Showing posts with label fox. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fox. Show all posts

Monday, December 9, 2024

fox stalks (a semi rhyme?)

 We've moved smoothly into colder weather.  We've had some snow flurries...

Ominously, bird and cat tracks crossing!

a rabbit on the sidewalk

tracks on the frozen pond

Birds are rapidly emptying the feeders...



...and generally trying to stay warm.


Both kittens have an observation perch.



(More concerned citizens...)


After the melt, Todd had to check a potential roof leak in the barn (it was only condensation from the HVAC with sudden increased usage).


Claudia has had a few moments of fresh air...


...but she's mostly been in the warm barn.  It's too cold outside for elderly ladies!

My birthday weather didn't top 26 degrees, but we still managed to be out and about for a few hours.  As usual, I made my own birthday cake...a healthy chocolate pumpkin brownie with cream cheese frosting.  I saved the calories for the tortilla chips with my tex-mex lunch!


We've had beautiful sunrises...


...and so much activity on the trail cams.

Bobcat!

Fox!

A coyote pair!

And so many rabbits, deer, and raccoons.  I'm glad to see them all looking pretty fat and active!

Meanwhile, when not working, I've been knitting, or frantically trying to get Christmas decorating/cards/gifts coordinated, or finishing puzzles in quiet moments.


I just started a 2,000 piece jungle scene that I absolutely love.  I'm looking forward to more of those quiet moments in the next couple of weeks...hopefully!

Have a great week!  






Monday, November 20, 2023

...stag-gering genius

 It's the time of the rut!  We have a few stags around the property and they're in a fightin' mood.

having a snack between bouts

You don't see them fighting during the day, but we've definitely caught them on our trail cams. 

 
Ack, I hope I'm loading these correctly!

Listen with the sound on to hear the off-camera jousting!  

We've just gone through the last phase of fall leaves.  First, great color...


Then, cooler weather moves in and we have the "rust" season.  Look at the same walking path, just two weeks apart!

November 6th

November 16th

The "rust" season is still beautiful...



...but short-lived.  The leaves have all fallen now and the trees are bare.  But we had some really atmospheric fog in that interim time!  It's one of my favorite things about fall.  







Claudia caught the last of the leaves too!


I'm loving our trail cams.  We're seeing a lot more activity as things cool off.

Coyote

so many deer!

And raccoons, possums, stray cats, rabbits...even foxes!

still shot from trail cam

I'm excited to see who else is ambling around the property at night.  These boys ought to be grateful that we're keeping them inside!



Have a great week!  






Monday, June 27, 2022

Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Pig Cafe

 Into each life some rain must fall...finally.

Virginia Tiger Moth caterpillar

After three bone-dry weeks of scorching upper-90s temps, we finally got a little shower.  Light, for maybe an hour. It's still desperately dry and I am watering, daily, for at least 30 minutes, especially my young seedlings and seedlings-to-be.

We're all set up here!

Germination!


You can see the three bare-ish beds here.  The weeds are growing just as fast as the seedlings, somehow.  Todd, too, is mystified by their persistent growth.  We graded and laid landscape fabric around the white barn, then topped it with gravel.  And...weeds, weeds everywhere.  Our driveway is almost completely consumed.  How?!?  I haven't quite hit upon a solution for the garden area, anyway.  Newspaper does NOTHING to control the growth.  I might have to hand-rake and mulch heavily, which will be a major chore with my injuries.  We'll see how this develops!  Meanwhile, I'm enjoying the flowers...






...and the critters!  I've seen three or four rabbits this week.


Two fawns, two deer, one fox for which my camera wasn't quite ready...


One giant turkey vulture...



...and multiple sightings of our resident groundhog.


He (she?) is burrowing heavily in our white barn, and I learned why they're sometimes called "whistle pigs" when I interrupted him last week.  He pig-squealed...and let me tell you, it's an interesting noise to hear when you're entering a dark barn.  ;) Here's an internet clip so that you can hear it too!  

We also have a bobwhite here ('Robert Blanco' - named by Todd).  They're elusive and I haven't gotten a picture of my own yet...

photo courtesy of Metro Parks

...but I hear him daily.  He's one of those charming birds easily identified because he sings his own name.  "Bob white!  Bob white!" There were plenty of these quail around when I was growing up, so I love to hear his call!

Inside, it's a kitten love fest.


If they aren't tearing through the house, they're bathing...or sleeping.  They love each other!  💕



They're still so small (and so destructive) that I'm afraid to leave them alone for more than a few hours...but they're getting bigger every day.  Six months old now!  Time flies when you're having...naps.


Have a great week!




Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Funfetti, Fawns, and Foxes...Oh My!

Late last week, Todd removed the lawn mower from the carport, mowed for about an hour, and came back to the carport to find this:


That's right...ANOTHER tiny fawn!  Apparently the mothers leave them for 8 hours at a time so they can go feed/build up their milk.  What a sweet face!


He disappeared after a few hours, but our mailman told us that she'd seen him there the day before as well. 


I don't think it's the same fawn, but here's Mama with a baby next door, the very next day:


Another newcomer is this red-tailed fox.  I'm afraid that he might have sarcoptic mange, judging by his thin, scraggly tail.  I've only seen him once, but our neighbor sees foxes all the time!


This Cooper's Hawk has been making the rounds recently...


...as has this Merlin, so similar to the Cooper's Hawk but much smaller.


Our resident crows are not happy about the hawks and owls who visit our trees.  They're very territorial and I can hear them squawking daily, usually two or three at a time.  I've seen them chase owls and hawks from tree to tree, but normally I see them just strutting around...


...or sitting like lords in our trees, scanning the branches for interlopers.


The beds surrounding our house are full of these tiny toads lately...


New life is everywhere!  And our "old faithfuls" are around, too.  Here is Augustus, assuming his daily position:


Because of the heat and the mosquitoes I haven't been out too much, though.  I've been inside, and when I'm not working, I'm still keeping busy.  I made this amazing cake last week:


It's a homemade funfetti cake with sour cream chocolate frosting from Hummingbird High (recipe here).  I already have a favorite vanilla cake recipe, but oh, this cake...


It's fairly basic, reminiscent of an old-fashioned birthday cake.  The frosting is delightfully tangy.  I'm definitely going to make it again.

I planned my next knitting project:  Birdie Fair Isle Cardigan (link here).


Resisting the urge to copy the exact same colors as the sample yet again, mine will have a light green body, white yoke, dark grey birds, and a marigold trim around the yoke.


Ignore that pale peach skein pair at the top.  I had hoped it would be closer to cream than peach, but it isn't, so I'll have to order a bit more in white.  I'm very motivated because I recently took a Craftsy class called Fit To Flatter.  It teaches you how to evaluate your body type, take your own measurements, analyze a sweater schematic, and determine where and how to make changes to custom-fit it to your body.  For example, the cardigan above is knit "flat" (back in forth on the needles, not in the round), top-down.  Not my preferred construction.  I'm going to take a basic sweater pattern that's bottom-up in the round, add the fair isle yoke, and then steek it to make it a cardigan.  Scary!  I have to wait a while to start.  I've always held my yarn incorrectly with knitting, tensioning with forefinger and thumb, and I'm an incredibly tight knitter as well.  I've fallen into the habit of knitting every night while Todd works on his computer, so have had some real marathon sessions lately.  I realized that my thumb and forefinger was feeling a little stiff and sore, so I started knitting with either my middle finger or continental-style, with my left hand.  Still, the feeling persists.  No tingling, no numbness, no real pain, but I feel stiffness and a little weak in those areas.  I will probably take a three-week break to see if it makes a difference. 

Tabitha, however, will make sure my yarn doesn't get lonely!


Have a great week!