Friday, July 26, 2024

The big pasture

For the last few weeks, we – especially Don – have been engaged in fencing our large pasture. Up to this point, the cows had been confined to the smaller areas below the house. While it was wonderful to see them eating down the grass and thus reducing the fire hazard, the available forage would only last so long.

So we've been fencing. And fencing. And fencing. Why does it seem like fencing takes forever?

But at long last, the task was done. A few days ago we gave the cows the "big release."

Our property is sloped, and the only access to the larger pasture from the corral where the cows stay during the night is up a fairly steep embankment.

Don built a sort of chute to make sure the cows went where we wanted them to go.

On the Big Day, we opened the gate. Maggie immediately started cropping the grass before she even got up the chute.

Pretty soon Mignon noticed the excitement. "Hey, what's going on?"

Then Fillet got in on the action and scooted up the chute without any hesitation.

I got the distinct impression the cows thought they were getting away with something nefarious. "Hey, look what we found!"

We left them alone to explore their new digs. Later, during the heat of the afternoon, I went to check on them and found them happily chewing their cud under the shade of some trees.

Isn't our Maggie a pretty girl?

The first evening in the new pasture, Don had to traipse far and wide to call the animals in for the night. But thereafter, they got the hang of it and come in automatically each evening for a bit of grain. In the morning, I release them to graze for the day.

What a pleasure it is to stand on the porch and watch our cattle grazing.

One afternoon they grazed right up to the fence line...

...and Frumpkin (Older Daughter's cat) – who was parked on his "catio" – had saucer eyes as he stared at them.

There should be enough forage in the large pasture to keep the animals occupied through November or so, when it will be time to feed them hay in the barn.

Little by little, step by step, we're becoming a homestead again.

Wednesday, July 24, 2024

Microscopic marvels

I have terrible vision. Anything beyond about six inches from my face is blurry. I've worn glasses since I was ten years old and am completely dependent upon them.

But this extreme near-sightedness has one amazing side benefit: I have extraordinary close-up vision. Seriously, it's practically microscopic. I call it my super power.

For this reason, I always remove my glasses any time I'm doing close-up work. This is a long-winded explanation of why I wasn't wearing my glasses the other day when sorting blueberries.

The blueberry harvest is in full swing, and I'm picking about a quart of fruit every other day. Before bagging and freezing it, I sort through to remove any stems, leaves, blossom remains, or other debris.

Like this:

Anyway, I was sitting there minding my own business, sorting the blueberries, when something caught my near-sighted eyes. Take a closer look at the berry at the farthest left:

It had a collection of tiny (empty) insect egg cases adhering to the skin of the fruit.

They were extraordinarily tiny and perfect.

I popped the egg cases off the blueberry easily with a fingernail. You can see the scars on the fruit itself.

Just one of those microscopic marvels I was blessed to see, all because I have lousy vision.

Sunday, July 21, 2024

Thirty-five thousand words so far

I'm still waiting on another contract from Harlequin for my Love Inspired Amish romances. I've been waiting for months. It's frustrating and not a little nerve-wracking, since the first thought that goes through my brain is they're trying to tell me my writing isn't good enough.

But a note to my agent soothed my frayed nerves. I wrote, "I have to admit, [my editor's] silence in the face of a possible new contract worries me. Should I be concerned?" – to which he replied, "No. Stop worrying. She’s not being silent, she’s being busy. [smiley-face emoticon]" Clearly this agent is used to dealing with insecure writers.

In fact, Harlequin is by no means ignoring me. I've had emails from editorial assistants regarding various components about books currently in the pipeline (finalizing artwork, etc.), and a note to my editor confirmed she hopes to get to my latest proposal soon, but she's behind in her reading. I have to remember they're dealing with controlled mayhem on the editorial side, and the world doesn't revolve around me.

So I've tried to be patient. And I'm writing. I'm writing a lot. Currently I'm participating in "Camp NaNoWriMo" and so far I'm 35,000 words into a 70,000-word manuscript. My hope to submit the final story in a month or so.

Besides, it's beastly hot outside (107F as I write this), and the keyboard is a useful and productive alternative when it's too miserable outside to do anything else. Onward!

Baby turkeys

We have baby turkeys everywhere. The hens seem to gather in groups (possibly related groups), and the chicks of each hen mingle with each other. Just let one hen stray away, however, and the chicks instantly sort themselves out and follow their mama.

I heard turkey alarm calls a while ago and peeked over the edge of the porch to see what was going on. Here's one of the mamas. She was looking alert, peering through the fence at the road on the other side.

Aha! Here's why the family was upset. A neighbor's cat was making its way up the road. (Sorry, it's gray and white and in the shadows, so it's hard to see.)


Once the danger passed, mama decided she wanted to get to the road. However she was too big to fit through the bars of the gate.

Easy solution, fly over the top.

The babies, however, were baffled, and piled up at the bottom of the gate.

Soon enough, however, the chicks were able to slip through and follow mama across the road to the other side.

Just a snippet of country living.

Friday, July 19, 2024

When the world grinds to a halt

Older Daughter was summoned for jury duty this morning. She dressed nicely and drove to our very small rural county seat to report for duty. What she thought was going to be a very long day of civic responsibilities turned into a very short jaunt. She was home within a couple hours.

Why? Because the global cyber security outage that happened early Friday morning even impacted the local court system, which was unable to access its own information as a result.

This is, needless to say, a massive vulnerability in an inter-connected system of anything. It's not that cybersecurity isn't necessary; but by having one access point – apparently globally – then it's vulnerable to massive disruptions. Even a very small rural county seat is affected.

Everyone is reporting the "blue screens of death."

As of this writing, the IT outage has affected banking, transportation and logistics, medical systems, news organizations, sporting events, manufacturing, supply chains, package deliveries (i.e. FedEx, UPS, Amazon),  government services, retail and e-commerce, education, and much more. As one source noted, the worldwide IT outage seemed a little "like Y2K, except it actually happened this time."

Time to check in, dear readers. Who has been impacted, and how?

Tuesday, July 16, 2024

Slow progress is still progress

Two years ago, I put up a post called "Ten directions at once" in which Don expressed frustration that he was getting scatterbrained because there were so many house and farm projects that needed doing.

As I said in the blog post, "He was pulled in so many different directions that he would do just a bit of this and a bit of that, without bringing a particular project to completion. ... The trouble is, accomplishing one thing was often hinged on first accomplishing another thing first, which in turn was hinged on accomplishing yet another thing ... and so it went, until he felt like he was a hamster spinning on a wheel, unable to focus and accomplish anything at all."

To overcome this issue, we sat down and hammered out a list of things to accomplish:

• Build deck for Older Daughter’s suite (finished, but never put up a blog post on it)
Build storage platform above shop
Organize a yard sale
Fence the pasture
• Build chicken coop
Build more garden beds
• Build wood shed
Order drip irrigation supplies
• Install hand pump for well
Build loft above shop
Cut firewood
• Make a well house
• Re-plumb pressure tank
Coat decks with sealant
• Install sunshade on western wall
• Build deck storage room
• Clean gutters (Don does this every year; no photos, sorry)
• Build cattle infrastructure in barn (he built feed boxes, but that's it)
• Clean out shed (I've done this several times)
Buy cows

I wrote out this blog post and then forgot all about it. But when I stumbled across it a couple days ago, I was impressed with how many of these projects were already completed. 

Don was less impressed, feeling like he should have done more. (How??) But then as he put it, slow progress is still progress.

The next project he plans to do is to install a 1500-gallon water storage tank under the deck. We have the tank; the issue has been finding the time to install it. Once the cows are moved onto the larger pasture, we hope to tackle the water tank.

Slow progress is still progress!

Monday, July 15, 2024

Apparently now the gloves are off

I didn't sleep well last night. I'm still trying to process the events of the last few days. America, and possibly the world, came within a hair's breadth – literally – of being irrevocably altered forever when a bullet grazed Trump's ear instead of hitting him squarely in the forehead.

The dust is still settling and the finger-pointing is just beginning as people try to get to the bottom of just exactly what happened. Speculation ranges from the gunman being a lone-wolf assassin to the whole thing being an inside job by the Secret Service.

I don't know. And here's the thing: Neither do you. Everyone is spouting his favorite theory, but no one knows for sure. We, the ordinary citizens, may never know.

But I do know this: There are layers upon layers of obfuscation that prevent us from seeing the true state of our country. The divide in this nation has never been wider, except possibly in 1860 or so. And above all, there are evil forces at work out there, forces we can't even begin to comprehend.

And now, apparently, the gloves are off. Batten down the hatches, folks. It's only going to get crazier as the election grows closer.

Friday, July 12, 2024

Cows and fencing and water, oh my

Our bovines are settling in nicely. We've gotten into a routine, and they quickly learned to come to the "Bossy" call to get a bit of sweet COB (corn/oats/barley) each evening.

Here's Maggie, peeking over the edge of the deck.

Mignon nursing off her mama Filet.

Right now they're restricted to the area below the house. This is an area of less than 1.5 acres, so we've been closely monitoring how much grass they have left and supplementing them with dry hay in the barn.

We have a larger pasture, but can't release the cows into it until it's properly fenced. That's a task that has been consuming us for a couple weeks now. Most of the hard work has fallen on Don; not only because I was gone for 10 days to visit my parents, but also because I work my online job at least three days a week (sometimes more, if covering for absent coworkers), during which times I'm positively glued to the computer.

Additionally, with this crippling heat wave the western portion of the nation has been experiencing, we're limited to working in the very early mornings. This week, I was at last able to give Don some proper assistance in getting longer stretches of fencing tied up.

We're using up the field fence we bought several years ago, purchased because we knew this day would come. We have plenty of rolls, and we're glad we bought it when we did since prices are significantly higher now.

A roll fits perfectly into the tractor bucket.

We needed two rolls (they're 330 feet each) for one of our fence lines, up a steep enough slope that we didn't want to tote them by hand (each roll weighs 144 lbs.). We were also armed with gloves, extra T-posts, wire, nippers, a come-along, and all the other accouterments necessary to pull a fence tight and wire it in place.

We started at the top of the hill and unrolled the fence downward.

Earlier, while I was down in California, Don was weedwhacking along the fence line when he discovered this brave pheasant, setting on eggs on our neighbor's side of the fence. She hasn't moved off the nest, despite us working mere inches from her. Pheasant hens set for 23 days, and we have no idea how close the eggs are to hatching.

Well hidden, isn't she?

She watched me with her gimlet eye, but hardly blinked.

A day or two later, when passing the same spot, I noticed the hen was gone (doubtless off getting something to eat). Six eggs, that's her clutch.


Once the fence was unrolled, we loosely looped it over the T-posts to get it off the ground.

Then, section by section, Don ratcheted the fencing tight and I wired the fence to the T-posts. We've been working very early in the morning to beat the worst of the heat, which is one of the reasons the process is going as slow as it is.

(Bonus photo: I was trying to focus on an insect that had landed on a stem of grass when suddenly a hover fly flew into my camera focus, so I snapped a pic. Not the clearest, but kinda cool.)

Meanwhile, another chore that needed doing was cleaning out the cows' water tank.

It had become gooky (is that a word?) and needed a good scrubbing.

Siphoning it out was a slow process and took about an hour.

Finally it was drained enough that I could tip the rest of the water out.

After that, it was just an easy application of elbow grease.

I rinsed everything, then reattached the float valve and started filling the tank.

Filet wandered up about this time to see what I was up to. She got the benefits of fresh, cool water to drink. It must have tasted like ambrosia after a warm day.

Yeah, they're extra work. Yeah, fencing is a pain in the patookus. But I'm glad to have cows again.