It's been a tearful week here on the homestead. Claudia, our beloved barn cat, is not doing well. It's hard to qualify the exact issue, other than she seems to have aged rapidly. She's not eating much. Her fur is extremely dry and matted and she does not like to be brushed like she used to. She has a stiff, arthritic walk and spends most of her time asleep, but not in her usual spots on the porch chairs. I suspect that she's unable to jump up like she used to, so we've made a soft place for her on the ground. She stays there, but spends more time in secret cubbies under bushes and locations unknown. I've heard about animals going off to die somewhere and have been really fearful. This week, Claudia is getting tons of wet food treats and head rubs.
I caught my first glimpse of Claudia in July 2019. She was feral...
fleeing our first encounter
...but quickly got used to her new family.
We both love her so much and are trying to sneak outside as often as possible to give her the love and attention that she deserves!
I'm glad that she's finally getting some warmer weather. It's been so chilly and rainy this spring. Some flowers have loved it...
my 'Roguchi' clematis
...but most flowers have been unhappy, including my poor annual cutting garden. My last-minute planting of the easiest flowers - zinnias, cosmos, marigolds - have produced a handful of seedlings, a few desultory sunflowers (how?!?), and weeds. It's too late to plant more seeds. The garden is toast this year. At least I can take a break from the seeding, potting up, and planting out of grumpy seedlings that don't tend to make it past the first few days. Next year I'll start over with new seed and hopefully will have better luck.
Tons of critters around, at least! In the frequently foggy mornings...
...I see lots of deer.
eyeballing my sunflowers...
Some cool caterpillars...
grub worm
bronze cutworm moth caterpillar
...and other insects.
syrphid fly
eriophyes tiliae, the red nail gall mite
another gall wasp, the wool sower
I've found some really exciting spiders, too (skip the next few pictures if you're spider-averse)!
This is a northern male black widow spider, only slightly venomous and less aggressive than the female.
Ditto this red ant-mimic spider.
Check out this wolf spider and her egg sac!
Todd has informed me that we have "record humidity" settling in for the next few weeks, so I'll be spending less time outside...and more time inside with these guys...
Frances and Calliope, an uneasy truce
Frances nap
...and just outside, with this gal.
Have a great week!