Home. And Home Some More

Paige came to visit over Thanksgiving which was swell. She loves the dogs and it was very mellow and low key.

Zsa Zsa and Cici have taken turns being broody. I was thinking it was all 3 of the young ones, but Rob pointed out it was just the two of them, but the thing is it FEELS like all three! After weeks and weeks of this then….Zsa Zsa is broody again! So it just goes round and round. There was a brief time when all three were laying, but it didn’t last long (the 3 older hens seem to be done laying for life). I decided the one silver lining of having to yank them out of the coop all the time is that it’s a fine opportunity for a selfie together.

Zsa Zsa is so fluffy

I was noticing that the coop was littered with feathers as many of the hens were molting this fall. So I gathered up a bunch of them and glued them to make a wreath. It came out OK- it actually looked best early on with just the fluffy feathers so I was thinking maybe next year I’d try again and just use those. We were both kind of thinking the feathers may be kind a gross/bug infested so anyhow we ended up hanging it in the chicken coop!

I was in California for Christmas so Rob held the fort while I was gone, about a week. For a few days we were concerned that Pangea hadn’t pooped in her daily soak like she usually does. We decided that maybe she just wasn’t used to Rob yet being the main caretaker. Sure enough, she finally pooped which caused minor celebration.

This blog is about our life in Austin, so not gonna talk about my trip but I will include a picture of the amazing squid earrings that Raine made for me!

By the time I returned, we were realizing how omicron was everywhere and we really don’t want to get it (I’m really concerned about long covid) so anyway we’ve basically been hunkering down ever since. We hope to resume sort of normal once omicron fades, maybe in a couple weeks from now.

Oh and in December I got in the pool and swam 4 times! It was cold, but I just kept moving. Now I’m afraid it’s too cold for me until Spring.

I guess sometime before omicron kept us from doing anything, we had dinner over at Susan & David’s place along with Karen & Doug Murray who were visiting Austin that weekend (from Minneapolis). So it was really fun to see their place and get to hang out with Karen & Doug again.

I was noticing recently that the little air plant that I stuck into a large-ish hole in our front stonework is actually still alive! I hope it makes it through the winter—I can’t recall for sure if it survived last winter or not but that seems hardly possible with the prolonged extra cold weather we had.

IT’S ALIVE!

Occasionally Nessa puts up her back feathers which looks really weird. Not clear why. Hard to catch her in those moments but I finally did the other day.

Most recently I used eggshell pieces and assembled them to make the United States (representing how fragile it is right now). I did Alaska and Hawaii too but the pic looked better just with continental U.S. They are just laying on posterboard so I will just wipe them away soon. But maybe I’ll do another thing like that and see if I can glue them down somehow? It will be hard as they are teeny weeny and fragile. Perhaps.

Gallery of more pics below. There’s been a lot of fun cooking that you’ll notice.

Fall Surprises

We put in a few crops in our raised beds last month and at least some of them are doing well. The collards, chard, kale, and arugula. Also snap peas. Some of the others seem to be slow but maybe some growth is underground like beets and carrots.

Chickens have been OK except all this broodiness! When Zsa Zsa was done, then it was Sisi’s turn and she was broody for WEEKS and WEEKS. I was removing her from the coop a few times a day and we also tried ice baths but nothing worked. I finally just stopped doing anything and she actually seems to have finally cured herself. So I don’t expect eggs from her for a LONG time. I gather hens typically slow down egg production in the fall anyway and since Matt is molting, we only have one hen laying any eggs right now, and that’s Isis.

On my birthday we met up with Louise & John, and to my surprise, they knew it was my birthday! We enjoyed mini pies they brought and beers, of course!

It was actually pretty shocking and gory one morning when I saw out front that a dead deer was laying in our front yard! It was a full size deer that had its entire mid-section eaten away overnight. And not near the road. So who knows what took it down- maybe rumors of mountain lion are real? Anyway, per Paige’s suggestion, I moved the trail cam to our fence that evening to see what may be attracted to the carcass overnight. Unfortunately, before nightfall, something shifted the camera (seemed to be the neighbor’s cat). But the carcass was still semi in view. Around midnight, the camera picked up a deer walking by….and then nothing else. But when I went out in the morning, the carcass had moved like 30 yards!! So frustrating not to pick up the action on the camera!

We wondered briefly how to dispose of the carcass but quickly realized it wouldn’t be a problem as the vultures were all over it and in no time it was just some bones. Rob put the bones in a bag in the trash. Those vultures are kinda spooky and they were all over the house and you can hear their wings when they fly nearby and stuff. This was a little before Halloween so it was authentically spooky.

Pixelated for sensitive viewers

Weather’s been great so we can eat dinner outside often this fall, watched football on TV outside on the weekend! And I swam in the pool recently, about a week before Thanksgiving! Yes, it was chilly, but I stayed active for like 15-20 minutes.

Wheeled the TV outside to watch football.

I got a new app on my phone that makes it easy to create cinemagraphs, and I LOVE cinemagraphs. Basically you take a short video clip and then you can choose what part remains still versus video. So I tried some experiments and put a few things in my instagram.

I recently germinated some red wheat berries and we ate some of them but some other ones I threw into a flowerpot and they have grown into wheat grass that I feed to Pangea!!

We now have a dehydrator and when I was over at Regi & Sean’s I was admiring their Cuban Oregano plant and offered to dehydrate some since it wasn’t going to get used for anything. That was the first herb I tried. It worked, but the leaves need to be cut way smaller and dehydrator run for a long time. I’ll be trying to dry some other herbs too.

I learned later to cut these into teeny pieces as even then it takes a LOOOOONG time to dehydrate!

Now that we no longer have to inject calcium into Pangea I’m hoping we can be friends. So sometimes I heat a rag in the microwave and wrap her in it and set her on my chest. Sometimes she’s fine with that, other times not really.

Regi & Sean get along well with Pangea

We bathed the dogs recently outside using the hose which kinda went alright until the next day when Woody was acting weird and I realized that he was suffering from “cold water tail”!! It took me a bit to remember but Nimbus used to get the same thing sometimes after baths at Petco! Anyway, I think he’s already a little better. His tail is no longer sagging straight down- starting to rise up a bit.

Here’s how the dogs get into the car.

More pics in gallery below.

To Our Tortoise

Those wrinkly stalky irresistible rear legs
Pressing on
Walking
No such thing as sitting

Ah me, but your wee home!
The substrate the lights the water the rocks the uvb
The temp the humidity the air you breathe
The noise of the aging refrigerator

You fit in the palm of my hand

Walkabouts where you try it all out
Grass
Dandelion
Toxic weeds
Dog poop
Plastic waste pieces—how are there so many?

What about winters?
What about trips?
What about your life after my death?

What about our insistence to make you a pet?

Your scaly arms a preview of your future form:
A rock solid, statuesque, timeless, weed-eating, moving mound in the grass

Strong and silent type

You were barely born when the vet prescribed Calcium
Injections
Daily
For two months at home.
We almost couldn’t stand to comply
But we do

You contract as the needle pierces your skin
and you exhale audibly
with pain.

Someday you’ll meet the dogs and the chickens and the vagrant peahen

We offer you grass from outside, grass I grow inside,
Plus Tortoise Table green lights like hibiscus and heather
And I once snuck you a berry
Sometimes some kale
Shhhh!

The move to outside living is looming
Will you tip over or get hurt? There’s predators and weather and chance of escape!

Don’t let’s talk about pyramiding.

Pangea, we fight for our future.

Warped Ways

Raine came to visit for a few days which went great, even though she had to work more than she had hoped. She and the dogs got along well, and she also got to see her friend, Nicole, who lives in Austin. Raine painted me a painting of the chickens while she was here too!!

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During Raine’s visit my brother was driving through Texas so we met him on his actual birthday at a restaurant in San Marcos! That was cool to catch up and give him a couple of little gifts.

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Zsa Zsa is no longer broody…but Sisi is! What a pain! Right away I tried putting Sisi in an ice bath, like 3 times in one day, but it didn’t stop her. So I just take her out of the coop a few times a day. And I gather once they are broody it takes awhile before they lay eggs again. So currently, only Matt and Isis are laying eggs!

Brought Sisi in for a quick pick on one of my many trips to remove her from the coop.

Brought Sisi in for a quick pick on one of my many trips to remove her from the coop.

Once we were 100% certain that Nessa’s eggs were infertile and LONG past any chance of hatching, we threw them out. Nessa still lives in the yard, though, and has reverted back to her original lifestyle which involved a lot of honking noises and dominating a bit over the chickens. Mostly it’s fine, but I do guard the coop for a few minutes in the morning so the chickens can eat breakfast before Nessa barges in for her meal.

Nessa paces around the run while she waits for the chickens to finish eating in the morning.

Nessa paces around the run while she waits for the chickens to finish eating in the morning.

Rob built a structure atop Pangea’s habitat with PVC pipes and plastic and we added a reptile humidifier, so that her space now has much higher humidity. Seems to be working pretty well. I also feel pretty good about the foods I’m feeding her which include grasses and dandelion from yard, tortoise grasses I’m growing inside, occasional piece of lettuce or kale, African hibiscus leaves, and moistened tortoise pellets. In fact, I just weighed her this week and she has grown about 35% over the last month! Seems pretty good to me.

And after 3 trips to the vet, we finally have got an OK way to give her daily shots of calcium. Rob sets up the needle for me, and I stick the needle under one of her scales on her forearm. She hates it and usually pees, and I feel AWFUL, but I usually succeed. We can’t wait to be done with this. We still probably have another month to go though.

Sean invited us to see Dwight Yokum with him and his son, Noah, which was very fun. It was an outdoor concert right down the street from us at Nutty Brown.

We also hosted Sean and Regi over for dinner and it was great, and we also went to their place for dinner. Their house is more remote-feeling as it is surrounded by nature rather than lots of yard. They have cool plants and also frogs that hang out around their pool. My favorite part about their place were the two secret doors in the walls!

I’m pretty sure I gasped loudly at this point!!

I’m pretty sure I gasped loudly at this point!!

I feel like I look goofy in this but tough luck I guess.

I feel like I look goofy in this but tough luck I guess.

Somewhere in the middle of all this I finally upgraded my iphone from a 7 to the very newest model! Normally I wouldn’t get the newest but since the camera is completely upgraded and it is important to me, I went for it. And on top of that I recently got two new apps to go to the next level: CinemagraphPro to make cinemagraphs which I LOVE and also Halide to make macros even better! Still getting up to speed on these.

In writing this blog post, all my pics taken with new iphone are appearing warped in this blog post! Not sure what’s going on and I haven’t gotten help yet from Squarespace so I’m just going to post all this even if the images seem warped. Who knows, maybe on your device they will look OK. It’s frustrating me! NOTE: I just fixed them using a workaround they gave me. Hopefully in future they can make this easier :)

Paige informed me that the Grahams, friends from Minneapolis, have moved to Austin! So we invited them over for dinner and it was a lot of fun. Sorry I guess we didn’t take pics. It was fun showing them our place and all the animals!

This weekend we planted veggies in 4 of the raised beds. Some already started and some seeds. Rob cleared out the remains of last year’s garden in preparation, and threw it all behind our fence in the trail cam’s area. So deer are basically in all my trail cam shots lol for the last couple of days. Literally had over 4,000 images to go through yesterday :) Also, rabbits simply do not eat carrots in my experience.

The dogs are obsessed with a couple of baby rabbits that live under the deck. The constant sniffing is one thing, but digging around the edge and/or scratching at the wood is quite another!

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Another momentous stretch for us. What kicked it off was one day we were out on a walk and we said hello to some boys I already “know” because they often walk their dog, Lulu, around the neighborhood. But this time, they were accompanied by Mom. So I excitedly said hello and we talked for a minute mostly because I knew they also owned chickens. Well, she happened to mention that they also own a tortoise! In fact, they had recently “lost” her but she was found. I had seen this drama in the Nextdoor app but I didn’t know who the owner was!

So anyway, a couple days later we visited her place and got to see the tortoise that lives in the backyard. The mom explained that the tortoise rescue place didn’t really enforce the rules that they emphasize on-line. It seemed like was easy for her to get one!

So after that, we had renewed excitement about our chances to adopt a tortoise, even from the rescue place that seemed so particular. So I looked at their website, but at the current time there were no African tortoises available. Who knows how long before there would be. They had other kinds of tortoises/turtles, but we had decided on African tortoise as they get really big, live really long, and are considered great pets. They can also live outside.

So anyway then I recalled that in my social media feed there were pics of baby tortoises someone was selling. I went back and found the entry in Facebook (a tortoise owners group) and messaged the owner, Khloe, and there were still some available!

Khloe’s baby sulcatas

Khloe’s baby sulcatas

So then I discussed the idea with Rob, and he agreed immediately (probably realizing that being measured and thoughtful wasn’t going to go over well with me). So that weekend we drove to Waco to pick up the baby tortoise! The seller lives in Ft. Worth so it’s basically halfway. The weather was uncharacteristically stormy, so it made for some poor driving conditions along what is already a busy road.

Khloe asked me to pick which one I wanted LOL. So this is the one I chose!

Khloe asked me to pick which one I wanted LOL. So this is the one I chose!

On car ride home!

On car ride home!

I learned that the eggs had been kept at a temperature that favors females, but anyway the sex of the tortoises won’t be known for a while longer. Rob and I were both shocked at how SMALL she was when we saw her in person! Somehow the pics didn’t convey this. She was like 3 inches long. The CUTEST thing ever! I asked the Khloe and her husband some questions but I could hardly listen to the answers I was so excited. We forked over $125 and drove home.

Turns out Khloe is just converting her hobby of raising/selling sulcatas into a little business called “Shelby’s Shells” and we are therefore one of her first clients. We take this as a good sign as she has been very happy to answer questions and will be glad to have good reviews from her early customers.

We may need to keep the tortoise indoors for her first 2 years or so because predators. We have her in an open-topped container with a UVB lamp and a ceramic heat lamp. Every day I take her outside for a little fresh air, sunshine, and walkabout. Oh, and a bath which is recommended for hydration. I have been keeping those short as she seems to hate them :)

Sulcatas eat mostly grasses and weeds. Most fruits or veggies are not recommended, or at least only rarely. We provide her with “timothy hay” but she hasn’t eaten any of that yet. Khloe also started us off with some tortoise food pellets but she also doesn’t eat that. Khloe explained that in their first month, the babies don’t eat much because they are still getting nutrition from the yolk.

If all goes well, I expect she’ll grow fast. Her Dad, Brutus, weights 165 pounds!

She is scared of me and when I approach her tub she often freezes up. But I have caught her in the act of eating a few times now. She definitely will eat romaine lettuce (not ideal nutritionally but Ok for now), dandelion, and a little thistle.

I am unclear what kind of grass we have in our lawn, so I ordered some tortoise-friendly grass seeds and planted them in a planter. I also ordered African hibiscus and have planted a few seeds of that as it would be a good food source. Some of these are starting to grow. I also ordered buffalo grass seed which I hope to put right in the yard as it should survive well here.

Having some confusion about best way to raise her. Biggest concern now is humidity. We are not achieving high levels but it sounds like that’s important. So I’ve been keeping a sprayer on hand and every so often during the day I “make it rain” all around her tub. Hoping that will help a bit.

We weighed her yesterday (I think we’ve owned her now about a week and a half so far) and she was just under 2 ounces.

Don’t intend to allow dogs anywhere near her until she’s a large enough size that she appears nothing like a “chew toy”. But once she is sizeable, we plan to keep her in backyard. Then our issue will be keeping track of her. They are known as escape artists- climbing up and digging down under. So that’s a hurdle ahead of us. The neighbors with a tortoise have attached a tracking device on theirs so maybe we’ll do something like that. While brainstorming, Rob even considered a zip line for her. Haha, wouldn’t that be hilarious! Anyway there’s time to figure that out.

So I’ve been busy trying to figure out what to feed her and trying to identify our local weeds. I have an app which tells me what plants are OK for tortoise to eat, but it is UK-based so a lot of Texas plants aren’t in it.

So also one day I was in Tortoise Forum and saw that a “Lisa” was also a new sulcata owner and she lives in Round Rock which is north of Austin. I contacted her and we ended up texting each other and plan to maintain communication as we try to rear our tortoises. She already knows a lot more than me about local plants. She also already owns two other kinds of turtles! We will probably meet up soon because I ordered some cuttle bones and we will do a trade of cuttle bones (turtle can chew on it for calcium) for plants.

In other news. both Americaunas are laying blue-ish eggs. If you look carefully, you can see the difference in coloration. Isis lays more bright blue ish and Sisi’s are a little more olive-greenish.

Zsa Zsa has been a bit of a handful. First event was one day I noticed she was on her own by the pool and before the dogs walked over there and spooked her I decided to try to urge her over to steps but as I approached her she freaked out, flew up in the air, and landed plop in the middle of the pool! It was hilarious. She then very capably swam over to the edge, but was having trouble getting out. So I picked her up and out of there. She is kind of the odd girl in the flock it seems.

Zsa Zsa swimming to edge of pool.

Zsa Zsa swimming to edge of pool.

And the last few days we found that Zsa Zsa is “broody” so she keeps going into the roost and just sitting in a trance. So to try to get her out of this mode, I have to keep going in there and taking her out. I do this at least a half dozen times each day. When hens are broody, they don’t lay eggs. We went through this before with Matt, but I don’t think it lasted this long. I’m hoping this will end soon.

I have an idea for art on a blank wall outside on our deck. We have a large, flat piece of wood we could hang up there and probably paint. Then, on top of this, I would glue down painted balls. I have been collecting the little plastic balls that are inside Guinness Stout cans. I was thinking I would choose some kind of image and paint the balls (maybe use a grid to figure out what color goes where?). Possibly the paint color on board underneath would support that, else it would be the opposite color on the color wheel. Haven’t decided on the image yet, but would like it to be dung beetle pushing spherical poop ball. Seems like a good metaphor. But I haven’t done a lot with this idea because I’m basically spending my time moving Zsa Zsa, checking on the tortoise, and thinking about what to feed the tortoise.

If you can drink some cans of Guinness, please save these balls for me.

If you can drink some cans of Guinness, please save these balls for me.

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The tortoise is not officially named yet. We don’t know if it’s M or F, but likely she’s F. So for now, we call her Malala. That may stick. The name that came up for M is Jerome, which Paige recommended as she reminded me that one of my favorite kids’ books is called Jerome (it’s about a frog). The only other name candidate on our list is Cusp of Oscillation. This came about because when I learned that her birthdate is July 30, I quickly googled to see what her horoscope sign was, and it turns out to be between two different signs, or, as one site put it, on the “cusp of oscillation” which cracked me up.

Having both dogs at a brewery (usually Suds Monkey) can be tricky because when it is busy there’s kids running around and stuff and we like to keep a close eye on the dogs to make sure they don’t freak out or whatever. So anyway, we have gone back to taking only one dog at a time. The only consequence of this is that we are now having to visit breweries TWICE as much as before in order to get the same amount of dog socializing in. Sigh, what we do for our pets!

More pics below. The last two pics are from Khloe, showing parent tortoises in her yard with her kids.







Eggcellence

It hasn’t been long since my last post but it’s been so EVENTFUL I had to update you. Literally the same day I finished writing the last post, I found a different-looking egg in the roost- one of the pullets started to lay!

The Hash Browns lay pretty large beige-pink eggs and Matt lays medium brown eggs with little speckles. So when I found a very small egg with an almost glossy coating I knew immediately it was from one of the new hens! And since Americaunas lay blue eggs, we determined it had to be Zsa Zsa!! (Zsa Zsa is a cochin).

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We quickly concluded it was Zsa Zsa’s egg.

We quickly concluded it was Zsa Zsa’s egg.

Since then, Zsa Zsa has laid several more eggs. That may seem super exciting, but this big news was soon eclipsed…when one day Rob was moving the water hose and when the flowerbed forest got mushed down a bit, he saw that Nessa, our resident peahen, was sitting in the back of the flowerbed in the dirt! So we were like, OH, THAT’S where she’s been hiding!!!

So then we were like OK she’s either sick, or “broody”, or actually sitting on a nest. So I kept an eye out for the next time she would be in the yard (not in the flowerbed). So one morning I saw her out having a dirt bath in a raised bed and I ran out and to my surprise she had a nest full of EGGS!! Super super cool.

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Nessa sitting on her nest. You can see one of the eggs underneath her.

Nessa sitting on her nest. You can see one of the eggs underneath her.

So now it was like, OK, she’s got eggs…but are they viable? As in, were they fertilized so they will hatch into chicks? We still don’t know, but I joined a Facebook peacock group and one person told me that peahens seem to “know” so if she is sitting on them basically all the time (which she is) then they probably are viable!!

So I had been tossing some treats her way but she doesn’t eat much and I think it was attracting Matt and the Hash Browns which she probably doesn’t want so anyway I don’t bother her at all now unless she’s up in the yard (very rare) and then I throw her a few dried grubs.

We figure that all the time we thought she was roaming outside our yard she in fact had been sitting on her nest. We feel hatching time must be soon….hoping for actual chicks!

But that’s not all.

Yesterday I found yet another new kind of egg in the coop….BLUE!!

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The blue egg is either Isis’ or Sisi’s. We’d lean toward Isis just because she’s larger but we don’t really know yet.

In other news. we had doors installed between the hallway and “music room” which look nice and will be a noise barrier but also create a “suite” for that guest bedroom area. And Rob’s been organizing the garage which is awesome so it’s super neat and tidy in there.

I caught a sentence or two about bonsai trees while we had the Olympics on and I heard that bonsai trees aren’t smaller trees, they are just regular trees pruned and whatever to be that way. So I was like, Oh, I can do my own! So I went to the back where we have a bunch of “cypress” which is actually juniper I think and got a couple baby ones to experiment with.

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Laugh all you want. We’ll see how it looks in a year.

Laugh all you want. We’ll see how it looks in a year.

We found time to meet up with a couple we met at Suds Monkey Brewing, Sean and Regi. So we hope to get together with them again as they live nearby.

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And finally, I am tracking another piece of data to see if it correlates with trail cam animal sightings. I note the days where my Citizen app shows that someone was stuck in an elevator. It’s something that I noticed occurs FAR more often than I ever dreamed. Like, the last 3 days it has happened!

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A handful more pics below.

Paige, Pullets, Peahen, and Pox

Pullets have come a long way. We moved the tractor to the backyard so that they could see the older chickens (and vice versa). After while of that, then we started to let the pullets out during the day so they could roam the backyard with the others. They’re very skittish, but are starting to roam most of the yard. They are usually in the vicinity of the older chickens but keep their distance. At treat time, the older ones make it clear they get first dibs. Nessa is the highest in the pecking order but even so she seems pretty easygoing.

We named the lavender-colored Americauna Isis, the black Americauna Sisi (Isis backwards; pronounced See-See), and the cochin Zsa Zsa (after Zsa Zsa Gabor) because she’s covered in feathers all the way down to her feet. Very showy.

We also got the courage up to administer the fowl pox vaccine to all the birds! We had to try to learn how to do it based on youtube videos and the like, so it was kind of trying, but we decided to persevere because Matt suffered so badly last year and almost died, so it seemed worth it. They carry the vaccine at Tractor Supply, but it turns out there’s enough vaccine to vaccinate 1,000 birds! And you can’t easily share with others as after you mix it up to use it, it has to be used within an hour and you have to keep it chilled. So anyway, one morning we went out there, and Rob got a hold of each chicken, handed it to me, and I held the chicken while he opened the wing and stuck the two-prong thing into each hen’s membrane in crook of wing. Amazing that we did them all, even the adult chickens!! It is recommend to do it yearly, but I’m thinking maybe we’ll do every other year.

Meanwhile, Paige graduated from college and is visiting for a nice long time this month. The dogs are having a ball with her, but Woody in particular took awhile to get totally comfortable. Even now after being here a couple of weeks, if she hasn’t walked into the main room for a long time, Woody may growl on her approach. For awhile, he was scared to be near her!

Paige needs some rest and relaxation time so this trip isn’t about going to lots of stuff, it’s about hanging out which is A-OK by me! We spend time taking walks, doing crossword puzzles, watching sports, feeding animals, and fleading (reading while foating). One of the rare outings was a meetup at a Brewburg Brewery with Louise and John!

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Trail cam still entertains with regular appearances from armadillos, fox, coyote, and bobcat. One night in particular was crazy neat with a coyote getting harassed by some deer. It’s hard to share as so many pics but below I’ll put a couple that maybe gives you the idea.

Guests

The most surprising recent event has been the sudden appearance of a peahen. She simply showed up in our backyard….and hasn’t left since! Probably it’s been around 1.5 weeks so far, maybe 2 weeks. I attempted to find the owner via Nextdoor, but didn’t find one. She likes to walk around the yard along with the chickens, and seems to want to join the flock. The chickens are intimidated by her and try to maintain a distance. However, I think they are starting to get used to her. I’ve named the peahen Clytemnestra, Nessa for short. (She maybe murdered her husband LOL).

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Nessa spends her nights up in a tree and in the morning you can often hear her loud call, kind of like a horn honking. She likes treat-time just like the chickens, but chickens are scared to eat from same pile so I go out and give chickens some and Nessa a different pile, and stand there for a bit to prevent Nessa from stealing from chicken pile. She’s not aggressive or mean, but if she simply walks over the chickens will abandon the food. So it works out fine.

She hangs in same places as chickens, which includes the flowerbeds by the back of the house. The thing is that Nessa’s neck is so long that she can look in the windows! So she sometimes just watches us which is hilarious.

Just a day or two after Nessa moved in our human guests, Tom and Leah, arrived from Minnesota. They were here a few days and took one day to explore San Antonio (Rob and I stayed home). We checked out classic Austin fare, went to a brewery, and walked Zilker/Barton Springs. We all had a really fun time, and, incredibly, the dogs were GOOD!! As in, not a lot of fussing…in fact, by the latter half of their visit, both Tom and Leah could pet each of the dogs and there was a comfort level among everyone. It was SUCH a breakthrough for the dogs!

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The deer continue to be aggressive and I do have a little bit of footage of the dogs sparring with a deer on the other side of the fence. Fortunately, we have this fence as dogs actually get attacked otherwise!

We still see Piccolo, the baby deer, around our yard. Actually, there are a couple that hang around our yard.

Pullets still doing fine, and at treat-time each day they will now eat out of my hand. They mostly come right down on their ramp in the morning, but the cochin still occasionally gets confused about how to get down.

Realizing that my reluctance to travel is heightened now that I have so many dependents here: the dogs, the chickens, the pullets, the peahen, the mealworms, and the starter (which is actually about 50 million yeasts and 5 billion bacteria).

Below are trailcam pics from today which were fun because besides are armadillo, there’s what appears to be a bat captured on 3 pics.

More pics below. Notice the little deer in the pic of the grass & wildflowers. Also the pic of apparently scientists that were studying the Barton Springs Salamander!

Pullets, Trail Data, Roadkill, and More!

There have been some crazy scenes recently involving the deer and the dogs. The deer are all dealing with babies so are aggressive and stuff. The other day we had to call the dogs in when they were racing back and forth along the fence with a deer running alongside outside the fence. Sorry no video, it all happens fast and it’s kind of mesmerizing.

The baby deer that was laying by our driveway has been sticking around. We named her Piccolo.

Got a ball for the dogs. Woody gets obsessed over balls like this! In this video, we are first introducing it so Stony appears interested but in fact, he’s not keen on balls at all.

Not sure I mentioned that I learned how to use the sourdough starter discard and make a scallion pancake. Yum Yum. We get to have it once a week!

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We replaced some fruit trees and others are recovering from the devastating winter weather. Two pomegranates, two peach, one fig, one plum, and a loquat. You can see some teeny eeny weeny pomegranates starting to grow!

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Trail cam data visualization below!! Keep in mind I don’t tally deer or rabbits as they’re so common.

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Rob finished the chicken tractor and right on schedule the guy with the pullets called…so we drove out to his place and chose 3 pullets! It was a bit random which ones we got, mostly we didn’t care, and actually one had interesting coloration but when he pulled it out he noticed the beak was curved which could be an issue, so he advised choosing other ones.

So anyway, we ended up choosing two Americaunas (one black and one lavender) and a Cochin which is basically black/charcoal. I believe Americaunas lay blue eggs! They’re about 3 months old but the Cochin is a little younger.

It was downpouring rain when we got home and with the stormy weather we decided to keep them in the playpen for the night in the garage. In the morning, we transferred them to the tractor.

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We haven’t named them yet. Possibly choosing names from NFL draft again. Also in the running is “Isis” for the lavender one.

So they are living in the tractor in the front yard, totally separate for a month from our other chickens which is advised in case illness shows up. The tractor itself has worked great, but the little birds are first of all completely stressed out and go all whacky if we go near them and they haven’t yet figured out the internal architecture of the tractor. So at night, they are supposed to go up the ramp to the roost area and in the morning, we lower the ramp so they can go down and hang out in the grass and access their food and water. However, they don’t understand how to use the ramp! So until this morning, we have had to manually move them from one area to another. This is not easy because it is a small, cramped space and they go all whacky with noise and wing flapping and running around when we try to grab them. The worst time is in evening, I’ve been laying on the ground where they pooped all day to try to get them on the ramp lol.

But this morning a couple of them found their way down on their own! We had to help the Cochin down. The thing is that from the top the hens can see down into the grass because it is just some wire fencing separating them..so they longingly hang out there wishing to go down, and don’t realize that they have to go over to the ramp on the other end to get there! LOL.

I deliver a bit of a treat in the afternoon, like dried grubs, oats, mealworms, and they love those but they won’t eat any thing until I’m gone. They stay far, far away from me!

The other hilarious thing that I admit has happened to me twice is that I got locked into the tractor!! Fortunately I was able to call out/call Rob both times. Rob has since added an emergency string that will allow me to let myself out next time. Because I am SURE I will do it again!

Meanwhile, I’m attempting to “deworm” our original 3 chickens. Sounds like people do this once or twice a year typically. So I’m using the recommended goat dewormer product in their water… and probably we can’t eat their eggs during this process. They seemed fine to me but I guess it’s best to be preventative. Here’s a video of one of the hash browns being loud which she just randomly does sometimes.

I’ve seen a couple of snakes run over, including a pretty coral snake which was on the street right beyond our driveway. I also recently saw a dead porcupine.

Today on a walk I brought along the clicker and counted 26 dead toads on the road squished by cars. The walk was about 36 minutes long so that means you can expect to see .72 dead toads every minute!

We have now taken BOTH dogs to breweries TWICE!! It worked out swell! Big deal. The last trip was to Suds Monkey Brewery’s new location, which was cool to see because we love their beer and now it’s like a 4 minute drive from our house! I wish there were a path there from our house as we literally could walk. Anyway, the dogs hang out fine although they still aren’t OK with anyone approaching to pet them or anything.

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A few more pics below.

Tractor Action

Rob’s been making steady progress building the chicken tractor. I help occasionally by holding one end of something lol or whatever. I think he’s almost done actually and we hope to have it done by end of the month because I contacted someone that likely will have 3 pullets (pullets are young hens) by end of the month! Below I’ll show some of the progression. It has a ramp, a couple of doors, a hinged door to access the roosts. It’s pretty cool.

Some plants have come back from the wicked winter, and it turns out roses loved the severe cold. They went crazy with blooms and I read other people’s roses did same.

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A lot of shiso is growing, like A LOT. I didn’t use it last year but I decided since it is so plentiful that I should try, so I steeped some leaves in hot water which turned the leaves from maroon to green and the water kind of dark and unappealing. Then, I poured in vinegar and it all turned bright red! Very cool. So we keep this in the fridge and add it to iced tea or cocktails :) Below 3 pics.

I’m only a week away from being fully vaccinated. Then I will return to in-person grocery shopping!

There are still more breweries nearby we haven’t even tried yet, so our last trip was to 12 Fox Brewing, which was great because it wasn’t as crowded as other places, they had live music, and there was a BBQ food truck which had really good food- the meat was NOT too salty and sides were tasty! We’ll be back.

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This morning there was a teeny weeny baby deer curled up beside our driveway. Left it alone as this is normal behavior, even though it seems weirdly unsafe.

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Looking ahead, we expect some visitors. In May, Tom & Leah are visiting for a few days (coming from Minneapolis), and Paige is planning to be here in June. Rachel & Zach probably in August. Others I’m not sure of dates yet. It will be fun AND great socializing experience for the dogs!! So hopefully the guests can handle the dogs who can be over-the-top…I assume with each visit they will become more “normal”.

Rob picked up another 1/8 of a steer from Grey. So this is “Greyson II” haha.

Our 3 chickens seem to be doing fine. Matt keeps creating holes in the yard to sit in and dust bathe in. So I added some diatomaceous earth to the barrels of dirt in the yard that are MEANT for dust baths but so far she’s not going for it.

So the other day I was on a walk and watched as utility crews worked on the telephone/whatever wires on our street. When they were done, there were these spherical objects attached to the wire (pic below). I realized, aha, it took them almost a year, but Tokyo Electron is onto us! They’ve installed surveillance!

YOU CAN’T HIDE

YOU CAN’T HIDE

Seeing more hummingbirds and lizards. Haven’t yet encountered a snake this spring. Anyway, more pics below.

First Guest Visit

Most significant news is our vaccination status…Rob is now FULLY vaccinated and I have had my first of the two Moderna jabs! We’re so very close! Once I’m fully vaccinated, I plan to actually do the grocery shopping in-person again rather than curbside (I really want to be able to pick my own produce), but honestly other than that, we may not be changing our behaviors all that much. Still, will be relieved to have that protection!

We dropped Woody & Stony on separate days at a place for baths. We couldn’t guarantee they wouldn’t bite from fear (doubtful, but who knows as they hadn’t been around any other people) so we sent them in with a muzzle on. The cool thing is that when we came back to pick each one up, the groomer had removed the muzzle! Ah, so great. Clearly the groomer didn’t feel threatened and the dogs got bathed and nails trimmed!

I stopped giving them chill pills each day as we didn’t really notice a difference. I cut them off cold turkey and we noticed Stony was getting all freaked out two days later at…practically nothing. So we realized it was maybe withdrawal so then we gave him decreasing amounts over another couple of days. We’ll save the remaining pills for an event we think will be extra stressful.

I tried feeding my sourdough discard to the chickens but they didn’t like it. But then I learned about making scallion pancake with the discard…YUM!! So now I’ll be making that once a week :) See picture below in the center of table.

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I’m going to share graphs of 3 months of trail cam stats. I track any animal sightings except rabbits and deer since they are so commonplace. If there’s 1 or more of something, it gets 1 tick mark that day. Will wait for the moon phase data to accrue more datapoints before I share that. I hope it makes sense. I have a hunch I should have used a different kind of chart but anyway.

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People have spotted a mountain lion in our area recently. Would be so cool to catch it on my trail cam (or with my eyes directly), but we have not yet.

My Mom came to visit for a few days which went really well. When she planned the trip, we didn’t know if vaccinated persons were likely to spread virus or not, so anyway, to be safe, my Mom stayed around the corner in our neighborhood as they have a Bed & Breakfast! We just stuck around neighborhood most of the time, but the best thing for us was that she could interact with the dogs. The dogs barked and were nuts at first, of course, but even after like day 3 or 4, when she showed up, they’d act crazy again. She offered them treats, and they would maybe sneak one or two from a table next to her, and they would run for the toys she brought, but they NEVER let her pet them! That’s how scared they are of other people! So it was an awesome first socializing experience for them.

We did take my Mom to Jester King Brewery which went well, but there was a cold front so kind of chilly. She also played darts with us at night which was extra fun.

One of the days she was here I was checking on the eggs in the roost and found Cole face-down, dead in the floor of the coop! No apparent struggle, just dropped dead I guess. She had apparently just laid an egg too. So now we have only 3 chickens: the hash browns and Matt.

We will need to add more chickens to our flock. To do that, you have quarantine the new birds for awhile in case of disease and also to get the chickens used to each other. So Rob has picked out a “chicken tractor” design that we are starting to build. Once that’s finished, we’ll figure out how to get a few more birds!

What the tractor should look like

What the tractor should look like

Our baby peach tree just may have survived the winter, as it has some leaves and flowers. The fig is alive, but is just growing some leaves from the very bottom, so not sure how viable that is. Pomegranate trees appear dead.

Pics below.

Chill Times

Rob has gotten his first of two COVID shots! We’re starting to be hopeful although not sure how long before I can get a vaccination. Texas got a slow start.

Waiting to see what plants survive this terrible winter. Our baby fruit trees had already started to bud before the storm, so that may not be so good. Our redbud tree has started budding, but all the live oaks which are the most populous in the yard, look dismal and have dropped most of their leaves (although they typically do lose some leaves this time of year). Where a few branches had fallen, Rob cut them up, and after we reviewed the local guidelines, he trimmed the tree at the break and sealed it so that beetles won’t go in and spread oak wilt which, once introduced to a tree, can then spread to other trees via roots. Basically, a disaster.

The dogs got ahold of my prescription sunglasses and wrecked them. Which is terrible. However, I’ve had them a long time and never really liked them as they didn’t fit well weirdly I couldn’t see well with them on. So anyway, I experimented and ordered sunglasses that simply fit OVER your glasses. You’d think that’d be terrible but remember my head is teeny and my glasses are also teeny. So I ordered X-Small and Voilà! They work awesome, and are so cheap as no prescription needed, and they came with a cord so I can easily have them on or off. I’m really pumped about that.

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Chickens back to regular but they do seem like they don’t lay many eggs. Possibly one or two of them no longer lay eggs? Or they have a secret stash? But the flowerbeds, normally their area for stashes, has been ravaged and so that’s not happening. The chickens spend a lot of time, though, underneath the deck surrounding the pool. I keep wondering if they have a stash under there. So finally, one day, I put on long sleeve shirt, pants, gloves and my headlamp and went “spelunking” under the deck! The maneuvering space is shallow so it required shuffling along with my body flat on the ground. At first, it was spooky and I was wary of insects, spiders, snakes, whatever, but anyway I managed to scramble all the way around…and all I saw was dirt, feathers, and chicken poop. No sign of a secret stash.

Pups are OK but same issues with them hyper together, Woody peeing anytime he’s excited, etc. So I went for it and searched on amazon.com for “dog chill pills” and yep, there they were! So now I give them each 3 of them per day and supposedly over a few weeks it will help with all those difficult behaviors. Why not try it!? We literally are strategizing all the time on how to minimize bitey-face between them, and how to prevent Woody from peeing all over due to…anything exciting or new or scary or whatever. See gallery below of pics showing an example of pee on the floor.

Dogs probably need baths but we’re ignoring that. They also probably need toenail trims. Woody’s paws we refer to as talons because they are wicked sharp. Even after they get toenail trims, Woody’s are ALWAYS sharp as knives! So anyway, Rob has dog nail clippers and has surreptitiously cut a couple of their nails when they were laying sleepily on his lap!! It’s a start!

Rob recently put another layer of stain on the deck, which looks awesome, and the funny thing is that I noticed one of the hash browns has stain on her back! Haha, as I said, they spend a lot of time under the deck so it makes sense.

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We’ve been brainstorming ideas for a couple of homemade clocks in the house. For the music room, which has a mid-century modern feel, we came up with several design concepts but anyway, I think we have one picked out which Rob can build himself. Then in the great room, while we have one clock, we could use one more. So we talked about different chicken-themed clocks. Starting with the obvious, but of course I want to go radical so after considering hands that turn behind the face of the clock and you can just see them through gaps, or cuckoo-clock style, then we talked about a clock that doesn’t involve a clock face at all. So it would involve representations of the chickens and also representations of the places they hangout (chicken run, roost, under the deck, flowerbed, yard). The chickens in real life have patterns to where they spend their time each day. Overnight, all are in roosts (we lock them in). And first thing in morning, and before bed, they are in the run. Usually throughout the afternoon, any or all of them may spend time in the roost laying an egg or pretending to lay an egg. So basically, the clock would reflect the chicken daily rhythms so that you can then deduce what time it is!

A few pics below.

Aftermath of Storm

As you all know, that winter storm became an epic catastrophe in Texas. Waves of icy precip, single digits temps, and snow over the course of about a week. We fared pretty well. We had recently grocery shopped, our power was only out for around 15 hours, and we had potable water the whole time.

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A few tree limbs down and a couple of outside pipes need repair, but we came out in pretty good shape it seems. After the first icy wave, we obtained some tree and shrub coverings and supplemented those with some blankets and sheets to cover some of our plants. Not sure it helped given the extreme temps, but at least we tried.

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We texted with our former neighbors over in East Austin, and they had been without power for 60+ hours! And the house we rented last year was surely uninhabitable as it had like zero insulation, no fireplace, etc.

So many people were hit SO HARD by this storm with lasting problems. It’s sad. I hope Texas makes some improvements to the grid after this tragedy.

The chickens refused to venture into the snow. They spent the entire week in their coop. Not even in the run but in the roost area. So I added all I had left of pine shavings so they could have as much insulation as possible. Heres a video where I got them to step out just a bit for some treats once the snow was melting.

During the week or so of winter weather, the trail cam had little activity. The night before the storm, however, was a JACKPOT! There was coyote, fox, bobcat, and raccoon! I assume all the animals sensed what was coming and got all their hunting in that evening.

After the endless storm, there was a warm-up mud-season kind of day and ever since then it’s been warm, sunny, and like SUMMER! 80 degrees today. Weird to see the weather shift so quickly with all snow gone in about 1 day. I sure hope the trees survive.

I also tried to recall all the different herbs and shrubs in the flowerbeds around the house in case they didn’t survive, as well as the ones that were annuals. These were all here when we moved in.

Rosemary- 2 or 3 kinds
Thyme - 2 or 3 kinds Sage
Lavender - 2 kinds?
Cilantro
Parsley
Mint
Lemon Balm
Shiso
Echinacea
Roses- various kinds
Coral Glow
Texas Yucca
Aloe
Lamb’s Ear
Laurel bushes
Salvia
Sage (mexican bush, mealy cup?)
Prairie Verbena

Just a few more pics below. I didn’t take many pics as I didn’t get outside much because it was very icy and dangerous out. Also it was just really cold. And finally, I don’t find snow and ice all that novel having spent all that time up north.

Mid-Winter Briefing

Woody’s pink spot has faded away and dogs are doing fine. Fine, considering they are very isolated and we were reminded of how jumpy they can be when recently the 4 of us were on a walk and we walked by a vehicle that was stopped on the road. It was actually two vehicles- some kind of camper thingy connected to a car. The driver was outside doing adjustments or something to the connector. So we are walking along and saying to the dogs calming things and they are doing just fine (not barking at the man) and as we are about past the vehicle, out of nowhere, a little furry head pops out of the driver’s side window and releases a bunch of loud barks. We all get a big surprise, and Woody is is now PULLING ME AHEAD and it is difficult to stop him. And the thing is Woody just won’t calm down. We walk a little more but Woody is TOTALLY FREAKING and his tail is down between his legs and he’s low to the ground and A MESS. Can’t even offer him treats he’s so scared. So it probably took another 10 minutes before he was halfway himself. JEEEEESH! And a couple days later he had some PTSD just seeing a car approach from behind us.

We have not been anywhere at all since the variants were in circulation- curbside grocery and no breweries.

I finally picked up a book or two. i think I was unable to read books during the Trump catastrophe.

Recent reads

Recent reads

I liked all these books. My favorite was An Absolutely Remarkable Thing which read almost like a kids’ book but had adult topics some of which were quite a lot parallel to some things we’ve seen in America this past year. Extraterrestrial was a surprisingly easy read, and I for one am convinced that the thing that went through our solar system was a non-”natural” thing, but I was kind of annoyed the author had to spend so much time telling readers to keep an open mind. People are so lame. Interior Chinatown had a crazy unique approach to its story, making it hard to tell when characters were “real” or “characters”. It was heavy-duty topic and basically depressing.

So far we have seen one or more instances of the following animals on trail cam: Coyote, fox, skunk, bobcat, raccoon, possum, and armadillo! I don’t mention bunnies and deer as that’s all the time. Too early to share any graphs. I put out a little water bowl and the deer drink from it sometimes.

After drinking contents of water bowl.

After drinking contents of water bowl.

Rob has updated his music playing equipment (long overdue) so he’s been catching up on listening to records when he gets a chance.

In an effort to keep the chickens away from our deck (they poop a lot on it and we plan to spend more time out there come spring), we moved the dog water bowl over to the grass. The chickens drink out of it too, preferring it to their chicken waterer in the coop. So anyway, being extra lazy, I observed that it’s a pain filling up the bowl all the way over in the grass (where there’s poop) and plus, I have to lean over! So we’ve been brainstorming fun ways to construct a water-refilling-system where you can pour into a funnel up on the deck somewhere, and the water is piped along in some roundabout manner to the dog bowl. Perhaps a branch of it goes off to a little water dish for perching birds? Perhaps part of it involves a waterfall? What’s always neat about tangents like this is it’s never just a dream; ROB CAN BUILD IT!!

I can see now that the perching-bird-bowl has to be in a different place or these birds will poop into dog bowl.

I can see now that the perching-bird-bowl has to be in a different place or these birds will poop into dog bowl.

I noticed too that we have new fire ant mounds in the yard so I did a quick try at fire ant painting but the ants didn’t really walk through the paint. I tried to thin it out with a toothpick but it didn’t work out so I finally gave up and made an abstract painting with a toothpick.

Mealworms are thriving and I had to replace the oat bran substrate again recently. I finally bought a gigantic bag of this stuff at the local feed store for about 6 dollars. I’ve started to give our chickens a few living mealworms (not the dried ones I had purchased) every day.

It doesn’t even gross me out anymore.

It doesn’t even gross me out anymore.

We’re in the middle of a week-long cold streak which will break all kinds of records. We just hope the chickens get through OK, the plants around the house, the new fruit trees we planted, and our plumbing. We have taken some precautions, but I’m worried. WHAT A DRAG! We need to move somewhere warmer!

Oh and I recently received two awesome gifts from Raine & Paige. Raine sent me the most astonishing chicken earrings that she made herself! They have chickens and eggs alternately hanging on them!! And Paige sent a mushroom grow kit which grew practically instantly and soon we can harvest and eat them!

More pictures below, all of which were taken on our property.

Happy Trails

With the new COVID variants, we’re trying to take even more precautions so we are starting to do curbside pickup for our groceries. We were pretty happy with our first trip, so we’ll probably keep this up until the pandemic eases. As for breweries, we’re not sure yet. We can pretty much be outside the whole time so it is probably OK, but we’re kind of on the fence right now.

The biggest surprise recently for me was after I posted my “trail cam montage” on Nextdoor. People really, really liked it and I have over 300 reactions to the post (and counting). Since that time, we have more footage of a bobcat, and new sighting of a possum!

Hopping rabbit, coyote, rabbit, skunk, deer, fox, coyote, bobcat.

Hopping rabbit, coyote, rabbit, skunk, deer, fox, coyote, bobcat.

I’ve started tracking the animals we see in a spreadsheet except for deer and bunnies since those are all the time. I’m going to see if there’s any trends over time or by moon phase or day of the week! I’ll need some help with the formulas because as soon as I need to nest more than one thing I get confused :) Anyway, I’ll generate some cool pie charts and bar graphs eventually!

Woody developed a pink spot on his nose and the vet recommended we bring him in. Just getting him there was tricky as Woody seems to have developed a fear of doorways! Anyway, probably it’s just some kind of irritation from his rooting around, but vet prescribed antibiotic and we will see how he’s doing in a week.

The Great Pink Spot.

The Great Pink Spot.

Rob’s been upgrading some of his stereo components, and he’s outfitted the backyard with speakers so we’ll have a pretty cool setup going forward! Found a little used coffee table from FB marketplace which will get our family/music room setup to our liking.

One of neighbors who we don’t know at all put up a Trump 2020 sign in their front yard…after the election. I happened to see a young man leave the house with a couple of rifles the other day. There’s also a couple of other Trump flags in our neighborhood that are still flying. So there’s that. To be fair, there are also several neighbors with “science is real” type signs.

Pics below.

2021. We're Still Here

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Our Xmas and New Years went great, given it was just the two of us. Lots of fun gifts. Probably the most exciting has been the trail cam which we setup behind our fence.

Every morning I get to see what creatures walked by in the last 24 hours. We get TONS of bunny rabbit pics and always many deer pics. But even more exciting- we’ve seen fox multiple times, as well as coyotes, skunk, and raccoon. Other animals I am hoping to see over time include: snakes, armadillo, badger, bobcat. Sometime we will probably talk to the neighbors who have creek behind their place to setup over there as I think armadillos are often seen by creeks.

For a few days I was not sure why my eyes were messed up but after a few days I started to see locally people complaining about “cedar fever” when the cedar trees have their annual pollen dump. And then, one day when walking Stony, I was seeing all these foggy spots in the air and stopped to watch some when PUFF a huge cloud of pollen just gushed out of a cedar tree. There are these huge, very visible clouds all over. So anyway, I am not really noticing it much in my eyes anymore, but they are still more bloodshot. If that’s all the reaction I get, I’ll feel very lucky.

Watching the news carefully these days what with the Capitol Riots and general state of chaos. This blog is not a place to discuss all that.

Otherwise, up to our usual which is staying home except grocery shopping and brewery once a week. I’ll just add a bunch more pics below.

Holidays

If we don’t bother to latch the pet gate (separating parts of house), Stony will pry it open and come through. It’s not really a problem because Stony doesn’t usually do anything wrong. He’ll walk around to see what you’re up to, maybe sniff things here and there, but won’t be a bother. In the meantime, Woody often watches Stony open gate, and yet does not himself know how to pry open the gate. So he just stands on the other side. We’re pretty happy with this arrangement and we often purposely leave the gate unlatched. Stony can enjoy the privilege and get away from Woody for a little bit.

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Woody is also still in the habit of peeing in the house if there’s anything exciting going on or if he is scolded. We are trying to double down on treats and positive things to try to rectify this. In fact, because we are using so many treats, I’ve been making homemade ones. Little niblets with pumpkin and peanut butter.

Woody has yet another nickname besides sea cow: fluffernutter.

I also experimented with a sourdough loaf and added dates, spices like cinnamon, allspice, chinese 5-spice, and cayenne pepper. It was actually pretty good!

We have been eating dinners more often at dining area table rather than kitchen table, and I guess as a result we were thinking about having dynamic placecards for it which will have the names of the Knights of the Round Table (from Monty Python). Our table is round and the chairs around it seem to fit that vibe. You could choose “Dame”, “Sir”, or “Warrior” and I discovered that each of the Knights actually has its own coat of arms so we would make all of those. Future project.

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I’m also doing quick sketches on cardboard (leftover from packages) where I first paint some white gesso on them. Chickens are often the subject :)

Also, not sure if I mentioned this before, but I have seen Matt hiccup. It’s hilarious. She ate some treats too fast!

Recently Rob was on an errand to pick up a dinner-to-go order, and he was entering the intersection of our road and Highway 290. His light had been green for awhile, and after 2 cars turned in front of him, he proceeded into intersection….when a car coming from the left plowed through the red light at like 55 mph! Fortunately, Rob was barely moving and the front of his car raked along the side of these folks’ car. So theirs was pretty well damaged but Rob’s not very much. Rob said they were pretty upset and they said they never even saw the light (it was sunset and it’s true the sun would have been in their eyes). But wow, if it was a second or two later, Rob would have been SMASHED INTO! Yikes!!

In terms of dog separation, besides walks, we decided to make it easier on us and go to a brewery once a week and just take one dog. We alternate dogs. We’ve been to Vista Brewing, Jester King, Suds Monkey, and Brewburg Brewery. By the way, we seem to live at a brewery epicenter, so these are all just a few minutes from our house! (We haven’t even tried any distilleries yet, there’s a lot of those near us too). The dogs have been pretty good, but Stony is especially socially fearful. Recently a Mom came up with her young son and asked if he could pet the dog, and we were like, well, um, he’s a puppy so not sure … so she tried to approach him first (and I threw her a treat) but all Stony did was bark at her and act unfriendly so we gave it up. Bummer.

Before Stony growled at an unsuspecting passerby.

Before Stony growled at an unsuspecting passerby.

Oh we also flew the drone and it was funny to watch the dogs bark and be weirded out. Hoping to try again and get more pics. Hard to get good ones. Honestly, I can’t even handle the controls properly so Rob has to drive.

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Our mealworms are still living and multiplying in their little plastic container. I just add a carrot in every few days. I think we have to update the substrate soon. Not looking forward to that as it involves filtering it and stuff. We also made some curried fermented cabbage but that’s still ongoing for a few weeks before we know how it will turn out.

Xmas coming up soon and we’ll maybe cook one of the finer parts of that 1/8 steer we have in the freezer. We named the steer Pat.

Oh I had a doctor annual checkup recently and it was at a new clinic location for me and it was just overall a stressful experience. Hard to locate, sketch inside, and they were understaffed and whatever so I was probably there like almost 2 hours! All the while worrying I’ve picked up COVID.

I also recently saw 3 unmasked shoppers at the grocery store! Haven’t seen that before. I didn’t do anything but my plan next time is to go up to the person and say, “Hi, I’ve got extra masks in my purse, here why don’t you take one”. If they say they don’t need one I’ll point out that it is the store policy so they really kinda have to. Yikes these people!!

Today my eye sockets are a little sore and my eyelids are a little swollen Kind of weird, seems like an allergy? As long as it’s not COVID!

Quite a few more pics below.

Driftwood

We met with a different trainer and she was a lot easier to talk to. We still had the impression that we need to separate the dogs AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE so we have worked on that some more. Our walks always include at least half the walk separated and we also do periodic “playtimes” in the yard with a special toy with just one dog at a time. And we re-introduced kennels rather than beds in the living room.

Stony, however, has almost zero interest in toys. He might play tug for a few minutes but that’s about it when it comes to playing with humans and toys. He does play a lot with Woody though. We see them chasing each other around the yard playing “keep away” with a toy or stick or whatever regularly.

We have the dogs on a waiting list for a day of “tutoring” at the canine center which would be ideal as it would be a day to separate them and also get some kind of “tutoring”. But no openings in sight. So recently we dropped Stony off at “Stay ‘n Play” which went just about as we expected: he was completely terrified and never interacted with any of the staff (he was scheduled to have some playtime with a person). Walking into the kenneling area with all the other dogs barking and stuff was alone completely traumatizing for him. So we picked him up a bit early to reduce the time he spent suffering! We chose Stony first as we knew he is more high-strung and suffers more from separating from his littermate.

In another experiment, we took Woody out with us to a brewery (Vista Brewing in Driftwood) which is nearby. As we walked out to the picnic table, he was freaking out and didn’t even want to walk! There were a lot of people, kids, and dogs spread around the outdoor area. Then, once we got him to the table he was all nervous and barking occasionally and all that stuff. Finally he calmed down and we gave him a chew. So it worked, but not totally smooth.

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Since we had Woody in the car, we stopped for a tourist pic in Driftwood since that’s his namesake!

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We plan to try Stony at the same brewery tomorrow, which is a Tuesday, with the hope that it will be sparsely attended so he won’t be overwhelmed by all the stimulation.

When lolling around the house we often refer to Woody as a “sea cow” due to his bratwurst-like-body. Another other trait he frequently displays is “irrational exuberance”. Any little thing that seems exciting at ALL causes him to jump up and bite on things (us). This includes but is not limited to:

  • one of us walking into the living room after being gone over 5 minutes

  • walking with a pail (ask Rob)

  • changing any part of your clothing

  • making an unusual sound

  • one of us calling Stony.

Woody is also causing a hassle because he will pee when we tell him “NO”. That’s really annoying and we thought by now he would quit doing that. We try to do a lot of positive things with him and praise him when he is good, but I mean you have to say “NO” once in a while! Then he just pees all over :(

Last observation about thee dogs is something I often repeat to them on walks:

“those aren’t treats, that’s deer poop”

We tried out Suds Monkey Brewery recently, which is like a 5 minutes drive from here, (sans dogs) and sampled their pizza. It was pretty good so we are basically surrounded by nice breweries :)

I also discovered a sort of hidden path that leads out of our neighborhood on a far side, not near the entrance by the main road. So if you take this path and then keep going along an actual road, you get to JESTER KING! So that’s cool but the only thing is it probably would take about an hour to walk there from our house. So we may do this sometime and plan to spend a couple hours there in afternoon and walk back. One might consider riding a bike, but the trick is that it has to fit between two narrowly placed walls surrounding the path.

We have some veggies growing but we have no idea if they’ll work out. Well except the lettuce that we’ve already had a lot of. For a sneak peek, we pulled some carrots a bit early and saw they were minuscule and decided it was because we never bothered to thin them after planting. Noted!

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A couple more pics below.