Well the
rains finally stopped. Now we most likely won't see any until October. We got
just shy of 12 inches in 9 days and we were the lucky ones; we were always
outside of the brunt of the storms. Our usual August total is about 3 inches.
The mosquitoes are loving it. The driveway looks horrible but it is drive-able
with what we have and makes everyone else have to stop on the other side.
I can
barely find my garden with all the weeds that have grown up. It would most
likely be a complete loss if we didn't plant in the mineral tubs (about the
size of a half a whiskey barrel). Ten or eleven of them actually had water flow
in and over them, one of them had half the soil washed out. And we have had
water flow into the fenced garden before but never like it did this time. My
asparagus should recover but I have some debris to remove from the bed. We have
a line of six or seven of the mineral tubs in the garden with an old fence
stretched along them to let things grow up it, like last year we did melons in
that spot, this year is tomatoes. One of the tubs in the line got hit head on
with rushing water and the water pushed the tub a little over a foot, I think
the tomato clinging to the fencing stopped it from going further, but it was
far enough so that a lot of water washed around it. Any more and it would have
just torn free. Those tubs are hard to move when full and more so if they have
been in place for a while, and this one had been. Now it has so much sand and
rocks and sticks and every other thing that flows in flood water that I am not
sure about getting back in place. Unfortunately, the mower was sitting right
next to that line of tubs and got buried in sand and other debris; we do not
yet know if it is savable. There are flood marks on the garden fence, the
driveway side where water would exit, that are 3 feet high. We are slowly
getting it all cleaned up.
My silly
soap, Days of Our Lives, is on and Ron has a doc appt. we need to leave for
right after it is over so I need to get ready during the commercials and put
the rest of this off until later.
I'm back.
The roads
close by have had lots of damage. They dropped a bunch of boulders down in the
spots where they got washed out; not for driving on but to keep folks from
falling in the big hole. No telling when our roads will be tended to better as
there is a lot of work on the paved roads and they get done first.
I noticed
a couple days ago that some of my regular hummingbirds are not around but a
couple of my "regular" transients have made an appearance accompanied
by some I do not recognize at all. This means their migration has started. It
seems early but I have never noted when it seems to start so maybe it is not
early. Heck it took me a few years to really recognize most of the regulars so
figuring when they are starting to leave isn't that easy. The very first that
became recognized was because he had a shorter and stouter build than the
others so was easy to spot. He had been coming here for seven years but I did
not see him this year. I have seen his offspring, quite a few actually; one
looks almost identical but is obviously a younger guy. And we had a female this
year that had to be his--she is short and fat comparatively. I hope to see her
again next year. I like being on the migratory route south and it is neat to
see the ones that go further north stop back by here for a short fattening
break before going on further south. The ones that have been here behave
different than the ones that have not. It makes sense.
1 comment:
Hmm, I think I'm going to like being back in MO. It's like a freakin desert here in TX, comparatively. lol. Yeah, I know.
Humming Birds. OMG I miss those tiny-bird families we had on FringefolkFarm. Cool birds. I miss chickens too. Actually, I miss all of the country lifestyle.
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