Barn Cat

Thanks to Sarah for taking photos.

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Springtime Thunder

Todays storm clouds over southern Missouri.

The oregano

IT’S ANOTHER SUNDAY in Paradise, rather the Ozarks in springtime. All the yellow flowers blooming their heads off, songbirds, both the locals and the migrants, making a splendid racket and warm but blustery weather making its magnificent march across the skies. Starting tonight, the forecast is for rain and significant flooding through Saturday. Wow. Where city folks may be sending us waves of pity, we’re out here thinking, Hmm. Nice. Ponds will get washed and freshened, Water table will get topped off, and with luck I’ll have an excuse to just watch the garden grow, instead of being out there working in it.  Good all around. We hope for no damage to areas along the rivers. But spring high water is an exciting time that sometimes provokes good fireside tales. Of course, some of my Pollyanna-like good cheer is because I live on a hill. My apologies and well wishes to folks down in the hollers. May the waters be kind.

photo credit; S. Denton, Moonmooring

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Raccoon Eyes

PICTURE ME as a squinty-eyed little raccoon sitting at the computer, peering at the screen and wondering if what I write is what I intend if I can’t see it. Nothing wrong with my eyes. But after eyelid surgery I’m having to keep antibiotic ointment on my incisions, and it leaks down into my eyes sod turns everything blurry. So doing is a struggle. I managed to transplant some houseplants and rig a little rack for the seed starter unit, so the day wasn’t entirely wasted, just mostly.

Next, I’ll count out potatoes to go in their bed, since it’s St. Paddy’s Day. Or as some pagan Unitarians call it, “All Snakes Day.”  It tickles me to see some folks refer to it as St. Patty’s Day, as that would be another saint altogether. But I’ve made greater error for sure, probably in this blog post. More garden news to come, but I gotta go rest my eyes. Happy day, whatever its name.

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Outstanding!

I’VE BEEN OUT STANDING in my field, trying to get ahead on garden chores before eyelid surgery. The list of things I can’t do in the days and weeks following surgery encompass everything on the list to be done, so I’m racing the clock.

Pat Hight tilled the garden area, so the first chore was raking up everything into raised beds. Then I realized I’d made some of the beds too narrow, so I re-raked to turn 6 of the beds into 4 wider ones. The next tier of 6 I left alone. They’ll be wide enough to hold peppers and eggplants, with some onions along the edges. Next, I used some salvage lumber to build the first of two boxed beds that, side by side, will be the basis of a hoop house to overwinter greens and other hardy winter veggies.

First, though, it will grow a crop of carrots, beets, parsnips and radishes, so the soil had to be dug out, sifted to remove about a bushel of rocks, and amended with coarse potting soil (actually just rotted wood), peat and sand. Once I recover, three more inches of soil has to be mixed in before it can be seeded.

I also assembled and erected an old child’s swing set on which I’ll grow beans for drying, and marked out some places where the garden’s edges need expanding or evening out. I also laid down cardboard and hay to mark the edges of the beds for raspberries and blackberries. After all, if you’re gonna have a garden, why not have all the garden you can? More to come, but after surgery.

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The Seed Swap, a photo

At the seed swap last weekend.

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Building Beds

Lettuce and kale - the first garden bed. There wasn't time to build a bed before it was time to plant some of the early greens.

WELL, THE WIND slowed, but only down to 30 mph gusts, which was better, but  not really good for working in the garden. Still, it had to be done. The sifting of the rocks out of the roots bed, leveling the box that contained the bed, lining its length at the margins with newspaper. Then a break for lunch and I was off to the dump to unload the trash that Van and I collected the day before, and reload the bed with potting soil, sand, a few groceries and a 3 lb. hammer. Back at the farm I drove the truck around to the garden and Sarah and I finished off our day (and poor aching bodies) by topping off the bed with 5 cu. ft. of coarse potting soil, a bale of too-dry peat and about a bushel of sand. More soil will be added tomorrow to finish off, then the bed will be stirred, smoothed and planted with several kinds of beets and carrots. I can hardly wait. But my back and my knees sure can.

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Songwriting

CONTINUING TO STRUGGLE with setting up a working midi station with a borrowed board so I can send a new song (written on said keyboard) to Robin for final editing. The board came with a stand that I can’t get to work, so it’s across the room on a table, too far away to hook up to the computer. Tomorrow, after the garden party, I’ll drive over to my storage unit and get my keyboard stand. But why am I borrowing a keyboard stand, you say?? Obviously if I have a stand, I have a keyboard, you’re saying, and you’re right. Years ago, I was persuaded by a slimy music store salesman to purchase a WONderful Peavey DPM3 board (and stand.) Trouble is, its software is stored on 3-1/2″ floppy disks. Over the years, loaning the board out while I wasn’t doing music, the disks got away and technology passed me by, leaving me with no computer capable of downloading the software  ONTO that size disk. Just retrieved the keyboard and have found the disks on eBay, so the problem will soon, I hope, be solved. And I will keep you posted on how that’s going. Meanwhile, I’m wrestling this little Yamaha that does 40-times more things than I need, and will, with luck, get the durn song on the durn computer sometime within the next week or two. Aaarrgh! I hate technology. But I love what it does when it’s working. Like now, actually.

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