Weather | 2/16, p. cloudy, 40°, 61° | 2/17, cloudy, 45°, 58°
| 2/18, sunny, 48°, 63° | 2/19, cloudy, 0.01 rain, 35°, 64° | 2/20, cloudy, 21°, xx° | 2/21, xx°, xx°
| 2/22, xx°, xx° |
- Monday, 2/16: Snow Geese in Big Numbers
- Mary and I saw a huge bunch of about 1,000 snow geese this morning as they flew low over the house. They were heading west and were led by a duck. They were flying low enough for us to hear the wind rushing over their wings.
- We heard our first robin "tea leaf" song this morning, a sure sign that spring is coming.
- At noon, Mary and I walked Cooper to Wood Duck Pond and noticed the ice is gone off the top of the water. We also looked at Bass Pond. The water is down about 3.5 feet, exposing several dead American lotus plants. I turned a lotus seed head over and a seed fell out. It's the size of a hazelnut and looks like an acorn without the acorn's cap. We need to work at eradicating these plants, because they're taking over Bass Pond.
- I spent hours looking online for chainsaw sharpening parts. There are three sharpening tools that I use on the large chainsaw, but need for the other two chainsaws that have smaller teeth on their chains. One is a file guide holder that puts the round chainsaw sharpening file at a correct 30-degree angle and the other is a file guide, which holds the round file. The final item is a depth gauge used to measure the rakers ahead of the teeth to see if they need filing down after teeth of the chain are sharpened.
- We vacuumed bugs over and over and over, again.
- On an evening walk around the west field, Cooper saw several bob white quail running into the north woods. He froze and watching them with keen attention, then sniffed where they ran.
- I finished and sent off a survey of the fly tying class.
- While walking Cooper on his walk prior to bedtime, Mary and I heard snow geese flying overhead in the dark.
- Tuesday, 2/17: First Blackbirds
- I received a nice reply from TJ, one of the fly tying instructors of the online class I took in January and the beginning of February. It was after I sent in a survey of the class. Here are some of his words..."Dick, after reading this over, I feel like you actually understand how and why we have done many of the things that we did. That is very appreciated...Hopefully we see you next year. Thank you for the kind words."
- Mary and I saw more snow geese heading west, today.
- While walking Cooper around the west field, we saw a big deer track in the mud at the southwest corner of the field that was 3.75 inches long. We also heard three different Carolina wrens singing in the north woods when we walked to the end of Bobcat Trail.
- Every time I feed Cooper and I move him into the living room to allow the cats in the entry room to finish their meals, he gives me a big tongue smack up the side of my face after thoroughly licking crumbs from his bowl. He's very generous with his saliva.
- Mary and I did some housecleaning.
- I checked clean wine bottle numbers and I have enough for the three batches of wine that are overdue to get bottled.
- I did a little more work on the house plans.
- I saw and heard a few red-winged blackbirds in the east yard trees at sunset, which were the first of the season.
- I received the The Orvis Fly Patterns Index in today's mail. Unfortunately the book came with a moldy smell with several of the back pages stuck together. It soaked up water at one point. The seller said it was in "good" condition. It was not.
- Wednesday, 2/18: Downy Woodpecker Makes a Home
- During morning chores, Mary and I spotted four trumpeter swans in flight. We're wondering if they decided to stay here and nest. We also saw a bald eagle and several more Vs of snow geese.
- A downy woodpecker put a big hole into the top of the trunk of the old weeping willow tree (see photo, below). Mary watched the woodpecker emerge from the hole and fly off to the big cherry tree.
- Bill showed up at around 11 a.m. He's here until Sunday.
- Bill and I walked Cooper to Wood Duck Pond, east on the dry creek bed, and then home via an old east/west path.
- I took in a Missouri Department of Conservation Webex session entitled "Oddballs Under the Surface," about freshwater jellyfish, tetras, and shrimp that live in ponds, lakes, and streams in Missouri. It was very interesting.
- I contacted the customer service department of thriftbooks about the moldy fly tying book I received yesterday. A representative emailed me back to tell me that they will send me a different copy of the book and that I can either keep the current copy or throw it away.
- Mary made three pizzas and we played two games of Trivial Pursuit. Mary won both games. We also enjoyed the last bottle of 2021 pear wine, which was exceptionally good.
- Wednesday, 2/19: Bottling Apple Wine
- Mary made a cherry crisp with the last of the pie cherries in the freezer. Most all cherries went into cherry wine this year.
- Mary raked leaves and put three wheelbarrow loads on the top of the compost pile to add organic matter to it. She also put new hay in the chicken coop.
- Bill washed two loads of laundry and changed the oil in his car.
- I washed 18 bottles and then Bill and I bottled the apple wine that was made almost six months ago. The pH was 3.5 and the specific gravity was 0.998, which gives it an alcohol content of 9.96 percent. I added 0.6 grams of Kmeta. We filled 17 bottles and corked them. Bill, Mary and I tried the leftover wine. It has a good apple flavor that will probably enhance with age.
- Mary did a couple chores and then we got a thunderstorm around 4:30 p.m. It was our first thunderstorm of the year.
- While I walked Plato to the gravel road and back, Mary and Bill saw several flocks of snow geese flying east after the rain. We also saw snow geese in the morning. A big flock of gackling geese flew west to east in the afternoon.
- Bill threw the lacrosse ball for Cooper. The puppy loved it.
- Mary heard our first killdeer of the season.
- The three of us ate popcorn and watched Clear and Present Danger (1994) and Sister Act (1992).


































