Thursday, February 18, 2021

Pig Trails

                                      Photo agfc.com Arkansas Feral Hog Handbook

It was already feeling like an extremely uncomfortable day to show property. 
Morning mist hung in the air for hours finally giving way to sunshine and scorching heat; a bit of Arkansas summer like we know it best. Tendrils of steam rose from the blacktop. Even the birds were quiet this morning, keeping to the shadows.

Lack of air movement made the humidity puddle in the low spots, the damp air thick as mud.   
The river valleys can be cooler this time of year if there's even a bit of a breeze to stir up the thin layer of comfort over the rolling water. I was hoping for that. 

The property I was showing that day was just a few miles from the White River. A nice place, mixed grass and stands of old oaks and hickories.  It was the kind of place that we imagine when we think of that perfect home in the country; room for a garden, nice deep wrap around coffee porches, the quaint old barn with long forgotten hay bales and ancient timbers that screamed "character!"  The big doors even talked about it when they swung open on rusty iron hinges. 

There was a pretty horse pasture with a wooden fence down the lane, a few missing boards and some tree sprouts woven through. Deep sandy loam bottom land soil that will grow just about anything made me wish it could be mine.

I had high hopes for a productive day.   

It's a beautiful drive down 201 South out of Mountain Home, Arkansas. Rolling hills and creek bottoms and plenty of time to talk about hopes and dreams. The grass and trees were glowing from recent rain. So far so good.   

The house had sat empty for a long time. The musty smell of a closed up house on a humid day can be a slap in the face, but this wasn't bad. Wide plank pine floors and ceramic tile instead of carpet helps.

Open floor plan, towering stone fireplace, big bedrooms, nice views of horses in the pasture, this house had it all.
     
I just smiled and said "of course!" when these buyers decided they wanted to walk the overgrown farm road and see more of the land.  

(Oh. My. God. it's going to be miserable, I was really thinking) 

I checked to make sure there was still a can of bug spray in the car, and gave us all a couple shots to the ankles to ward off the summer ticks that were bound to be waiting for us.   

Off we went. I encouraged taking breaks by stopping to identify tree species and talking about forest management and pasture grasses.  I think they were on to me, though, when they kept getting way ahead on the trail. 
Pretty soon, we were all huffing and puffing and walking in silence. Not enough air for words.   

I heard them up ahead, then. 
"Why would someone plow out here?" he asked.    
The first thing that came to mind was wildlife food plots.  Its a great way to concentrate wildlife for hunting or photography purposes. Or just to be nice.
   
 As I rounded the bend, I instantly knew that that was NOT what we were looking at.  Huge slabs of turf were erratically turned over on at least an acre. Small tree sprouts leaned this way and that. Rocks appeared to have been rolled out of the way, sitting oddly on top of the grass. 
Tall clumps of Johnson grass in the near distance were swaying ominously even though the air was still and thick.   

 And I could smell them. The humid air was concentrating the smell in the clearing.   

"We need to go back right now." I said in my most official real estate agent voice. 
It was probably the look on my face that betrayed my concern since I always feel like my face is an open book no matter how hard I try. 
I looked around for a big stick and couldn't find anything that wouldn't shatter on impact.  
They didn't understand.

"You see that grass moving over there?" I asked. "there isn't any wind." 
They looked, still not feeling that there was a problem.
"I believe we have come up upon a herd of wild hogs and we need to leave them be" trying to sound all calm and knowledgeable.
I was terrified.

We turned to go and I swear I heard them behind me. Deep sounds, and swishing grass...
  
As I led them back down the trail, it seemed to get even hotter and steamier.  The trail was definitely a lot longer going back. 
Finally the car was in sight. 
Nothing happened, and probably wouldn't have, but when you have heard the wild hog stories I have, taking chances didn't seem to be an option.   

I didn't sell the house. 
What a fool I was to let a family of wild pigs scare me like that.

Tuesday, February 16, 2021

Dirt


There is something about the dirt in my garden beds. I can plunge my hand into that soil with very little effort, opening up holes for the new tomato plants. 
I swear I can see the excitement in their leaves when they first taste their new home. But maybe I am just imagining that. 

I look closer. 

I can see strands of old hay, some dark and black and almost dirt, some still retaining a bit of gold from a summer in the sun. 
Right there is a tiny wad of white fluff imported on the cramped roots of a nursery plant. 
I see a bit of bark from the mulch I used one year. The rib of an oak leaf, a few grains of gritty sand. 
There, in my palm, is a small stone. Much older than all this other stuff, it could tell me stories if I knew the language. 

I know what’s in this dirt, mostly, because I made it myself. 
When the raised beds were built a few years ago I didn’t have enough dirt to fill them. I had the excavated soil from the foundation of our room addition. I had a barn full of old hay. So, I made garden lasagna; a layer of hay, and layer of dirt, a layer of hay, a layer of dirt and finishing off with a layer of sawdust cheese! 
I sprinkled two buckets of red worms liberally, for seasoning. (to taste?) 

I grew the best garden I have ever seen that year. Worms oozed up in the paths between the beds when it rained and migrated into the yard. 
The broccoli heads didn’t fit in a gallon bag! 

My dirt is alive. I feed it old hay now and it rewards me with vegetables. I clean a barn stall and add a layer to the beds in the fall. Ashes from the fireplace get sprinkled on through out the winter. My worms do a pretty good job of stirring on warm damp days. 

The smell when it rains is that humusy organic aroma that gardeners love. 
  
I imagine the tiny root threads and microscopic mold creatures crawling thru a dark maze of decaying organic matter and plant bits. 
The huge pink bodies of the worms pushing thru them, gobbling them up. 

I think I will go play in the dirt...

Kill Hill


It was naptime, finally. My two little boys were crashed out after a busy morning of eating, crying, fighting, playing, and running. 

Kyle was a precocious 4 and little Ryan was a handful going thru his terrible twos. Adorable children, but very tiring today. They didn’t stay in one place for very long. 

Now was my chance!

I had been working intermittently all morning planting a row of baby butternut trees in front of the cabin. Swing the pick, scoop out a few cupfuls of soil. Repeat. Maybe they would generate some shade in their lifetime, but not too hopeful at this point. The soil was hard, dense packed with whispy dry grass poking thru the crust. Rain would sure be nice, to soften up this concrete dirt for me. Isolated thunderstorms were predicted, but we had only gotten a few brief sprinkles during the morning. Just enough to turn to choking steam in the sunshine. 

Thunder in the distance let me know that the atmosphere was energized! I could see the thunderheads building and I hoped for one to head my way. 
Suddenly the wind came up. 
The birds that had been chirping madly in the brush stopped their chatter to listen. 

Rising up from the valley below, a massive thunderhead reared above me to the north.
 
The smell of rain was heavy. In an instant, huge raindrops began to pelt the dust making little poufs with each strike. I dashed into the house just in time to avoid a soaking. The sky erupted in a summer light show complete with thrashing trees and cracks of thunder. 

And just as quickly it was over. Blue sky above.
 
The hot sun began converting all those raindrops into waves of steam. Rivulets of mud swirled in the driveway. Too hot to do any more I went to gather my tools; pick, shovel, wheelbarrow, a bucket of saplings. 
I stopped to gaze down the hill to the little pond at the edge of the woods. Someday, those little boys would fish there if the bluegills I had released survived. But I knew they would. 

KA-BOOM! 
The flash of light and boom-hiss of expanding air knocked me to my knees! The lightening bolt that hit the well head 15 feet away from me was about a foot wide at point of impact, with a fuzzy indistinct boundary of burning atmosphere of at least that much on each side. The tangy smell is one I will never forget. 
I lay there on the dirt for a few minutes, my heart racing. I was ok. And then I tried to get up. 
I was made of rubber. Nothing worked!  My arms didn’t want to support me as I struggled to rise on wobbly legs. I lay in the dirt a few more minutes and tried again. 
It took 10 minutes to get into the house. I sat, getting my breathing under control. Lucky to be alive. 

And those little boys slept thru it all. 

It turned out that the lovely pasture high on the hill, overlooking Bryant Creek to the north and south was devoid of trees for a very specific reason. Known as Kill Hill for its attractiveness to deer for countless generations, I had witnessed just the latest tree clearing event.
  
Arrow heads occasionally rose up thru the gravel from ancient hunters who camped in that very spot to take advantage of the bounty. 
Although I bet they had enough sense to come in out of the rain.
 
I was lucky in many ways that day.

City Pool

                                 Photo of abandoned Gary pool by 
travisdewitz.com

 

It was so hot. The sidewalks were hot. The streets were hotter. But the reward was so very worth it.

We walked, a rag tag group of pre teens, towels draped over our shoulders, thru the neighborhoods in our swim suits on our way to the public pool. It was at least a mile, maybe closer to two, with not a breath of air.
 
The Gary, Indiana suburb of Glen Park was a pretty nice place back in the day. Mowed yards, sidewalks and tall yard trees that provided just enough shady spots to keep us going. We dashed from one shade patch to the next past the big brick houses and detached garages. Dogs barked listlessly and went back under their porches. It was just too hot to get very excited.

The clunky window air was the only relief at the house, unless you counted the cool blast from the refrigerator when I opened it to steal a quick breath of cold. Just the idea of the cool pool water made us move a little faster.

The last 1/4 mile to the pool was a stretch of sizzling black pavement that made our cheap rubbery flip flops stick if we didn’t pick up our feet fast enough. Go too slow and we could feel the heat thru the thin pink soles.
 
The sound of the screaming kids, splashing, and an energetic life guard whistle punctuating the uproar drew us. 
We paid to get in, I think it was a quarter, and were given a numbered square wire basket for our ‘valuables’. I had a watch. An actual real watch with a second hand. It had been a Christmas/birthday gift and I loved it. I wore it everywhere. It went in the basket with my glasses. 

Some wet benches were available for those who had to change. We didn’t dawdle too long in the steamy ‘girls side’ with tiny windows up high on the walls, we were ready for that cool blue water.

Every square inch of concrete was wet. Peeling blue paint decorated the block walls of the pool office. Towels were laid out on the wet concrete as if it was a beach. An elevated life guard throne gave the muscular bronze teenager who sat there an air of ultimate authority.

As hot as it was, I could never just jump in. I had to gradually submerge myself an inch at a time into the cold water. Funny, in just a few minutes the water no longer felt even cool. 
It was wall to wall kids of every color, size and shape. 
Like a soup of kids simmering in the sunshine. Thankfully the babies with their saggy wet diapers had their own pool. 

Swimming lessons never helped me. I remember as a little girl begging my mother not to let water get on my face when she rinsed my hair. I couldn’t stand the feeling of water in my ears. I guess I can’t say that it never helped me. I did learn to put my face in the water and kick my feet. But the coordinated swimming movements coupled with actual floating were beyond me. I didn’t float. I sank like a stone. But I could splash and squeal when the boys splashed us. 

There wasn’t really any room for real swimming anyway. Except for one place. 
The diving well was in an ‘L’ off of the main section of the pool separated by a very official floating rope. The bigger kids waited in line for their turn to jump off of one of two boards into the ‘deep water’. The big splashes when someone did a cannon ball would send water shooting onto the concrete pool deck all around. 
It was so impressive! We watched them. Envious. But, they were just jumping in. Nothing special. No big trick to that. We tried jumping in from the side of our kiddie section of the pool. I did it! I went under water and got my face and ears wet and it was just fine. Felt kinda good.
 And someone said, “I bet we can jump off the low board and it would be just the same.” 
“Oh no, that part of the pool is way too deep!” 
“But, it’s not even that far from the edge, we can make it to the side.” 
“What, are you chicken?” 
 And so it went, until we had meandered over to the deep side of the pool.
“Are you in line or not?” the teenagers asked.
“Move out of the way if you are not going to go!”
And so we moved forward in the line.
It was my turn. I could feel all the eyes upon me as I struggled with the thought. All I could hear...”Go on!” “Don’t be a sissy” “get out of line if you aren’t going to go, you are holding up the line” “Chicken!”
 And so I reached for the rungs of the stainless steel ladder that would take me up onto the board. I climbed. I was on the board. I walked out to the end...and realized I was on the high dive!
“Go!” someone yelled. And I jumped... I sank like a stone all the way to the bottom of the pool. I could see the sparkle of sunlight on the pool surface. But it was so far away. I was going to die.

In a moment of incredible clarity, I realized that the side of the pool really was very close. So I crawled. I crawled across the bottom of the pool towards the side. I looked up and could see the bottom of the pool ladder. What luck. If only I could reach it. I was just tall enough to grab that bottom rung. I pulled myself out of that pool just as the darkness was closing in.
I broke the surface, coughing, choking and gasping for air. But I made it.
 
And no one noticed.

When I went to get my basket to go home, my watch was gone.

Monday, February 15, 2021

The Rest of the Story



Last night when I lifted off the lid of my little hot tub I inhaled the steamy clouds wafting up from the toasty 104 degree water. I turned on the bubbles before I got in to circulate the chlorine. 

I had just filled the floater that morning with a new pool tab and it was a bit strong. Sometimes a high chlorine concentration makes my skin tickle. Best to let it vent for a while. 

I have to get in gradually when the water is that hot. Ahhh. The bubbling water feels like hot champagne. So soothing.

It took a few minutes to realize that something kept brushing against my legs that didn't feel like bubbles or chlorine tickles.
There.
What was that? Something was there. I finally reached over and turned off the bubbles and stood up.
The water cleared quickly as the remaining air fizzed to the surface.
What was that twirling on the bottom there? A leaf? I reached for it and, oh no! It was a soft little lifeless body. Limp. Eyes unblinking. Sort of cooked looking. It was one of the tree frogs that had been huddling under the rubberized canvas flaps of the cover recently. She must have fallen into the hot swirling water when I lifted off the lid! Perhaps overcome by chlorine fumes.

 I looked closely. Moved the little arms and legs looking for life. Nothing. Sad, I set the body aside and decided I wasn't in hot tub mood anymore.

This morning when I checked for frost I happened to think about the frog. Yep, still there in the same position. A little bit dry now. Cold. I picked her up and went out to check tomato plants. I walked around in the yard a bit.
What? Did I just feel something? I opened my hand and the body lay lifeless, as before.
 Again. Something. I opened my hand again and stretched out one of the tiny frog legs.
And it moved back. But you know how frogs have those reflexes that never end right? We learned that in biology... But, what if?

I carried my little corpse to the kitchen sink and ran the water until it was just a bit over room temperature. I dropped my frog cadaver into a bowl of warm water. She settled to the bottom, belly up. I must have been mistaken.

Wait, that was an arm swishing. I drained the water and raised the temperature a bit. I put just a little water in the bowl and laid her in it. She gathered her legs under her and sat up!
I changed the water a few more times until all of a sudden there was a breath! Her little throat started taking in air.

I now have a tree frog sitting in a cup next to my keyboard. Her name is Laza. Short for Lazarus of course. Not quite sure what to do with her. Perhaps tomorrow afternoon will be warm enough to tuck her under some mulch in the garden.






Training 101

The other day when I pulled into the driveway I noticed that one of the little horses was in the yard. Stormy is generally so peaceful and content with life that I was surprised to see her.
She nodded at me and continued eating the day lilies just peaking up. I lead her back to the field gate and put her back in.

Thinking surely there was a place where a limb had fallen and pushed down the fence,  I found nothing when I searched the short section of fence from the barn to the driveway gate.

The next day, two were in the yard. So I checked the fence again. I found a low spot and even though I can't imagine a 3 foot tall mare jumping over a fence I pulled the fence up and tied it with baling twine. You know, one of the those temporary permanent fixes.

The next day, the same two were bad horsies, again.
Stormy and Teddie who is as cuddly as her name were peacefully weeding the iris bed. This time they evaded capture for a bit, but then grudgingly did their horsie duty and went thru the gate.

Ok, what was going on?

I went into the field and looked at the fence from their point of view, and what I saw was more than a bit surprising.
While I was watching, another one climbed a partially eaten round bale and then slid down and thru the gap on the other side into a space along the fence behind the bales...and at the end of the bales was a gap just barely wide enough for a horse to fit!

I went to get tools, and by the time I was back, 3 were in the yard. UGH!

I gave them a scoop of grain in the barn thinking they would be occupied for a while. Before I could get a good look at the problem, there they went, up the hay bale and over the other side. This time they were NOT going back in.

Rufus is absolutely no help with this. He is a great dog, but he thinks they are all his buds and this is play time. He soon had them running circles around the house while I pulled a twisted cattle panel out of the hay and attempted to reset it as a barricade.
Ok, two back in the field, again. The stud colt absolutely refused. No way was he going back in there. He just glared at me "Make me!"

Round and round the house, almost to the barn and then bolt away with a snicker and tail held high. What attitude.

Finally, tired and wanting to go home he tried to find his way back the way he had come...and I cornered him in the space between the bales.
OMG you would have thought he was being murdered. Squalling and squealing and kicking like a tiny bronco. I got a rope on him and he about dragged me across the yard. You would not think a 6 month old mini would have that kind of power. Lots of stops and starts, complaining and snorting (him not me) he was in a stall tied to a post.
Well, yeah, I complained.

Halter time for this pipsqueak. What a baby. He wanted to play with the "big" horses, he can now start to act like one.
I took his little head in my hands and looked him right in the eyes. I calmly told him he had been very, very bad and that he was now going to learn a lesson. You know the mom voice.
He was very submissive as I tried on several halters to get the right fit. Mamma is mad!

Yep, he will think twice about doing that again. Training 101.

For Sale: 


Life Lesson

                           https://www.flickr.com/photos/shookphotos/


When I was a young child I got to go to the small nearby town of Valparaiso to spent the night with a classmate who had moved away.  We had gone to St. Marks Catholic School together and our families lived only a couple of blocks apart in the Glen Park neighborhood of Gary, Indiana. 
Her dad got a better job and one summer she left me. 
  
She came from a huge Catholic family of  9 or 10 children. They had a big redwood pic-nic table in their dining room so her parents could seat everyone at dinner time. I thought that was so cool!

I remember her mother had to go away on 'retreats', to find the energy to go on, I realize now. 
At the time I thought it was just a cool Mom vacation.
  
After begging to spend time together, our parents finally relented. I was so excited.
One summer night we got to giggle and carry on like no time had gone by, even tho it had been an entire school year.
  
The next day we were given permission to walk a few blocks to the small downtown.
Kids could do that stuff then.
Poking around in the  Harvey's .5 and .10  she found a silly plastic purse on display that she had to have, but could not afford.
She was so upset when she counted her money.
But, she had a plan. She thought that she would switch the price tag with one that she could afford, and no one would know! 
I told her I did NOT think that was a good idea, and only watched, having nothing to do with what she was doing. It made me nervous and I am sure we looked very, very guilty hiding behind the purse and belt rack whispering and looking around to make sure no one was watching.
  
Being silly little girls of course we got caught.   The manager met us at the register and escorted us to his big office with huge chairs.
We were scared and crying and I knew her parents would be so mad at her!  The manager told us we could go to PRISION for what 'we' had done! He said he really should call the police and have them take us right then!!!   We cried even louder!
He called our parents, tho, and her dad showed up first since he was an attorney who worked just a couple doors down.
When he walked in, she fell into his arms crying uncontrollably..."Candy made me do it! It was all her idea!!"
I was horrified. In absolute disbelief. Surely she wasn't blaming me...His look at me told me all I needed to know. 
  
I think my mother believed my story, but I never saw my friend again. She was allowed to make one last phone call and told me that her parents had decided I was not the type of friend she should have and that she was no longer allowed to call me. She never apologized. I was so very hurt. 
I think now they must have been supervising the call. 
 
The years went by and I never forgot that day. I never forgot her.
If she was on facebook I would tell her how much I hated her then for what she had done, and how much it hurt. But I would forgive her.

To this day, the idea of stealing makes me sick to my stomach.
Funny how those lessons in life stick with us.

Contributing Factors


Our lives can be broken down into smaller and smaller fragments. 
A year. a day. a minute. a second. And each of those bits contain all the information that we had at the time to make choices. Choices that can be insignificant, or can mean the difference between life and death.  

A group of riders from a nearby stable were enjoying an evening ride on a balmy December day. They ride here often, down the country roads. Mostly, they stay off the pavement and we slow down to pass them so we don't spook the horses. Its a pleasant part of living in the country.  

It was about 5:30 when the accident happened. You know that time of day, when the sunlight slants steeply thru the trees and creates that strobe effect of flashing shadows and light. It also makes every speck of dirt and smeary place on your car windshield look like dense fog.  

Was the driver irritated? distracted? He had likely driven that same road 100 times. Maybe it's like most things we get used to, and roads in particular, the more we drive those curves the faster we can take them. We know when to let up on the gas and when to brake as we approach them.  We live here. We know the road, don't we?  

There isn't much shoulder on that particular curve. The ditches alternate between pretty deep and steep and rough rocky slopes. Thawed mud offers fairly poor footing even for a horse that has been that way before. (because, like us, they learn the road, too).  
In an instant, that particular combination of factors brought tragedy to their lives.  
The car rounds the curve and they are there.  6 riders.  On the roadway hugging the edge of the pavement, treading the fine line between the roadway and the ditch? In the ditch itself? Side by side or single file? 

The impact was brutal.  3 horses down. 3 riders thrown.
The car skids to a stop. Screams in the dark. Shock. Blood. 
And a 911 call.  
The lights of the first responders and the ambulances contrasted sharply with the festive Christmas lights nearby.  Blending in for a second, and then so horribly not.
Within long minutes the county road was blocked solid with police cars and emergency vehicles.   
Red strobe lights created an instant landing pad in our little field for the Air Evac Lifeteam that was on the way.
One of the girls was seriously injured. Did the horse fall on her? Was she thrown free of the animal and landed hard on the rocky ground?  Another was sitting up, and a 3rd...a young man...was holding his leg and yelling out.

The downdraft created by the helicopter created a wind chill I didn't expect.   The car driver stood motionless and watched, cell phone in hand.  Tensed up, with fear? with anger? with the thought of how a split second had forever changed his life, too?

No medical personnel waited on him. No emergency people talked to him.
I asked him if he was OK. Did he need anything. No, he didn't. He paced.   His friend who was with him was defensive...it all happened so fast...they came around the corner and the riders were there...there was nothing they could do!
  
I can't say if speed was a factor, or if they hugged the inside of that curve when they came around. Were they off the road even a little? The stories varied. The human memory is not very precise.

He was upset about his totaled car. For a young person who lives in the country the car is everything. And sometimes people in a tragic situation have to focus on something. Anything. I don't think he could bear to look at the carnage he had inflicted. 
  
After the ambulances and air rescue had taken the injured people away, and the stock trailer had taken the 2 skinned and bleeding horses back to the barn, there was still one life left in that ditch. The black horse couldn't get up. She struggled briefly, and then gave up. Waiting. Two young people held and comforted her.
"Leave her alone!" they screamed. "No pictures!"
The vet advised there was nothing that could be done. The girls sobbed as they comforted their fallen friend.
I had to walk away before I heard the gunshot.
One fatality.

Tecumseh Curves

Just past that curve to the right in the picture below is another sharp curve to the left.
I was on that road.
As I approached that left hand curve there was was something in the road ahead. I hit the brakes. It was a buck deer standing in the middle of the road. I slowed almost to a stop, creeping up to him. He stood his ground.
Around that curve, in the oncoming lane, was a dark pickup truck. Coming around a blind curve way too fast, he slammed into that deer! The deer flew into the air, tumbled, and crashed onto my car! The damage was incredible and I was nearly in shock.
But I had to get off "the curves".
I drove to the bottom of the hill and pulled into the gas station, which was closed at the time. No cell signal!
I half expected the truck driver to turn around and come to check on me. Nope. Hit and run.
By the time I decided to drive up the hill on the other side to get a signal, I was calmer, but boy was I pissed!
I didn't see any point in trying to find the other driver. It had been 10 minutes or so and he was long gone. I don't think he would have been too happy to see me.

 Note: on that stretch of road, there was no where for the deer to go. 100 foot drop, or rock face. He had literally gotten himself between a rock and a hard place.

Dam Ants

The legendary teamwork of ants is only part of the story. They are also very smart!
I have battled with teensie weensie ants this summer like I have never seen before. Tiny things. Maybe a 16th of an inch. I suspect that they came in bags of mulch. 
They have actually given me an opportunity to study them in great detail...not that I wanted to. Interesting little creatures who have invaded my space and in spite of all their talents I want them gone!
What survival skills they have...
They freeze in place on the kitchen counter when I walk into the room...meaning they must have good eyesight. (we have to hit the counter with a fist to get them to run so we can squash them!)
If I lay something on the counter and see no ants, within a few minutes a few scouts come to check it out....indicating a good sense of smell. (and social organization)
They seem to eat anything they can find and being omnivorous means they are not specialized and therefore more likely to survive. I watched them devour an entire cicada in the driveway in two days, and then appear in the front yard swarming an apple.
The bait kind of traps only work for a short time and then they avoid them...does that mean that they learn from their mistakes?  
They live in huge colonies and even tho I have sprayed every crack and have cleaned and searched for any possible food source or entry point, and treated the foundation, their sheer numbers mean that the colony goes on.
I have watched them in the yard as they move their entire colony in stages, carrying the eggs and babies across vast (a few yards) distances to outlying pre-prepared bases of operation. In a summer a colony could move miles! Perhaps splitting multiple times along the way. Many thousands of them participate in the migration, meaning they are very prolific. They will diverge from their migration to take advantage of food along the way...like peanut butter blobs dropped on the grass. Very opportunistic creatures.
Thankfully, after all of this study, I think I finally have them under control. Maybe.
Makes me wonder who is smarter here.

Small Things

When you least expect it, sometimes things happen that can change your world forever.

I was getting gas the other day and, since I am in the process of a major promotion for the We can Make a Difference Benefit Ride, I went inside to pay and drop off some fliers, Unusual since I always pay at the pump for speed.

The helpful clerk directed me to a bulletin board near some tables in the back where several were sitting, likely staying cool on one of our "rarely gets to 100 degrees" days.
As I approached it appeared that a couple of men at one table were involved in a very agitated discussion.
The bulletin board was so close to their table that I had to stand next to them to pin up my flier.

Customary greetings were exchanged: How are you? Hot enough for ya'?
I couldn't help but notice a massive, still stapled surgical wound on the younger mans shaved scalp. Curving over his ear in a wicked looking arch, there was no way I could look away, especially since I was only 2 feet away.

Seeing my look he made eye contact and said very matter of factly, "I have to have brain surgery"
"It looks to me like you already have" I said. "are you going to be OK?"
He went on, "I was in a fight. I was drunk and beat up two guys, but I fell and hit my head on the concrete, and now I don't even know my family."

How do you respond to something like that?

"Oh, my gosh, What are they doing for you?" was all I could manage.

"I escaped" he said.

Fear was written all over his face. The older man with him, head down, may have been a friend, but I think the relationship was closer than that.

"Escaped? From where? Why?"
"The hospital. They told me that I have an aneurism and that I have only a 20% chance of making it thru the surgery".

But I did know how to respond.
"You know, I know a guy..." I started, and had the undivided attention of both of them. It was obvious they were hopeful that I did have something to say.

"He told me a story one day about what happened to him. When he was 16 he was a rising star in the newly popular sport of off road motorcycle racing. This was before the high tech safety equipment and materials that protect riders today. Aggressive and fast, he knew he could win. And win he did. But it's a brutal and dangerous sport, or at least it was when he was a kid.
One day, during a particularly challenging race against opponents who were as determined to win as he was, and at any cost, he didn't make it to the finish line. 
He claims it was intentional, but I'm sure no one will ever really know.  The accident nearly took his life. 
But it didn't. 
He told me there were days he wished it did.
He woke up in a hospital room and didn't know the strangers who sat by his bed. He couldn't remember the accident, or the surgeries.
He realized he didn't know a lot of things anymore. But he was alive. And in time, he gained back some of his memories. Not all. But enough to build his life back. and it is a good life. Working, spending time with his family and friends, having a home."

"So, I can see how scared you are. Anyone would understand that. But you need to go back. Even a small chance to get your life back is worth it."
The older man reached for my hand. 
"Thank you, he said. "It really does make a difference".

"You're going to be OK" I told his struggling friend as I left.
And you know what? I believed that.

Second Chance

I drag the hose around and fill the water tanks daily. I have tall tanks for big critters and short tanks for little critters.
It is amazing how much water they drink!
I filled one of the short tanks first because the tall tank had 8 or 10 inches of water in it. The lambs gathered round for a cold drink. As long as I had the hose there, when the short one was full I moved it to the tall tank and plopped it in...and the water was...moving!
What was going on?
It almost looked like black water coming to a boil at the bottom of a huge grubby stew pot. As I was looking intently at the moving water...up pops a FACE! There is a squirrel standing on his tippy toes in the water. He is just tall enough to keep his face above water. And he is really, really tired.

I yanked the hose out of the tank! The rising water was overwhelming him!
Looking around, I found a stick under the pine trees. With a stick in the water he was able to pull himself up a just few inches. My poor little friend clung onto it as I carried him to the wheel barrow full of feed and laid him in it, gasping for breath.

Of course Rufus thought this had to be his lucky day! But no, I told him to leave it and he obediently sat, quivering in anticipation, watching intently as I went to get a cage for this pitifully saturated little guy. Rufus really, really wanted to grab him. Those squirrels in his yard drive him crazy! He finally had his chance, but no. Mom said no.

I dared not leave my wet friend out as a easy meal. The woods come alive at night. And the darkness was coming. The only place to grab him was his tail. I was a bit concerned he would swing up and take a bite out of my hand, but he was much too weak to struggle.
I picked him up by the tip of his skinny little tail, and he just hung there, resigned to his fate. His eyes locked onto mine.
He is now in the cage drying off and eating his serving of sweet feed.
UPDATE: He is fine. Bouncing off the cage walls like squirrel popcorn. He gets another chance today.

  A few weeks ago I had a tragedy on my little farm. I have a tiny herd of tiny horses. Cute little things. Great pasture ornaments! My 3 ye...