This Month
- We're keeping Cooper on our lane when we walk him, due to so many ticks on all of our trails. When I walked Cooper at noon, I squirted Dawn on all four sides of the mailbox post, nailing ants attempting to crawl that post and get into the mailbox.
- We did evening chores way early, starting at 3 p.m., due to rain clouds arriving from the northwest. We finished chores right when rain started falling around 3:30.
- There were complete double rainbows in the eastern sky around 5 p.m.
- We got 9.89 inches of rain through the month of April, which is one of the largest amounts of rain we've received in one month since Mary has been keeping records.
- I watched the Minnesota Wild beat the Dallas Stars, 5-2, to advance to the second round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs. It was a good game in St. Paul, MN.
- The electrical connection from our transformer to the power line was sizzling and sparking after dark, so I took video of it to prove to the electric co-op that we have a problem that needs to be fixed.
- I didn't watch the Edmonton Oilers/Anaheim Ducks game. The Oilers lost, 5-2, and are out of this year's playoffs. Instead, I read a book...must calmer that way!
- On Cooper's final nighttime walk, a whip-poor-will was constantly mouthing off, coyotes were howling, and a barred owl was hooting. The wildlife was really loud.
- Friday, 5/1: Electrical Short Fixed
- I drove into Lewistown to visit the Lewis County REC and showed my video of the nighttime sizzling electrical short at the transformer. The receptionist called the project manager to the front and I showed it to him. Halfway through that video, he said, "We'll get that fixed!" Just minutes after getting home, a huge bucket semi and a pickup from the electrical co-op showed up. They quickly checked the tightness of the old clamp. It was loose. They backed the bucket hoist onto our lawn and used it to get up to the transformer. They replaced the clamp and the lead wire. After the tall lineman returned to the ground from the bucket hoist, he said, "I don't think the last guy who tightened that clamp ate his Wheaties." At night, we noticed that all electrical items operated faster. The fridge isn't on as long. My Waterpik runs better. We think that electrical connection was an issue long before we discovered the short back in March.
- The bucket hoist left big dents in our lawn. The REA linemen suggested that they could send someone out to fix our lawn. Both Mary and I said no, we can do that. We'll pull sod out of somewhere and stick it in the dents.
- Mary finished weeding the garlic beds and fertilized them. The plants are quite tall this year.
- Mary and I found rabbit fur and guts left near the Carpathian walnut. We're guessing that a hawk did that.
- The bleeding heart plant is growing big. We need to switch the protector surrounding it to the Carpathian walnut, which is quickly outgrowing it's plastic protector tube.
- I exercised Cooper by throwing the ball until he was really tired, since he was an antsy pantsy guy all day. It worked. By evening, he was sleeping very soundly in his living room chair.




















