Glens Falls (NY) Online Book Discussion Group discussion
What are U doing today?
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What are U doing today? (Ongoing thread)
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Jim
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Mar 18, 2019 05:13PM

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I'm writing quickly on work computer. For some reason Post doesn't work on my computer anymore. Cannot post.
So, its my computer at home since I can post from another computer. Oh dear!

Oh well. At least I can post.
Going to dinner - early bird - 4 miles from home.

I hope we have a lot of hummingbirds this year. Last year we started with just 2 pairs, but had almost 2 dozen by the end of the season, IIRC. Some years we start off with a dozen & then they keep me hopping. One year I had 4 feeders out & was feeding a quart of sugar water a day.

I add the sugar & slowly add the rest of the water to get it mixed in pretty well. Then I microwave it for 3 minutes. With our water temperature & microwave, that just gets the water boiling for 5-10 seconds.
Then I let it cool & pour it into a 20oz Gatorade bottle that we've washed out. I keep a couple of them in the fridge & usually fill the feeders out of them.

That's great Jim. We put out the feeders last week - haven't seen any but that doesn't mean they weren't passing by.

Years ago and for many years, we participated in the loon census each July.
Love birds! Loons, hummingbirds, birds of prey, all birds - although turkey vultures are rather ugly they are interesting.




Fate took a hand & solved part of the problem for me last night. She cooked a steak on the grill along with asparagus from our patch that she'd just cut minutes before. She turned off the grill & we sat down to eat. The grill was still smoking & started smoking even more. I finally had to put it out with the fire extinguisher. It's toast. At least it didn't set the table on fire.
I scrape it out each year, but there were growing lumps coating the bottom half & those were burning hot. It was boiling the grease in the pan underneath, so she's getting a new grill for our anniversary.


There were a few things about it that tickled me. I was able to find my framing square buttons & laid out the stringers properly on the first try. Neither should be a big deal, but it's been 15 years since I last made one & we've moved since then.
I only had a couple of feet of the old 2x10s left. I cut the 2 stringers & one tread out of one with the 2' of waste. 4 treads used up the other completely. Great use of recycled materials.
I used up most of my odd TDS. I keep a 5 gallon bucket with dividing trays in it filled with assorted sizes of TDS, drywall screws, & nails. Lately each time I buy more TDS, I get a different head. Phillips used to be the standard, but one batch was Torx, & now the standard seems to be #2 square drive. It's a PITA to constantly change bits in the screwgun. I've pretty much got them all down to square drive in all the sizes now, though.



Here's a picture of me on Red, my new horse, & the mounting block. The height is perfect, as you can see. We haven't put a stick on Red, but I guess he's 15.2h, so it's nice to be able to step into my bareback pad from a 28" platform. My bad foot loves the ability to dismount that way, too.




I do have some fencing to fix, though. Guess I'll go do that now. It's light out, finally.




- Space around the feeder. They don't like it when the feeder has bushes & stuff too close, especially other birds.
- Bad food. I sometimes have to change it every 3 or 4 days. If it gets cloudy or ants in it, they won't touch it. Also, the feeder has to be super clean. I soak mine in bleach water every fall & wash it really well a couple of times each year. On some, I poke bristles through the holes. I have an old toothbrush for that.
- Steady, early supply. I put mine out a couple of weeks before they're in the area & keep it up until cold nights force me to bring them in. I always keep at least 2 filled. My neighbors often don't have them or many while we always have some due to the steady supply the entire season.

I had to hang another feeder out back. The male started defending the feeder against all comers. While a couple are keeping him busy, several others found the new feeder in a couple of minutes & are sucking it down.

She never had a lick of sense, but was always sweet as can be except to critters that weren't part of the family. She often went into brush piles after prey. One cold, snowy night, I had to spend over an hour cutting & chopping into a brush pile to get her out. At 10 or 12 pounds, she was small for that, but one afternoon she went in after a coon almost twice her size. She emerged a few hours later with half her lower lip chewed off, but the coon didn't. Small, but tough as a keg of nails. I'll miss her.



The hummingbirds are booming. I might have to break out the big feeder, a 32 oz one. I'm putting out about 24 oz in 2 feeders in the back daily & finding them both empty in less than a day. The front feeders aren't getting nearly the same traffic. I think one is guarded & the other has to do with the way feeder is made. The holes are straight up & I think it catches too much rain water which dilutes it.
We've had horrendous rains here over the past week. Several days have seen 3" or more back to back usually in downpours like an inch of rain in 15 minutes. Lots of flash flooding going on around the state, but we're high up. Still, places in my yard are holding puddles of water where I've never seen it before. Except for Friday, it looks as if we can expect rain every day for the next week. Not good for getting chores done.




My last remaining good friend from school has a small farm with a pond. We had a great time talking with him one morning & I brought my son & Colin ( 5 yo grandmonster) back the next morning to go fishing. Colin caught 8 bluegills, my son 4, & I got 2, one on my fly rod which I haven't had out in decades. The other was inadvertent; I cast out the line for Colin & had a fish on before I could pass over the rod.
Great time, but better to be home. I had to add a couple more buckets of stone dust to the newly graded area around the mounting block & put cinder blocks inside its legs to keep the damn horses from pushing it around.
Then I hopped on Cloud for the first time. He's my new pony, a flea-bitten gray that came into the Humane Society with Pumpkin, Marg's pony. He's 17, 14.2h, & narrower than I like. He's quiet, but I'll have to add a pad under my bareback pad for both our sakes. Even on the short ride, his back was doing a number on my perineum. Despite his narrowness, I could get a decent leg on him. With Marg feeding him, I expect some of that sharpness will go away, but I doubt he'll ever be a bareback pony for me. While we were gone, Erin took a video of him rolling in the pond, so that's a real plus.
I got the barn & north fields mowed yesterday, too. I probably had time to mow the south field, if I pushed & came in a bit late, but I felt like crispy bacon by then. Besides, my leg was hurting.
About a month ago, just as I started to put up the burlap, the scaffold slipped & my shin hit the sharp edge of a rough oak board with all my weight on it. Pretty ugly gash & bruise, not fun to work with, but I got all the burlap up since it didn't bleed much. It was mostly healed save for the deepest part which is right under a hard bump that I guess is a bone spur. Anyway, I hit the very center of that unhealed bit on the sharp metal corner of the tractor hitch while hooking up the mower which delayed mowing a bit. I had to stop by the house & wrap it up since it kept bleeding into my shoe. It's not too bad today, although it woke me up a few times last night when I'd hit it or Pip ran across it.
We're super dry again. 2 weeks ago, we couldn't wait for it to stop raining, but we haven't had a lick since then. I need to get some weeding done, but the ground is like a rock. Sigh. First it was mud, now rock. The gardens are a wreck. On the plus side, we have a fair few hummingbirds & a lot of stuff is blooming. The hibiscus, lilies, & Rose of Sharon are all going strong. I have the first lining the back porch, the second lines the entire fence line of our 1/2 acre back yard, & there are 4 of the last scattered around. Really pretty & they're drawing in an amazing amount of bees, butterflies, & birds.


Best to all - Linda




I came home Thursday, sat down with a cup of coffee & while talking to Marg, she saw 3 scoot up the tree just 20' from our house. The seed & hummingbird feeders have been getting attacked. I haven't seen a frog in the gold fish pond & one of the gold fish died from a tear in its side, so I'm guessing these 3 were just a little early for dinner. I hope they enjoyed their last one since I shot them out of the tree. They looked so cute staring out at me, but they wouldn't leave.
This morning, Pip wouldn't come in to eat & it turned out he had another young one 'treed' on top of a post. Again, very cute, but it wouldn't run even though Pip & I were inside the back yard. It could have run off into the field or woods, so I'm guessing it was sick or really starved. Looked pretty thin, although it's hard to tell with that thick hair & I didn't look too close. Ticks are really bad this year. I got several tiny (pin head sized) ticks on me from handling the others. Those buggers burrow into the skin quickly, carry disease, & are itchy as can be. One on my leg took over 2 weeks to quit itching.
Anyway, it's a hell of a depressing way to start the day & the weekend.

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