Wednesday, June 19, 2019

Shrew-d Moves

The dust has been flying around here lately!  While Todd is working on installing a subfloor upstairs...


...I have been discovering my unexpected love of wallpaper installation.  Pre-pasted, paste the paper, paste the wall...I have all of the types, and I am greatly enjoying them all.  Upstairs, I have a nature-themed paper...


If you look closer, you can see the blackberries, foxgloves, rabbits, and hedgehogs.  LOVE.


Because of the odd angles of the slanted walls and tiny doorways, I'm doing a lot of cutting and pasting to keep the patterns straight.  It's just like working a puzzle and therefore, right up my alley!

Downstairs, we've got rabbits in the bathroom...


...and the kitchen is nearly done.  It was tiled last week...


...and I spent at least 2 full days with the wallpaper.  There were so many little nooks and crannies around the sink that had to be custom cut.  But I absolutely adore the wallpaper, even though it's not quite an exact match to the trim.  Close enough.  It's hard to get a good picture in this early morning light, but you get the idea!  It's a William Morris pattern from 1876. 




We installed a new snail door knocker, whose long antennae will poke out an eye if you aren't careful.  We're going to cut those down a little bit and possibly replace the entire door.  A name plaque has been ordered to cover the hole left by the previous (personalized) door knocker. 


I've sanded down all of our cheapo '70s hollow core interior doors...


...and am in the process of installing beadboard and painting.


It's going to be a busy couple of weeks, because we will be moving in the rest of our things from storage after the floor is laid down upstairs.  I'll be so glad to have my craft supplies back, though.  And framed wall pictures, and summer bedding, and the list goes on. 

I've squeezed in some outside work, completely filling the newly-created front bed with perennials from an amazing sale I found last week.


The plants are severely pruned here, but hopefully they'll give a good show in late summer and certainly next year.

I had some nice company in the garden while I worked.  At first I thought I was seeing moles...



...but they were so much quicker than moles, and they were eating fallen seeds from the feeders.  Moles are insectivores and don't eat seeds.  I did a little research and discovered that we have a few SHREWS!  My photo at bottom, versus the confirmed shrew picture at the top.  


Shrews are SO interesting.  Their hearts can beat up to a thousand times per minute, and they are understandably voracious eaters.  If they miss a meal, they can die (I've experienced this problem myself, as Todd can attest)!  Shrews are also venomous and a single shrew has enough venom to kill 200 mice!  Humans are too large, though, to experience anything more than pain from a shrew bite.  There are endless YouTube videos about shrews fighting (and defeating) snakes, scorpions, frogs, chipmunks, and many other creatures.  Theodore Roosevelt kept a pet shrew and noted, "Certainly a more bloodthirsty animal of its size I've never seen!" They have pointy, red-tipped teeth (red because of iron deposits)...talk about an appropriate look! 

(photo credit John Rochester, Flickr)

Yes, they tunnel, but they also eat a great deal of garden pests.  For the moment, I'm glad to have shews around!

I spent hours and hours weed-eating around the perimeter of the barnyard last week.  It was nice to see the white barn again...it had been half-covered with weeds...but we've just been too busy to get back there and get the work done. 


Now we can see some of the fencing that has to be replaced next year!  This is one of the worst areas, but at least we aren't needing to keep anything fenced in right now.


While plowing through 6 ft tall weeds, I nearly destroyed this tiny nest, even though I'd tried to be intentional about going slow and giving lots of "notice" for wildlife (mainly snakes) to move along.


Thankfully I stopped in time, but I was worried that I'd removed its protective cover.  The nest was still about 2 feet off the ground, but was completely exposed.  I've been checking it, though.  On weeding day, there were 2 eggs.  A week later, there are four!  I'm excited to watch this spot for new babies!

Borga is enjoying our brief moments of sunshine during this rainy spell...


...and the cats are passing through our noisy construction time by staying close and taking lots of naps.


They'd better get used to it, though.  Many months of construction ahead.

Have a great week! 

Monday, June 10, 2019

Fluffle Kerfuffle

The red-wing blackbird babies are gaining independence and feeling adventurous...


...sometimes.  They come to our front feeder at least three times a day and bawl piteously to be fed, wings flailing and mouths agape.  They are loud


 We've also enjoyed discovering a fluffle (I'm happy to learn that delightfully apt word for a group of rabbits) out by the back barns!  I've seen up to six rabbits hopping around back there...



...or making their leave, especially if I've come too close and spooked them.


We've been back in the barn area a lot, working.  The gravel is down...


...and Todd and I worked together for hours, clearing chin-high weeds away from the chicken coop with a scythe I helpfully named Slythe (of Thundercats fame).   


Ugh, it's awful!  The coop predates the house by at least 50 years.  We burned an old doghouse, brush, and tree limbs, and that coop is next on the list.  What an eyesore! 

At least we had company (a red-bellied woodpecker!) while we worked.


I'm also happy to note that a nesting pair of indigo buntings are occupying our back space.  They have the most beautiful song


Another happy discovery:  wild honeysuckle.  Yes, it's invasive.  But since it's well out of reach in the middle of a huge briar patch, I figured I'd just clip the edges and enjoy.



Honeysuckle vine lasts for several days in a vase, and once it starts to droop, it's easy to replace with more tendrils from the yard!

Our front field is full of ox-eye daisies.  I decided to dig up about 30 of them to transplant in the front flower bed.


They're perennial so I hope they take off.  Meanwhile, other things have been blooming.


There are lots of 'rules' about flowerbeds, like height and texture considerations, and color...never plant pink and orange together, for example.


I'm not much of a planner, though, when it comes to flowers.  I plant things where they fit, and if I don't like them, I dig them up and put them somewhere else.  Easy!  

Inside the house, Todd is still working away on the floor upstairs, and the cats are still supervising...at least during their waking hours.


Have a great week!

Monday, June 3, 2019

can you dig it?

One major construction project nearly completed!  Driveway dug to the barn (gravel coming today)...


...and side of house trenched and graveled to prevent water incursion.



It looks pretty rough, but the dirt areas will be re-seeded and finer gravel added to the driveway once it has "settled."  I finished a little 'construction project' of my own last week, too.  Although we have very nice and very large mulched beds (10+ feet wide, all the way around the front and side of the house), the bed stops short mid-porch.  It looked pretty grim, I thought.  This is from March/April, so pre-mowing and pre-weeding, but still seemed like a big missed opportunity. 


First I laid out layers of wet newspaper...


Then covered with cardboard.


This will kill the grass as it decomposes, leaving a nice surface for me to build on.  The excavator piled fill dirt here to a depth of about 10 inches.  Once I get a free minute, I'll edge with pavers and start planning flowers!  :)

I also had him smooth out big loads of fill in the front field.  This is where I'll make a big veggie and annual flower cutting garden next year.  Hooray!


Some big drama with our local birds this week!  Fledgling birds are out and about, and parents are especially vigilant!



I watched this little guy struggle in a bush for a while before crying piteously for mom.



We have barn swallows nesting in our barn, and they were NOT happy about the construction noise! They vacated the nests and hovered nervously until the bulldozer was done.


Finally, I've noticed a very "tame" cowbird at our front feeders.  He stays when other birds fly away.  I took some close photos of him and realized that his eyes were swollen shut - that he wasn't flying away because he couldn't see me.


I believe this is a disease called mycoplasma gallisepticum, which seems to have started with house finches and spread to other birds.  It's conjunctivitis (pinkeye) and an upper respiratory infection.  We've found two dead cowbirds before noticing this sick one, who has been mysteriously absent from the feeders since this photo was taken.  I took all feeders down and cleaned them with bleach.  Hopefully that stops the infection from spreading to our other birds.  We get a lot of visitors here!



Our woodchucks have matured and left the den, but we've had some other visitors.  Some blink-and-you'll-miss-them wild rabbits...


...some sort of giant turtle (maybe snapping?) in our pond...


...and I've heard - but not seen - wild turkeys gobbling in our side field early mornings.  I can't wait to catch a glimpse! 

Our apple tree has little green apples, so small that you can still see the flower stamens (pic mislabeled) sticking out of one end.  Come fall, there will be pie!


The days have been a blur of enjoyable little surprises and pleasures like this.







We can't relax yet...June is riddled with construction appointments, and we don't even have the subfloor down upstairs yet.  But at least we've got some pretty views while we work.  :)

Have a great week!