Sometimes,
during this time of the stay-at-home edict, my days pass and I have no idea
where they went or what I've done. It's a good thing I have pictures to help
keep me straight!
The
bridge crew was off work for a couple of weeks because of Rona (the
Coronavirus) but they've obtained a waiver and are back to work now.
We
took the golf cart down to check on them.
They
must practice social distancing or wear masks.
They've
also set up a handwashing station along with the safety rules.
All
along the roadside are the bright sunny faces of the Coltsfoot. They don't need
much encouragement to grow.
"Someone
said they look like Dandelions," I told Mike. "Do you think they
do?"
I
hadn't seen a lot of Dandelions up to this point, then a few days later they
started blooming in my yard.
Dandelion
has been used for centuries to treat a myriad of physical ailments including
cancer, acne, liver disease, and digestive disorders.
And
let's not forget that as an early spring bloomer it's also a food source for
our precious bee population.
Speaking
of which, the pussy willows are flowering. I didn't even have to get very close
to hear the loud buzzing of bees. They were all over it!
I
let the girls out one morning neglecting to check the patio for remnants of Spitfires
hunting. I knew something was wrong when Ginger didn't come back in a timely
manner. When I checked, I see her standing there, ears perked straight up, just
staring at the cats breakfast dish. Someone had plated up a little Chickadee.
Out
on the front patio, I'm confronted with this.
"What
is it?" you ask.
This,
my dears, is a whole big handful of cat fur. And there's blood too! I'm guessing the two feral toms got into it.
Judging by the color, Mr. Mister got the best of Jerry. I've seen both toms
since then. I can't really tell how Jerry is because he won't let anyone touch
him. Mr. Mister has a great big open wound on his leg that I suspect was a cat
bite that has festered and opened. I don't think it's a bite from this fight because
I've seen it before but thought it had healed. But this fight certainly helped
to open it back up.
We
had such a beautiful day here last week. "I hung out a load of laundry and
have another in the washer," Jody, my best girl told me.
"Dang!
I wish I'd've thought to hang a load out!"
"Soon
the days will all be nice and it'll be automatic to hang it out," she
said.
The
next day turned out to be almost as nice. Mike mowed the field for me. I like
him to knock the weeds down at least once a year and I don't care if it's
spring or fall.
"You
could turn it into yard if you want," I told him.
"Naw.
I've got enough to mow."
I
had Ginger on a leash and was walking her around. Our pond is full of frog
eggs!
As
I was going around to the other side I spot a snot-gob of eggs on dry ground.
I don't think they're supposed to be
there, I thought when I
saw them. I wondered if one of the herons had picked 'em from the water and ate
part and got scared away before he could finish them or if a frog laid 'em
there when the water was higher. I don't have any way of telling how long
they've been out of water or if any of the tadpoles are still viable. I did the
only thing I could do. I picked it up and put it in the water. The snot-gob was
still wet and gushy so maybe there's a chance a few of them are still alive. A
few feet farther on I found another one and put it back in the water too.
They'll live or they won't. It's out of my hands now.
We
continued on around the pond and Ginger got right in the water — and got
herself a drink. She likes the water.
I
spot more egg masses under the water and stooped down to examine them when...
...this
little frog took off.
I watched him go then spot the other frog hanging from — what?
A reed, twig, pond grass? I don't know.
Sorting pictures for today's letter
blog I see there's not one frog there but two!
I
spot another mass (sounds better than snot-gob, don'cha think?) and think it
must be from a different kind of frog because it doesn't look like the others.
My
wash was done when I got back to the house so I got my first load of the year
hung on the clothesline.
I
just love everything about line-dried clothes. I love toting the basket out,
listening to the birds, feeling the sun and wind, thinking of my beautiful
mother as I hang the laundry the way she always did. I like seeing how many
spiders'll be in my basket when I come back. But I especially love the
outdoorsy way everything smells and still smells days later.
We
had such a nice breeze that it didn't take long for the clothes to dry. I was
standing at the line, unpinning, shaking, folding clothes, and dreaming of
spring days spent flying kites when I hear a sound coming from someplace where
it didn't have any business being. I hear a small motor up at Fry's place, a
summer house up behind ours. It sounded like someone was approaching it from
the field. Earlier in the day, when Mike and I took a walk, a couple of small
motorbikes came down the road. Were they up there 'exploring' while the Fry's
were gone?
I
called Mike. "I hear something up at the Fry's."
"Like
what?" he asked.
"Like
a small engine. Dirt bikes or maybe an ATV."
"It's
probably just Vernon," Mike said and I realized he was probably right. Vernon
owns the field next to us.
I
was just finishing folding the clothes when I hear Mike come out of the house
and the golf cart start up.
"Let's
go check it out," Mike said.
I
put the basket on the back of the cart and we drove out to Vernon's. We found
him, his wife Donna, and grandbaby Sophie sitting on the pier feeding the fish.
Sure enough, they'd been out and about in the ATV.
Mike,
my little social butterfly, hadn't had anyone but me to talk to in a long time
and he and Vernon had a lot of catching up to do. I got off the golf cart and
wandered over to chat with Donna while Vernon migrated toward where Mike was —
but we all kept our social distant don'cha know.
Little
Sophie is cute as a button but she doesn't know us. She didn't hide when I spoke to
her but she also didn't speak and didn't smile. I took a ton of pictures of
her.
Before we left she'd warmed up a little and smiled as she picked a handful
of grass for her grandmother.
"There's
that beautiful smile," Donna said and lovingly stroked her cheek with her
finger.
Sigh.
I
miss Andrew.
We
really hit the conversational jackpot that day! Before we got home we met up with
both the Kipps —
— and Steph Robinson!
"Jon's
making me a chicken house," Steph said.
I
gasped. "You're getting chickens!"
Steph
laughed. "Yep!" She cupped her hands and held them close to her face.
"Cute little baby chicks."
"Can
I come and see them when you get them?"
"Yes
you can."
Steph
was on her way to work but invited us to go up and check out the shed they're
renovating into a chicken coop.
I
didn't take any pictures of the coop even though they're doing a great job. I
just didn't think about it. But I did get a picture of this old farm machine
sitting behind the shed.
"If
I had one of those we could put it in the yard and plant flowers in it," I
told Mike.
"No
we can't," he said without even thinking about it. But for him, I know the
issue is mowing around it. He doesn't like to have stuff he has to mow around.
I
took advantage of one of our nice days to walk Ginger down to the creek and
look for stones to make snails with. On the opposite side, I see a beaver tree!
I came home with seven rocks I thought would work but they're all bigger than
the one I used so I don't know how or if they're going to work.
Coming
back from the creek, I came up the back driveway and as I approached the kitchen
alcove I see a cat dart for cover. It was Anon, one of our wild girls and she
didn't know who was coming so she hid. Do you see her?
I
put the snail project aside, which is what I do when I don't know what I'm
going to do, and picked up a previously put aside project, which is this one. I
really didn't like my butterfly so I cut him loose.
I
stripped, straightened, and twisted wire into more curly q's then added this
cute little butterfly. I like it much better now.
The
next step will be to adorn it with a ton of those little flowers that I made
from nail polish, Mod Podge, and paint. It's going to be a flower garden. I
haven't decided yet what I'm going to do with the butterfly. Add beads, paint him,
or leave him plain.
Do
you remember the flowers I made with Podge then dipped in printer ink? I found
out pretty quick the ink and alcohol mixture melted the Podge so I decided to
try just straight printer ink. I waited for two days for the ink to dry and it never
did. I rinsed them off and saw the ink had colored the Podge so they look like
this now. I haven't done anything else with them yet, like add detail and dip
in polyurethane, but I expect when I get an itch to use them, that's what I'll
do.
While I'm updating you on stuff, I've been
meaning to update you on those cans and bottles that someone stuck on branches
beside the dirt road. Remember them? My cute little red-haired brother Richard
has suggested that they may act as reflectors at night. I bet he's right. How
clever is that!
And
because I had a computer crash not so very long ago I've instituted a new way
of doing things. From now on, when I download my camera, it goes directly to
the external hard drive. No more losing pictures to computer crashes. An
external hard drive crash is another matter entirely and would be devastating.
And
the same is true for my letter blogs. They also get saved directly to the
external hard drive.
I
made homemade cheese crackers this week. I had a block of Swiss that I needed
to use and these things are so good!
My
biggest and best project this week was making a chicken and chick from barbed
wire.
My
Miss Rosie likes chickens and has quite an extensive collection. When I saw it
online I knew I had to make it for her. She didn't have any chickens made from
barbed wire that I knew of.
To
get the wire I asked my neighbor Jon Robinson. They have some old fences that
aren't used anymore.
"You
could have just taken a piece," you say.
No.
No, I couldn't have. Used or not, it's still their fence.
"But
he'd never miss it!"
I
know, right! But even so, I couldn't do it. I asked Jon and he gave me
permission. I walked along the fence line and found a place where I could get
to some. Unfortunately, I encountered an uncooperative branch that took a swipe
at my nose. It didn't hurt but I soon felt a tickle. When I wiped at my nose,
my hand came away bloody. I'll tell you what! That scratch bled and bled — but I
got my wire!
When
I was in the early stages of making the chicken everything was looking good but
I could trash the whole idea at any time and then she wouldn't get anything for
an Easter gift, which wasn't a big deal since she didn't know I was making her
something anyway.
The
wire was old and as I bent it one strand broke in a place or two. Rather than
start over, I justified. It's okay, I
thought to myself, It just adds to the
charm. My mind raced ahead. I worried what I'd do with 'em when I got 'em
done.
"I'm
thinking it might be kinda dangerous for Miss Rosie to handle barbed wire,"
I wrote to my online friends and family, "so I'm thinking of mounting it
on something like maybe a piece of old wooden snow fence? Then adding wire for
it to hang by."
I
went back to Jon and asked for a piece of his old snow fence.
"I
don't care," he said.
Although
I saw the snow fence before, I went and looked it with a more critical eye.
Then I went back to my online friends and family. "The snow fence won't
work. The slats are pretty far apart, rotted, and all rolled into a big roll
and I can't get to it anyway. I have an old window. What if I took the window
out, put chicken wire in, and mounted my chicken (and peep) to that?" I
asked. But even as I wrote it out, I worried. "I'm afraid the chickens
will get lost in the wire." I changed gears. "So how about old barn
wood? Either by itself or behind my window frame?"
I
asked for thoughts and got some great ideas. But the one I liked best was the
one my beautiful sister, Phyllis suggested. "Got any concrete?"
"What
a great idea!" I told her.
Adding
a concrete base solved another problem that had been rattling around in my
head.
"What's
that?" you ask.
If
I put it on barn wood and made it into a wall plaque, where would she put it?
"You
let me figure that out," is the answer Miss Rosie always gives me when I
ask her.
Mike made the bases for Miss Rosie and we took
them down Saturday afternoon.
I enlisted Lamar to cover Rosie's eyes and bring
her out where Mike and I waited. I
prefaced my gift with, "Miss Rosie! If you don't like them please say so!
I've been sharing online and there are other people who'd love to have 'em!"
She
pulled the bandanna from her eyes and I could immediately tell that she loved
them. "Why did you think I wouldn't?" she asked.
"Only
because it's just one strand of wire and tends to get lost."
We
talked about ways to make it stand out more but ultimately. whatever she does with
them is up to her.
Let's
call this one done!
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