Showing posts with label mole. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mole. Show all posts

Monday, January 27, 2025

the best freezefest

Our cold weather continued until just a day or so ago.  The snow was so light and powdery that when the sun was on it, it looked like glitter.

Believe it or not, we are having mole activity!


The snow is still so beautiful, even though it's starting to melt.

front pond

another beautiful sunrise, set off by the white blanket of snow

ditto!  I call these "Lisa Frank sunrises" 
after the colorful junior high school supplies of my childhood

I'm determined not to be stuck inside no matter what the temperature - at least not all the time - so Todd and I went to FreezeFest this week.  It's a festival that our town throws that celebrates all things winter.  We missed the games and the chili cookoff, but we did see the ice sculptures.






It was about 15 degrees so we didn't hang around for too long, but it was really fun to see for a few minutes!

Like I said, we've mostly been staying inside.  Besides work, I finished two puzzles...



...and have gotten quite a bit of reading in.

always better with a friend!

Speaking of cats, they've been enjoying our piles of winter bedding.  It's pointless to make the bed, because there's usually a cat tangled up in it somewhere.  



Our BIG cat (the bobcat) is still showing up regularly on the trail cams, but I've gotten some really good coyote shots this week.  There's a pair and they're definitely denned up down by the back pond!  Here's one trying...and failing...to get some breakfast.  Whomp whomp!  


Maximize windows for better viewing

We had a short but thick snowfall earlier this week...


...but it's finally warmed back up to the 40s and it looks like it's going to stay that way for a while.  I'm hoping that we can start hiking again soon.  It's been almost two months!  

Have a great week!  











Monday, January 29, 2024

cat nappin'

After a busy Christmas season, I've been taking a very slow and easy approach to the new year!  I haven't stopped blogging, but it's always harder to find interesting photography in the winter.  We've had a few light snows, never more than 2 inches.  I love seeing clear, defined snowflakes...




...winter interest with the remaining dead plants...


...and snow tracks, of course.

bird

cat

rabbit

I've seen lots of rabbits searching for food.  They're easier to spot in the snow...



...than in the thaw!


Even the moles have been making appearances, in a way.  After a week of near-zero temperatures, somehow they were still able to tunnel through the frozen dirt for some fresh air!


We've got a (mated?) pair of coyotes living nearby.  We've been catching them on the trail cams...



I love it!  The trail cams are such a treat.

Meanwhile, inside, our wild animals are staying...busy?





Oh well...perfect for the doldrums of January.  

Have a great week!  







Monday, May 27, 2019

how now, brown cow(bird)

Just like the seemingly countless red-wing blackbirds that are making homes among the cattails in our pond, we are nesting!  Slowly.


Some furniture is in, but most of my personal things are still in storage, waiting for the new floor to be laid upstairs.  Most painting is done, except for doors and bathroom.  Four rooms are still waiting for wallpaper.  But we have officially relocated! 

It's a remarkable change.  Total silence and darkness at night, punctuated by millions of flashing lightning bugs.  Cool, quiet mornings, usually just me and the roosters from one of the local horse farms.  Windows open, birds singing.  I've mostly been working inside, but just within the past two days have seen a wild deer, rabbit, and turkey.  Did I mention the birds?

The cowbird is one of our most common visitors.


I've written about them before - about how they don't make nests, but instead steal an egg from another bird's nest and deposit one of their own.  They must be pretty successful at it, because we have a virtual flock (or herd, as Todd says) here!  Another remarkable thing about the cowbird is that although they are raised by different species, they all develop their own (and identical, among their breed) unique song.  I learned pretty quickly that when I heard a sound like gurgling water, a cowbird was probably overhead. 

Speaking of invaders, it took me three consecutive mornings of getting up early and putting in two hours at a time in the garden to remove all of the invasive weeds and vines.  First the gnarled mint roots, then the vinca, Virginia creeper, and wild violets.


I found some new invaders, though.  We have moles!  Several holes have appeared in my newly-weeded beds, and a little head popped in and out of one yesterday while I was working. 


Moles don't eat plant roots.  They're insectivores and are strictly after worms, centipedes, grubs, and slugs...which, with the exception of worms, cause plant damage in the garden.  They're pretty remarkable creatures, more closely related to bats than rodents.  Their saliva contains a paralyzing agent, which enables them to eat prey at their leisure. They can tunnel 15 feet per hour!  I would never poison a mole.  A cat can eat a poisoned mole and die...a fox can eat the poisoned cat...a bird can eat the poisoned fox corpse...it's a terrible way for an animal to die, anyway.  You can humanely trap and relocate moles by planting cans in the ground beneath their tunnels, for all the world like an old-fashioned tiger trap.  For now I don't see the harm, so I'll let them be.

Another invader - a four-lined plant bug set up shop amongst my transplanted mint.  Its salivary glands make up 20% of its body weight, so you can see that they have plenty of destructive saliva to make these dark spots on plants.  These were easy enough to pick off by hand.


This little guy overnighted on our screen door daily for the past week!  It's a banded tiger moth.  It's got beautiful coloring...


...with a surprise dark orange inner wing pair that it occasionally flashes.


Another harmless 'invader' but one that I'm pretty excited about is this fungus growing around the bottom of a wooden planter.  It's easy to see why it's called Dead Man's Fingers!


They'll grow appropriately long, spindly, and creepy before they're through, then start turning black.  Aren't they amazing?!?  I can't wait to see how long it takes for us to have a whole 'hand'!

(above photo credit Boredom Therapy)

We've had a week of rain, with intermittently hot days, so when one of the bird feeders out front overturned and spilled about two cups of seed into the front bed, it didn't take long for a massive patch of sprouting greens to come up.



These were pulled along with the weeds, so I've been very busy outside.  I was a kid who spent a lot of time outside in the mud, and thankfully I haven't changed much.  I love weeding and love rooting around in the dirt.  It's exciting to see my little garden start to grow.  Although I don't expect much for a few years ("Gardens:  the first year they sleep, the second year they creep, the third year they leap!"), even my small blooms are enjoyable.

Spearmint...


Foxgloves, one of four:


Stock, an old-fashioned Victorian cottage garden annual with a delicious scent:


Newly-planted fern, one of three, showing new life:


Baptisia, with their pea-like leaves and dainty purple flowers:


Bright-faced yarrow:


Lady's Mantle, with their delightful leaves that show off beaded water like columbines:


Even our bleeding heart still has a few flowers, even though it's nearly June:


I hate leaving 16" - 18" blank spots around my tiny plants, not just because it's not aesthetically pleasing but because empty healthy, composted soil invites weeds...but my little plants will grow and spread.  I'll collect seeds from these plants this fall and increase their number by 10 - 20 each, hopefully, in the spring.  This tiny little garden is going to grow and spread nicely!

Even though certain cats are not yet allowed outside to assist...


...baby steps are being made toward something wonderful, I hope.

Have a great week!