Weather | 3/9, sunny, 45°, 76° | 3/10, sunny to thunderstorms, 55°, 83°
| 3/11, 1.42" rain, 37°, 55° | 3/12, sunny to cloudy, 25°, 53° | 3/13, p. cloudy, 44°, xx° | 3/14, xx°, xx°
| 3/15, xx°, xx° |
- Monday, 3/9: Cooper's Vet Visit
- Wood ducks flew out of Bluegill Pond when I walked Cooper down the lane this morning.
- We took Cooper to the vet at Petco in Quincy, IL. He was very good, but we could tell that he knew that he was in a veterinary clinic. At first, he was very weary of the vet, but after some coaxing and massive rubbing by this vet, Cooper relaxed. Overall, the vet pronounced him healthy. Cooper has a big wax build up in his ears. Dr. Andrew, as the vet calls himself, showed us an easy way to remove ear wax from a dog's ears. We're to do it each day for 10 days. We really liked this vet...Andrew Perrine. We'll use him again. We left with a NexGard Plus prescription and a bottle of ear wash. We picked up a handful of treats in the Petco store.
- I went into Sam's Club while Mary and Cooper stayed in the pickup. It was a hot time for them, with temperatures in the 80s over the black asphalt of parking lots in Quincy. Six months of NexGard Plus costs $206.43 after a Sam's Club discount. It's expensive, but we feel it's needed. This stuff handles fleas, ticks, intestinal worms and heartworm in one medication that's simply a chewable, instead of gloopy slop smeared between shoulder blades. With a wiggle wart like Cooper, picking off ticks absolutely won't work.
- We also got gas at Sam's Club for $2.89 a gallon, significantly cheaper than the national average. I got a couple things at Walmart and we drove back home. The front seat of the pickup is now a dog hair mess.
- When we got home, the inside of the house was crawling with thousands of Asian ladybugs. Mary handled chickens, then emptied about 5-6 inches of dead bugs out of the shop vac from yesterday's bug evacuation and started sucking while I did evening chores, including playing fetch with Cooper. I took over after I was done with chores. We sucked bugs well after darkness fell. What a mess!
- The red amaryllis is blossoming (see photos, below). It's a joy to see.
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An open amaryllis blossom. |
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| The other opening amaryllis blossoms. |
- Tuesday, 3/10: Pruning Apple Trees, Then Thunderstorms
- We had another big bug day with Mary and I trading off on vacuuming them.
- Mary pruned all of the small apple trees in the south orchard and the big Empire apple tree. I followed behind her and applied tree wound dressing on all of the cuts. It got hairy at the end as increasing southwest winds blasted me while I stood on a step ladder to cover cuts high in the tree.
- We noticed the first blossoms on the forsythia bush.
- Mary performed the first ear cleaning job on Cooper. A smaller amount of wax came out as compared to what the vet removed yesterday.
- While Mary did this, a deer tick crawled across Cooper. She grabbed the flea comb and out it came. Later in the evening, I saw a tick march across the right leg of my shorts. I disposed of it immediately. Today's hot temperatures brought out the ticks.
- On Cooper's late afternoon walk, he flushed out two bob white quail from the east edge of Bluegill Pond. He's a natural hunter. Our fetch session was cut short. Cooper tired quickly after just a few throws, kept the ball and headed home.
- Thunderstorms started rolling through us at about 9 p.m. A tornado touched down in the county just north of the Missouri/Iowa border, two counties away from us. Big tornadoes hit further east in Illinois. Softball size hail fell in that state. We waited on going outside with the puppy until thunder died down a little bit and let Cooper out after 1:30 a.m. It was still thundering to the east well beyond 2 a.m., when we finally made it to bed.
- Wednesday, 3/11: Rain, Molly Rubs, Woodcock Whistles & Labeling Wine
- After last night's thunderstorms, it rained while we slept and rain was falling when we woke. This was nice moisture that helps plants and trees. The grass is greening up and flowering plants are starting to show green leaves in the woods. Frog Pond, which was dry just yesterday, now has water in it with spring peeper frogs singing.
- Our high temperature was at midnight and the low was in the early evening.
- When we lived in Circle, MT, Molly, our golden retriever, would welcome the day by rubbing against the sofas with a smile on her face and a wag of her tail. Molly has returned in the form of Cooper. Each morning he rubs along the edge of our bed. When he does this, Mary says, "Hello, Molly!"
- While walking Cooper around the west field at noon, I heard the flight of an American Woodcock. They emit a whistle through their wings when they fly. It sounds like THIS.
- I put labels on the 25 bottles of the pear wine, but didn't get them into a cooler, yet.
- One of the four blossoms broke off the amaryllis plant, so Mary put it in a bowl of water. It's very nice have it on the kitchen counter top. Below is a photo as the light of the setting sun reflected off the petals.
- Mary and I enjoyed a bottle 2023 apple cider. It tasted good and is quite tangy. As with all wine, it's better with aging.
- Thursday, 3/12: Wine Inventory & Dog Fuzz
- Mary and I walked Cooper to Wood Duck Pond. The water level is higher, with water backed up into the once dry creek bed. Water is also up in Bass Pond. It looks like the water in that pond just turned over. It's cloudy water on the surface. We saw where water was extremely cloudy near the south bank where either a catfish or a muskrat did some underwater digging into the bank.
- I did an inventory of all of the stored wine. Through all of the coolers, I have 321.5 bottles. The half bottle is a 375-ml bottle of cherry wine. It's half the size of a regular 750-ml bottle. The largest selection of wine is cherry, at 90.5 bottles. Next is a tie with 38 for various apple wines, and 38 bottles of jalapeño wine. Next is 25 bottles of garlic, 24 bottles of blackberry, and 23 bottles of parsnip wine. Through this process, I identified two varieties with bad corks that I bottled in 2023, which are apple cider and pumpkin wines. I also consolidated some wine varieties, thereby emptying one cooler.
- I put away the recently bottled 2025 pear wine into the empty cooler.
- Mary clean the house and removed all of the dog hair (I call it dog down) off the floors. We used to blame cats for all of the loose hair on floors. For the month and a half that we went without a dog, we saw no hair on the floors. Now we know that it's the dog to blame for drifts of hair.
- Three new birds arrived for the year, which were the white-throated sparrow, field sparrow, and the American goldfinch.






















