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Random thoughts from the moose cave.

 
 
Rockhead
 
  1  
Reply Fri 13 Jan, 2012 10:41 pm
@ehBeth,
we best speak of something else before she show's up. she can get cranky when she doesn't get to go live in the woods with a buncha smelly miners for a while...

Ima have a belly fulla cornbread if I don't quit. my beans were mui excellente as well. big chunks of smoked ham. almost no fat. tossed the bones out back for my coyotes.

I gotta start thinking aboot cutting some more wood. this cold snap had depleted my pile down to a stack.

Think Ima bivouac down by the river and scout some of that downed hedge. if its dry enough, Ima borrow the 4x4 and hook up my trailer to haul me a big ass load of wood.

If I work real hard, I might not hafta cut any more this winter.

what a change from last years frozen days on end...
ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Fri 13 Jan, 2012 10:48 pm
@Rockhead,
I need to learn more about working with smoked ham. It sounds and looks interesting.
Rockhead
 
  2  
Reply Fri 13 Jan, 2012 10:56 pm
@ehBeth,
pioneer food. easy peasy. toss it in a pot and go work.

I'm seriously looking for a goat. I even have a name for it already.*

I can't find anyone near me selling them yet...


*(no, not pamela. she would not find the humour in that, eh)
Rockhead
 
  1  
Reply Fri 13 Jan, 2012 11:10 pm
I gotta go feed bubba san.

she's camped on my front porch crying for supper. (wet food makes them crybabies)

not gonna start her a fire, it's not nearly so cold tonight. gonna be in the 60s again sunday. there's still coals in the bottom of the stove, I can feel the warmth. I might toss her a chunk in to keep them glowing.

crossing my fingers I can be vertically functional tomorrow. I really needa get the Nissan motor pulled so I can have my shop back...

and I could use the corresponding benjamin that accompanies the deed.
0 Replies
 
mismi
 
  1  
Reply Sat 14 Jan, 2012 08:08 am
Enjoyed reading along. Hope you get the motor out of the Nissan and a nice vertical day.

Beth - girls by definition have lumps. I giggled.

Hugs you both.
0 Replies
 
ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Sat 14 Jan, 2012 08:47 am
@Rockhead,
is this Kansas hedge?

http://27.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lufxoiINjn1qb2gy4o1_500.jpg


getting ready to go get my ass kicked by my new dance instructor

I am going to hurt.

I need tea.
Ticomaya
 
  1  
Reply Sat 14 Jan, 2012 03:01 pm
@ehBeth,
ehBeth wrote:
is this Kansas hedge?

Yes (Osage Orange), and those are hedge apples.

http://img594.imageshack.us/img594/2299/fotolia16191139subscrip.jpg
mismi
 
  1  
Reply Sat 14 Jan, 2012 03:56 pm
@Ticomaya,
They are pretty - but don't look very yummy.
roger
 
  1  
Reply Sat 14 Jan, 2012 06:37 pm
@mismi,
They're not yummy in any sense of the word. From only one experiment, I seem to recall they tasted a lot like dandelion stems. Trust me, I was a more adventurous eater in my younger years.

On the other hand, the wood is almost exactly as hard as hickory, and twice as good looking. If only you could find enough pieces straight enough, you could make the finest bows (archery) in North America. That's if you could also find a few pieces that long that wouldn't crack and split while seasoning. The advice I had was to paint the ends of some logs, throw them in the attic, and forget about them for a few years.
ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Sat 14 Jan, 2012 06:47 pm
@Ticomaya,
those look like some kinda alien brains
mismi
 
  1  
Reply Sat 14 Jan, 2012 06:49 pm
@ehBeth,
I've always thought alien brains were pretty.

How did it go with the new teacher?
0 Replies
 
JTT
 
  1  
Reply Sat 14 Jan, 2012 07:25 pm
@roger,
Quote:
The advice I had was to paint the ends of some logs, throw them in the attic, and forget about them for a few years.


Really dumb dumb advice, Roger. A hot attic is the last place you would want a wood like that to season. An outdoor, covered shed with plenty of air movement is the ideal.
0 Replies
 
Rockhead
 
  1  
Reply Mon 16 Jan, 2012 08:12 pm
anyways...

Great snowy owls invade Kansas

This year is being called one of the most unprecedented snowy owl invasions of all time.

Since Nov. 16, when the first snowy owl was spotted in Kansas, more than 80 sightings of the birds have been reported. Kansas wildlife biologists say this may be only the beginning.

A normal year may garner one or two reported sightings of the birds from the Arctic.

“It is extraordinary and exciting. It’s unprecedented and never before been like this in recorded history, this kind of invasion,” said Mark Robbins, collection manager of ornithology at the University of Kansas Biodiversity Institute.

The closest the state has ever come to seeing this many snowy owls was during the winter of 1974 and 1975, when 80 were recorded in Kansas – but that was at the end of a long winter.

There may be far more this winter.

“What we are interested in is what this next cold front will bring,” Robbins said. “We are wondering if this will bring loads more birds down here. There is more snow cover up north and, with the snow, it is more difficult for the owls to find rodents and birds for food. We think we may get another major movement down here.”

The snowy owl invasion has covered more than half the state, and the newest residents in Kansas have created a plethora of paparazzi opportunities. Newspaper and TV stories have helped create enthusiasm for the birds. And, on any given weekend, it’s not unusual to see a string of SUVs and cars lined up on Kansas’ back roads as people stare into spotting scopes and binoculars looking for the birds.

But that has some birders concerned. They fear people are getting too close to the birds.

The Hutchinson News recently reported that a Hutchinson man was able to get as close as 10 feet to a snowy owl before it flew off. It was seen in a ditch about three miles from Sterling. When he returned to the site later, it was sitting in a nearby field.

“A lot of these birds are starving,” Robbins said. “Many of these birds are barely getting by. Whenever we disturb them, we are preventing them from hunting. They are living on the edge. They are so starved from flying all the way from the Arctic. We should encourage people to stay a couple hundred feet away — minimum. Actually, that is too conservative: a good 300 feet and don’t go any closer than that.”

Christopher Rogers, an associate professor in the department of biological sciences at Wichita State University, agrees.

“It is complex and it depends on the condition of the bird. Many of them are exhausted, tired birds,” Rogers said. “When you are able to walk up on them and they won’t flush, it means they don’t have much strength. You are wasting their energy reserves if they flush — energy they could have used for hunting.”

Bob Gress, director of the Great Plains Nature Center in Wichita, says it is good that people are seeing the birds and photographing them.

“It does more good than harm because it gives people a sense about caring for these birds,” Gress said.

But it is a mistake, he said, for people to believe that many of these birds will return at winter’s end to the Arctic. Many will die along the way, from hunger, from flying into utility lines, from being struck by vehicles. Many of the snowy owls spotted in Kansas are juveniles, about 6 months old, and not used to the hazards of Kansas.

“More will die than will return,” Gress said.

The birds prefer solitary vistas. On vast horizons they appear as small white dots.

“I have seen eight different snowy owls,” said Wichita birder Paul Griffin. His first was Dec. 2 at Marion Lake. “I saw two at Butler County, two at Quivira and then there was one at Cheney and two at Cheyenne Bottoms. I have video of all of them and pictures. Some are better than others. I am trying to document this as much as I can.”

Griffin was also one of the first birders to list concerns on an online Kansas birding forum about how close people should get to the birds.

“The birds are resting during the daytime, and people are walking right out into the fields to take photos,” Griffin said. ... If you are close enough to see the yellow eyes, you are probably too close. I approach slowly. Now if one lands near me, I’m not going to leave it but I am also not going to impinge on a bird — not as beautiful as these owls are.”

(wichita eagle)
http://www.kansas.com/2012/01/12/2177199/snowy-owls-are-beautiful-but-dont.html#storylink=omni_popular
mismi
 
  1  
Reply Mon 16 Jan, 2012 09:44 pm
@Rockhead,
Have you seen one? That's pretty cool. Smile
ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Mon 16 Jan, 2012 09:46 pm
@mismi,
They're definitely better looking than alien brains Very Happy
mismi
 
  1  
Reply Mon 16 Jan, 2012 10:13 pm
@ehBeth,
Wink - I dunno Beth...call me weird but - I have always had a thing for them...alien brains that is. (time for me to go to bed...getting goofy - er)

Rest well - I will see you all tomorrow I hope. Very Happy
0 Replies
 
Rockhead
 
  1  
Reply Mon 16 Jan, 2012 10:17 pm
@mismi,
no. I've not made it off the property other than to take mr snowplow home this evening so's I can try to work on the 4x4 if I get vertical.

mostly been abed of late...

Ima keep an eye out for them when I am oot and aboot, though.
mismi
 
  1  
Reply Mon 16 Jan, 2012 10:19 pm
@Rockhead,
take care o' you. Wink
nitey nite
Rockhead
 
  1  
Reply Mon 16 Jan, 2012 10:22 pm
@mismi,
you've inspired me to ask mr snowplow to give me his deer pelts.

I don't care for, and prolly can't digest the meat, but I think Ima make myself some leggings and a shirt. injun style.

anybody know how to tan the hides...?
Rockhead
 
  1  
Reply Tue 17 Jan, 2012 01:03 am
I just heard back from him.

as I suspected, he throws the hides away. keeps the heads and horns....

I have been watching videos, and I am going to try making a shirt.

in my spare time...
0 Replies
 
 

 
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