Tag: Gerardine Baugh
Mice are perfect cat food
It’s nearly five in the morning. The heat is running and Uriah is asleep. My cats are up and energetic, and the outside nocturnal animals aren’t bumping against the house.
This is that very quiet point of the day. I’m usually in bed, but Kenshin, my male half Siamese heard me tossing and turning and said ‘hello.’
I’m not about to step outside, its freezing- 34 degrees. I am staying inside.
The walls are quiet; come to think of it I didn’t hear any scratching at all last night. Hopefully all the mice have been caught or chased out by the cats.
This has been a great summer for mice; they tried to have the run of the house. My cats were catching them at a rate of one mouse per week. Normally, the mice only try to come inside in the fall after the farmers harvested their crops.
I still have a chance at more mice soon. The farmer still has feeder corn standing tall in his south side field. The cats will be happy…
Country mice and rats are slightly different than their city cousins. They are cleaner, and healthier looking. This is my opinion, from what I observed of the little rodents, from my perch on a chair, the couch or in the bathtub.
Just recently a rat took up residence near the outside dog kennel, which happens to be right outside my office window.
When Uriah wants to stay outside all day, I put a cup full of dry dog food outside with him. The rat will come running as if I were feeding him. Sitting upright, next to the dog bowl, looking eerily like a cartoon rat. If it starts talking I’m in trouble.
That rat’s days are numbered. The hawk has been circling the deck and I have seen the owl during the day a lot this summer.
Just to clarify I don’t like mice or rats running around where I live! The comical run though the house with me heading for high ground is not fun.
A couple of weeks ago, Kenshin came running out of the kitchen, inches behind a large mouse. I happened to be walking into the kitchen at the same time. I had a mouse and a cat running in circles around me, literally!
Cats are great mousers. I am not!
Cats love to give me mice. I have learned how to be thankful when they drop them at my feet or on my chest when I’m sleeping…
Keeping with the Green theme, I don’t use poisons. Poison is very bad for other animals that feed on mice.
Besides, a mouse is the perfect cat food, And a cat is a pefect mouser.
Morning: 8 am~
Silence- over cast sky, heavy air pressure but most of all, the silence it’s settled in like a thick blanket.
A couple of Blue Jays screamed and whistled at me this morning. I wouldn’t have thought twice about the silence if it had been cold, which is not the case; the temperature is around sixty degrees.
I felt something move around me, Mother Nature is waiting for something to happen. Every living creature has to have a migraine from this air pressure.
Somewhere around 12:00pm~
The ground is holding in the vibrations from the train nearly two miles away. When the air is this still sounds drift around the trees, and illusion can echo eerily in the darkness and fog. In the middle of the day it just feels odd.
Around 1pm~
I stood out on the deck and sneezed five times, painfully irritating. I looked up as the sun peeked out behind the grey clouds. Blue sky slipped into view along the horizon.
My sneezing disturbed a Blue Jay. He flew out of the old apple tree into a miniature crab apple tree, closer to the deck and to me, then screamed his anger.
About 5pm~
I just remembered to take Uriah for his last walk around the back. It is almost too late. I decided he needs the exercise, and so do I.
It’s nearly dark; that point where the lighter objects glow and the darkness is shadowed in a mist. Above me the clouds in the western sky fanned out towards the east. Pieces of yellow sunset and blue sky shine through the clouds along the horizon.
A heavy musky smell wafts past me. I whistle for Uriah. He is panting as he trots to keep up. We hit the lowest part of the path. I can’t see the mud so I hold tight to my walking stick and slip on towards home.
Suddenly Uriah starts to growl, a low muffled sound that comes from deep in his throat. He pushes past me. Then stops directly in front of me, and starts scraping the ground with his back paws and takes a stance of ownership and protection.
“Good, dog, Uriah!” My voice is loud in the darkness, he turns towards me, sneezes then growls back at the trees and tall grass. I wondered if his sneezing is a warning that a skunk is hiding in the grass? I wasn’t going to stick my nose anywhere near a skunk. Hmm, It could be a raccoon another reason to walk faster.
I moved past Uriah, and called him to follow. We are moving rapidly towards home I could barely see the ground.
Fifty feet or so away from the path, Uriah turns back and barks, scraps his back feet kicking up dirt and grass. His hackles are still raised, as we hurry towards the house.
Raccoons are dangerous for both of us. A few years ago, when I had three dogs I was attacked by a forty pound raccoon. My dogs saved my life.
Fly Low Among The Fields~
This afternoon ~the weather is holding up. Temperatures in the 70’s, winds have picked up and so has the noise level.
There are a lot of small planes flying over head, okay, maybe three or four. To me that’s a lot of planes. I didn’t notice if the gliders where out. They soaring above me occasionally and I hear a high pitch whine if they are coming down to fast.
Early spring, I was outside near the barn when I heard an odd high pitch, engineless sound above me. I couldn’t see anything until the glider came around the trees, very low. I could have touched it. It dipped between the barn and the trees, and then continued on over the farm field where it landed on the farmer’s air field. I went in the house and called the air field and let them know they had a plane down. After that I try to keep and eye on where the planes are in the air.
At least five people are shooting. At what I have no idea! When I first moved in this area, over fourteen years ago, I would rarely hear anyone shooting. Times have changed! People move in, see the open spaces and set up a target. That’s why I walk around wearing a very fashionable bright orange jacket.
Smoke from burning leaves and branches drifts past me. Reminding me, my burn pile is over flowing with branches. I tried to burn some weeds, leaves, and those branches a couple of weeks ago. They wouldn’t catch fire. I gave up.
I learned after I burned off my eyebrows, if something doesn’t want to burn give up.
I stood back and watched the farmer’s cows trotting towards his barn. Must be milking time! Uriah showed up, nudging my hand for a treat. He chose the Liver Snap, then sat back and stared at me, whining until I gave him the Milk Bone
A perfect autumn day, when I was a kid this was called “Indian summer.” When the temperatures rise so all I need is a sweater. This is as close to perfect weather as I can hope for.
I walked around the path, watching the ground and hoping to avoided raccoon scat, muskrat holes and sticks. I kicked up the leaves; they were curled and dried crunching with each step.
The mud on the low end of the path was easier to walk over today, not as slippery as yesterday. Green grass was making an attempt grow, not only on the edges of the path but directly in the center. I took advantage of that new growth using it as stepping stones.
I checked out the prints in the mud, my dogs, raccoons and deer, and small rat feet. That deer must be heavy, his hooves sunk deep in the mud. My shoes hardly sunk in at all. The marks I left would be the same if I had walked on pavement with wet shoes.
I set off up and to my right. I noticed that the farm to the south hasn’t been harvested. That farmer has been out at night for the past week. Early Saturday morning around two- thirty, he was in the fields to the north.
I stopped and listened to the rustling, dried corn stalks. Tall beige grasses moved around me in the warm breeze. Rustling, crackling, a branch squeaked over head.
Walking amid the dry grass, I could imagine others who passed through here over the centuries. Did they pause and listen to this sound of autumn? Were they in a hurry to gather the last of the seeds, fruits and vegetable storing them for a long winter? Or, did they pass through, taking with them dreams of the tall grass and rustling warm breezes. Maybe they weaved corn husk dolls, and canned fruit.
A faint buzzing and humming sound drifted my way. The farmer was out in his fields. Sounds drifted to me from the south. I hope that he doesn’t cut this field today; I wanted to keep the windows open. Dust will spread out from his tractor, and spread all over the house, if I don’t close all the windows.
I hesitated and listened. Crows flew noisily overhead. To my right there was movement in-between the trees. A young buck saw me; startled he started to run, and then changed his mind, and sauntered into the thicket. I smiled and nodded.
The farmer is still too far away. I have time to enjoy my morning walk. I may even have an hour or two to air out the house.
In this moment, I closed my eyes listened to the past drifting through.
Milkweeds, Snowballs and Wishes
I have been trying to grow milkweeds on my property for the past fourteen years. I have some milkweeds with whitish flowers, and some with pink flowers.
When I first moved here, the Milkweeds were small and very few, they were about ten inches high and scrawny. A neighbor, in Chicago, had credited me with the first monarch butterflies he had seen in years. So I pulled out my squirreled away milkweed seeds, saved from my Chicago plants. They were tall ones, three to maybe five feet tall.
I wanted to bring that out here. This is the country; it should have been easy to grow wildflowers, right? Well, not really. When the farmers spray the fields in the spring I lost the majority of the milkweeds. A few survived growing next to some trees or protected by tall grass. Each year they made the attempt to grow taller and stronger. Until finally had a patch in the front, near the drainage pond. Last year, that area flooded and the milkweeds sat in deep water for over a month and everything turned black and molded.
This year I had a small patch closer to the driveway. I watched it all summer. The plants grew between three and five feet tall. Even when they started to die down, the stalks stood straight and held onto the seed pods.
I was expecting to grab a couple of seed pods, like I do every year, and save them in the garage until spring. Two days ago, the seeds burst out of their pods, in a puff of pure white, sparkly, silky blur. The small flat brown seeds were connected like tiny parachutes waiting for the winds to catch them. For a moment, serenely, they held on to their pods, narcissistically I assumed they were waiting for me to notice them.
I did a double take when I walked out to get the mail. Surrounded by a variety of browns and dried dark greens, and sitting on those splotchy dried stalks the pods had burst into view. At first glance, I thought I was looking at snow perched on the end of a branch.
I have to admit, second and third glances they still looked like snowballs.
I waded through the dried grass to get a closer look. At that moment, a slight breeze made a wish and the seeds drifted around and above me, the seeds littered the grass, and wafting along on each breeze.
My first thought, “The Monarchs will love this.” Then I remembered that sometimes the farmers use Bt insecticides their crops, not very beneficial to Monarchs.
We live in a world of chemicals, electromagnetic radiation; poison rain,… the list can be endless. All this makes me wonder how one person, not pouring chemicals into the land can help? Help will come when we start to love the so called, weeds again and stop being afraid. Fear is a reaction to things we don’t understand.
I wonder if I make a wish with one of these seed pods, like a child when holding up dandelion that has gone to seed and wish for ,…What would you wish for?
This site has a description of what, Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) corn pollen is;
“Colorado State University”
http://www.ext.colostate.edu/pubs/crops/00707.html
Here is some information from the, University of Illinois Extension, Illinois Pesticide Review;
http://web.extension.uiuc.edu/ipr/i4188_829.html
“Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) is a bacteria that occurs naturally in the soil. It produces an endotoxin crystal that attacks the gut membrane and creates pores, which cause leakage and swelling. The swelling continues until cells burst, which allows the gut contents to leak into the insect’s blood, disrupting the blood pH and resulting in paralysis and death within 24 to 72 hours. In Bt corn, the genes in the bacteria that code for the production of this endotoxin crystal are inserted through genetic engineering into the corn plant. The resulting corn plants produce the endotoxin crystal, causing the death of caterpillars that feed on them. This toxin is produced in many locations of the corn plant, including the pollen.”
Picture of Milkweed-
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Milkweed-in-seed2.jpg
Rain Of Leaves~
I walked with silent contemplation. Not a fast paced march against heavy winds. Nor an irritation amid waving flags, aimed against storming mosquitoes, just a simple quiet stroll.
I stretched upward, taking in a deep breath of cool air and watched the tops of the birch trees; their coin shaped leaves had changed from a soft green, to golden green, into brown coins that littered the ground. The sun was hitting the top branches along with the gentle wind, which brought about a subtle clapping in the tree tops. I wondered are they applauding the setting sun, or sending thanks for the passing of a beautifully calm day? Either way the view was astounding.
A couple of stray bugs decided to interrupt my contemplation and buzzed around my head. Where did they hide when the tempeture dropped? Inside the house the widows were crawling with Japanese beetles. Outside I can’t find one.
As I walked off the path, and headed towards the apple trees I noticed the calmness of the corn field next door. The farmer still hasn’t cut that corn down. I can hear the humming of the large faming equipment. The field across the road was getting harvested.
The corn field next door, rustled. A slight breeze moved between the dried beige rows. I wasn’t worried a deer would come crashing through. In hind sight- I should be. I have seen a deer appear from the middle of a corn field in the middle of a bright warm day. I stopped and listened. I couldn’t hear anything crashing through those tightly packed stalks of corn.
The birds were quiet. They must be settled in for the night. I wondered if they sleep in the same place, night after night?
Uriah ran up to me, his tongue hanging heavy and a look of complete happiness on his face. He was checking up on me, once he knew I wasn’t going for a second walk on the path he trotted under the apple tree to chase the chipmunks.
Have Any Idea What That Plant Is?
I stopped half way around the back path, while talking to Uriah. He had seen a black squirrel. With high hopes his nose was to the ground and he wandered in circle. We never had a squirrels living in our backyard. Too many corn fields void of trees. As son as the line of trees from town grew upwards and out, the squirrels used them as stepping stones, and just last summer they finally reached us.
The black squirrel was startled when I walked on the path with out singing out. He leaped from the smaller mulberry trees into the tall grass and scurried up on one of the older bog willows – Uriah leaped into the grass with his tail wagging. Immediately he was pulled into the hunt.
From my stand point I could see it going nowhere. The furry squirrel was already thirty feet ahead of Uriah and holding onto a much stronger willow. He looked back at us, still not confident enough to chatter his anger in our direction. Instead he leaped again and again from tree to tree. I continued walking. Without a back ward glance I whistled for Uriah, surprisingly he followed.
When I stopped, I looked out and up to where the land leans upwards, facing away and towards the south. The grass had changed color with the last dip in temperature, so the colors were muted beige, browns, washed out green. Closer to the ground it was very dry beige. What got my attention was a plant that gave me the illusion of a wispy, swirl of green, bright spring green.
When I spotted the sweeping, feathered branches, of what I thought was one plant, was in fact, two growing side by side. The main stem had the look of an asparagus, soft light green; the large plant was three fingers thick. The smaller, its height was the comparable to the first and its stem was only one finger thick. Both grew on a single straight strong stem, side branches swirled downward like a weeping willow.
Using my ski pole I checked for holes and large spider webs. So each step took a lot longer than just and easy stride into the unknown, fraught with a possible jaunt to the ER.
The plant was growing nearly fifty feet from the path, after my initial surprise at its color, Easter grass green, I noticed the ends looked as though they had started re-growing, looking very feathery, in an evergreen pattern. I touched one of the branches, soft and delicate.
I couldn’t spot any other plants in the area like these two. I hadn’t noticed it this past summer. It more than likely blended into the landscape, so I don’t know if it had any other type of leaves or flowers. I could see that some of its branches were bare, with points were there should have been something. Similar to a fake flower when it drops off you’re left with a pointed, naked end.
I moved away searching for another like it, somewhere in the trees or out in the open fields I found nothing. Unique plants, like certain people, seem to come out in the open after every one else around them peters out.
I will have to make a note to watch out for this plant in the spring, I would love to find out if it is a wildflower, or a tree.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Squirrel
I Never Walk Alone
This morning, around 8am, I took Uriah out for his morning walk. The air was still and cool. I could hear the muffled chatter of the birds. A dog complained somewhere. He could be miles away. Around here, with all the open spaces sound moves across miles of fields, over the roads, past cows and horses grazing silently in early mist to land at my feet. Curiosity will have me speculating at each sounds origin.
Uriah ran ahead of me as I circled the back yard. I walked close to the trees to the north, near the old apple trees.
I felt someone, or something watching me. Peering intently into the nearly leafless bog willows I saw nothing. The dense summer foliage had changed over night, to naked branches weaved together in a haphazard maze.
Still, I felt something watching me. I tried to shrug it off and turned toward the house.
I took a few steps forward. My right side towards the trees, that’s when, just out of the corner of my eye I spotted him, a buck, standing quietly, about one hundred feet from me inside the tree line. He was the size of a large horse!
I didn’t move. Yet, I could feel him. He wasn’t frightened, neither was I…
I didn’t have time to react even if he charged. This is mating season, and crossing paths with a buck now can have direr effects.
His ear moved. Then he turned his head slightly in my direction.
I couldn’t differentiate between the tangle of trees and antlers on his head. He stood tall; his stance was similar to walking with a heavy crown on your head. All this time I kept looking straight ahead. I could only see him in my peripheral vision, he bended into the trees when I tried to look directly at him.
Time moved slowly. Finally, I noticed a slight breeze as it blew towards the deer explaining why I hadn’t caught his scent. Just as I was wondering if he was going to charge me, I saw his white tail flip; just slightly. He slowly started walking east. I took the hint and headed to the house walking west.
That’s when I realized, Uriah had decided to go check him out. I really wasn’t in the mood for irritating a buck today, or any day.
I whistled and Uriah did his bravado dance of scrapping at the grass with his hind legs. He squeezed out a couple of attempts at a growl. Then rolled his eyes, mouth open in a wide doggy grin he trotted over to me. His job is to keep the wildlife out of the backyard. He raised his eyebrows at me then he glanced around, as if to say, “No one here but us. I did my job, gimmee cookie!”
I gave him a choice of a Milk Bone, or a Liver Snap. Being Uriah, he ended up with both.
I grabbed my coffee, and stood out on the deck. High pitch screams circled above me and I could hear branches breaking. I love my morning coffee.
Show Me Your Secrets~
Early this morning the ground was frozen and the air was crisp, as I headed towards the path. I wondered if the water had receded enough to allow me to walk .
I was surprised to see the ground with only trickles of water still running freely. I carefully stepped on the grass growing along the edges, avoiding low hanging branches.
Frost airbrushed the shadows as I moved up and around the trees. I could see my breath added to the morning fog. I walked quickly. I was on a mission. “Walk the dog and quickly get back in the house to a hot cup of coffee.”
I reached the curve in the path that swings around and sets me on the path home. Stopping I looked up at the flock of birds screaming at me. I really shouldn’t group them together I saw robins, and starlings, doves and finches, woodpeckers and others that flew past so fast I couldn’t recognize them.
I took a deep breath, thanked the earth for the splendor set in this moment. Then, I asked, “Please show me your secrets.”
Nature is full of secret. You just have to slow down and look for them.
At that moment, when I looked up and away from my feet, and asked the question, “Please show me your secrets.” The clouds parted above me so that the sun, which was sitting near the horizon, slipped over my shoulders and lit up the farmer’s field.
Acre upon acres in front and around me brightened.
I could only describe what I saw as a patchwork quilt flowing out and across the land. Golden yellow leaves of soy beans, a deep green wave of grass, corn standing tall waiting to be harvested, 150 year Oak trees their twisted branches touched with that golden light.
The sun moved across the fields dipped low then slipped upward. I smiled and said, “Thank You!” At that moment a large hawk rose from the corn field, turned and flew towards me and landed in one of the larger trees to the south.
I took a deep breath, whistled for my dog and moved on towards home and my coffee…