Wildlife

Wordless Wednesday: Visitor

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Categories: Animals, environment, Life, Wildlife, Wordless Wednesday | Leave a comment

Wordless Wednesday: Is It Spring Yet?

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Categories: Animals, environment, Life, Weather, Wildlife, Winter, Wordless Wednesday | 2 Comments

Snowed in

…still. We’re on Day Four now.

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If I had a real car that weighed more than 75lbs I would be able to move about freely by now, but my little toy Saturn is rendered helpless by the few inches of snow that remain. A fellow from next door helped me drive/push/coax it as far as my back gate where Steve’s truck tracks end, so I think I should be able to make it to church tomorrow. Funny how much I’ve come to look forward to that every Sunday.

Yesterday my nice neighbor, who has actual grownup vehicles, was able to get out and into town, and she brought me some milk because we were running low. I have been constantly surprised and warmed by the kindness of people. In retrospect I cannot believe how socially isolated I let myself become during my marriage.

Snow damage toll: several trees lost branches, but there’s nothing too catastrophic. My stand of redshank took the heaviest damage and the big pine in my front yard comes a close second, but least nothing landed on the roof.

My house is very clean right now. I’ve had nothing else to do.

This seems like a good time to pull out all the bits and pieces that I’ve thought would be cool to blog about but weren’t worth having posts of their own. Like how Elizabeth was Student Of The Month in November, and how I’ve had to lock all the chickens back up because one bold coyote got hungry enough to come right onto the property and start stealing chickens out from under my dogs’ noses. He got two pullets before I realized what was going on and locked up the henhouse.

* * * * *

Things the Internet magically knows about me:


In a Past Life…


You Were: A Happy Go Lucky Monk.

Where You Lived: Alaska.

How You Died: Decapitation.

I can totally believe that I was a monk in my past life. I can see myself now, quietly tending my garden in some sunwashed courtyard, the gentle warbling of birdsong providing a peaceful soundtrack to my simple contemplations.

But ALASKA? I. think. not.

Decapitation? Absolutely, if I lived in Alaska. The other monks got fed up listening to me whine about all the damn snow. It’s just a question of which one of them snapped first, and what sharp utensil he was holding.

* * * * *

Other things the Internet magically knows about me: I am Probably A Woman.

We guess https://dsilkotch.wordpress.com/ is written by a woman (52%), however it’s quite gender neutral.

Gender Analyzer

* * * * *

Anagrams for “Debora Silkotch:”

Horseback Dolt I. Hmph.

Cobra Hiked Lost. Okay.

Bad Shock Toiler. Heh.

Rabid Sock Hotel. Whoa there, all our socks are freshly laundered, thankyouverymuch.

Broad Chokes Lit. Everyone’s a critic.

Ethics Look Drab. Some days…they really do.

* * * * *

Here are some Google search terms that brought folks to my blog recently:

how to sleep with mice in house

Try my method: get cats

5 fosmo rules

There are rules?? Crap, I’ve probably been doing it all wrong!

“christmas” “words” “list of”

“I’ve” “included” “this one” “only” to “mock” their “unnecessary use” of “quotes.”

expecting hard what will happen to my watermelon

I feel you, my friend.

what the hell moments

This person definitely came to the right blog.

mummified baby in glasses

Um. I got nothing here.

coloring for canaries

Dude, just give him some old newspapers to read like everyone else does.

upbeat christmas snogs

I could use a few upbeat Christmas snogs myself. Where’s my mistletoe?

men in ballet flats

I…have nothing to add to that image.

* * * * *

If there were any chance of anyone seeing me naked in the foreseeable future, I would totally want to do this:

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* * * * *

And I think that’s all I have today. Must go huddle in front of my woodstove now and thaw out my fingers.

Categories: Christmas, Family, Friends, Humor, kids, Life, trees, Uncategorized, Weather, Wildlife, Winter | 2 Comments

The Sting

I like bees. Me and bees have always gotten along just fine. When I was a kid I used to like to pick them up and let them crawl around on me, just to show what misunderstood creatures they really are. Even wasps, to a lesser degree. I am less likely to trust a wasp, probably because they can sting without any cost to themselves and they tend to get aggressive in the Fall, but by and large I have a live-and-let-live approach to our wasp friends. I remember when I was nine or ten, we lived in this house that had huge wasps’ nest under the eaves and all along one fence. I used to get right up next to them and peer into the teeming industry inside, so close that the wasps would land on my cheek before crawling into the nest. On the very few occasions when I’ve actually been stung, it was always because I’d accidentally stepped on one barefoot, or unintentionally disturbed a nest or some such. And the sting itself has never been a big deal — a little bump, some relatively minor pain, and then some itching, and then gone by the next day.

So yesterday I was sorting some trash into piles out behind one of the sheds, when for no apparent reason a wasp flew over and stung the everloving bajeebers out of my upper lip, just under my nose. Multiple times in rapid succession. I’m not sure how many times, because there are only two holes, but one is much bigger than the other as if that spot got hit several times. Anyway. The immediate pain was freaking unbelievable. I stumbled into the house, eyes streaming, clawed through Luke’s first aid kit for a packet of insect sting relief, and frantically applied it to my already-swelling lip. As far as I could tell it had no effect at all. I switched to a baking soda paste. No relief, and by now my whole upper lip was about four times its normal size. I’d heard that vinegar is supposed to help stings, so I dabbed some of that on. I think that may have actually made the burning worse. Now my cheeks were starting to swell. I called my friend Julie, and she said I should take some Benadryl, which I didn’t have any of in the house. I considered driving into town for some, but by now my face was pretty much balloon-shaped and I didn’t want to frighten any small children. Or risk having my eyes swell shut in mid-trip.

So I gritted my teeth and called Steve, whose parents’ house is practically an entire well-stocked pharmacy unto itself, and asked him if he could bring me some Benadryl. He drove some down as far as my back gate, and Elizabeth ran up and fetched it from there. I’m beginning to find his refusal to set tire on my property genuinely amusing…but I digress. I popped a Benadryl with all due gratitude, and popped a second one half an hour later when things didn’t seem to be improving, and then at 7:55pm I told the kids to put themselves to bed and stumbled off to a drug-induced loss of consciousness.

I woke up at three-something this morning, still looking a bit like the Sta-Puft Marshmallow Man, but the swelling was definitely going down. Whew!

I’d planned to take a load of scrap metal to the recyclers today, but I wasn’t really fit for public consumption yet, so I decided to take a break from the whole cleaning project and do some work in the garden. It felt really good to be puttering around in the cool, damp soil again, and before I knew it I’d turned over several spent beds and planted my fall crops. I am very happy about that, because this is only the second year I’ve ever managed to put in a fall garden, and the first year I’ve actually put one in the ground instead of containers.

By the time all that was done my face was looking almost normal; not good enough for actually interacting with people, but human enough to make a couple of runs to the dump.

With Steve gone, these trips to the dump always tickle my sense of the absurd. I drive a teensy toy Saturn, and when I’m hauling out large-ish pieces of scrap lumber and such I fold the back seats down to make the teensy toy trunk a little bigger. I’ve gotten rather good at arranging the variously-shaped pieces with Tetris-like precision to eliminate wasted space and squeeze in as much crap as possible, but there’s always this mildly sardonic voice in my ear pointing out that no matter how efficiently I pack it, it’s rather like a chipmunk with his cheeks crammed full of seeds. Sure, it LOOKS impressive…but it’s still just a mouthful of seeds. The two loads I hauled to the dump today, combined, would have filled maybe one fourth of Steve’s truck bed.

Today this task was complicated by my involuntary and uncharacteristic flinching every time a wasp flew too near. There are a lot of them around this time of year, and for the first time I was watching them with wary suspicion instead of friendly benevolence. I think we are no longer simpatico, the wasps and I. I think I will be picking up a few wasp traps on my next trip to Temecula.

Next thing you know the BUNNIES will be attacking!

Categories: Animals, Gardening, Life, Wildlife | 2 Comments

Ad Interim

Last night I headed to my bed only to realize that it was still unmade and my sheets and pillowcases were still in the dryer. I fetched them and put everything together, and was just about to pull the comforter onto the bed when I noticed a small nondescript something on the turned-over underside of the duvet-cover. I took a closer look and saw…

…a scorpion.

Let me just say that again: there was a scorpion on the UNDERSIDE of my comforter. If I hadn’t noticed it, it would have ended up UNDER THE COVERS with me.

Ack ack ack.

The worst part? It was so tiny. And I don’t know if it was tiny because it was a tiny variety of scorpion, or because it was very young and its fellow hatchlings are still hanging around nearby. Perhaps in that pile of clean laundry on the far side of the bed that I haven’t gotten around to folding yet. Or in my sock drawer.

In other news, today is the first day of school. Elizabeth is going into the fifth grade and Luke is starting third. I wanted to capture the occasion for posterity, but the kids were in a goofy mood and this was the best I could get:

You can’t see them in this pic, but Elizabeth is wearing a very pretty pair of ballet flats today. It was like pulling teeth to get her to even look for new shoes in the girls’ section, but there are times when wearing boys’ sneakers just isn’t going to be appropriate and I wanted her to have at least one pair of “girl shoes” in her closet. Luckily for both of us she fell in love with the silver “dragon scale” flats at first sight.

But we did not find find them in the girls’ section. Oh no. All of those shoes were too small for her. We had to go to the women’s section to find something that would fit her. At ten years old my daughter wears the same shoe size as me. Women’s sevens.

Eeergh.

Last and least, here’s a pic I’m throwing in just because I like how it came out. Gericault in B&W:

What a handsome fellow he grew up to be!

Categories: Animals, Dogs, Family, kids, Life, Wildlife | 4 Comments

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