Pond!

Pond!

Saturday, September 20, 2014

First Rain

This morning I went out early and took a few pictures of the sun rising.  It came up above the hills in a sultry orange glow -- very pretty unless you knew that the unusual hue was due to the presence of smoke from the huge forest fire to the north.  There wasn't a cloud in the sky -- just the smoky greyness stretched out over all the blue.



By afternoon, though, things had changed.  When Bruce and I were coming back from grocery shopping in Angels Camp,  there were lovely purple clouds popping up overhead like giant mushrooms.  On the way home, I said to Bruce, "Wouldn't it be wonderful if it rained?"  And about 2 minutes later the first giant splops of rain hit the windshield.  By the time we got home, it was really raining.  As I pulled tarps over the hay, thunder was booming.  Joy!


I grabbed my camera and took pictures of the rain, the sky, the gutters, the trees, the geese -- everything.  So did Bruce.

The rain gutter with actual water coming out 






































The rain was magnificent -- there is no scent like the fragrance of the earth, dry grass, bushes and trees when they are touched by water for the first time in months.  In the end, our rain gauge measured out that we had a whopping 0.03" of an inch of rain.  Then it stopped.

But for us here in this dry, dry land, this 0.03" was a blessing of the highest magnitude.  We were ready to build an ark!  We take what we're given, and then say "Thank you."

So...thank you!

Thursday, September 18, 2014

The Lure of Water




It is so dry that many animals have taken to coming up to the house for water.  Here is a wild rabbit that crouched right outside the backyard door.  We have pans and troughs of water set out around the place for thirsty animals to drink from.  If this means I'm drawing rabbits to my garden, so be it.


















For the second time in two years, large swaths of Northern California are burning.  Every time the fire crews mop up one fire, another starts somewhere else.  The latest, largest fire is called the King's Fire and is north of us in the Sierras.  From here, it's far enough away that we can't see or smell the smoke.  But I know that so far it's burned 110 square miles of two our National Parks and is only 15% contained.  They suspect that the fire was started by an arsonist.

We need water.  We need rain.  If we don't have a wet winter this year... I'm very worried.


Wednesday, September 17, 2014

My Crew of Cat Therapists


We may not have much of a pond here at Frogpond Acres (actually, we no longer have any pond at all), but we sure do grow pretty cats.  This is Multi-Pass.  She's a princess.  Of course.



OK, maybe "pretty" isn't the word I'm looking for in Poom's case.  His coat was so matted and stuck together with burrs that we had him shaved (under anesthesia) at the vet's.  He came home looking like a Dr. Seuss creature.  Or, more exactly, a Dr. Seuss creature with a saggy belly.  Never mind -- he has a magnificent pom-pom tail.







And here's Arby, my schmoo-boy fast asleep on my purse.  The guy is 16 years old, but still falls asleep like a baby kitten.  I love that about him.


School careens along in its usual roller coaster way -- happy, exciting times in the classroom but also plenty of drama and angst amongst the grownups.  At the end of most days, I'm emotionally exhausted. Coming home to these guys is exactly the strong furry medicine I need to get back to my happy place.

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Dorothea's Visit



Since retiring from the post office several years ago, my friend Dorothea has blossomed into the quilter she always longed to be.   Now that she has the time to devote to her passion, the results are stunning.

She and I only see each other once or twice a year, but since we are kindred spirits, we have an easy time of picking up right where we last left off.  She came up for lunch and an afternoon visit several weeks ago and brought along her latest works.  To use one of her favorite expressions, I was gobsmacked by her creations.















We sat back in our chairs at the dining table and talked, laughed and drank tea.  She unwrapped her quilts and I ooohed and ahhed (all the time wondering if it might not be time for me to retire too).  Then we ate lunch.  She contributed the smoked goat meat (delicious!) and a jar of artichoke tapenade.  I made my lentil salad and cut up several cheeses. It was, admittedly, an interesting menu but delicious.
















Dorothea is one in a million.  I'm truly blessed to have such a friend.

Monday, September 15, 2014

Calaveras Big Trees

This evening I called the woman with the dogs who killed the llama to see how she was doing.  She sounded a lot better and I was glad of that.  She also told me that she and her husband had decided to see if they could keep the dogs in their runs at night and when they weren't home.  So none of them had been put down.  I'm cautiously pleased about this.  The truth is that once a dog has gone into the "pack mentality" killer zone, it can never be fully trusted again.  However, if the owners are able to keep them contained, everything should be ok.  I don't hate the dogs for what they did -- they reverted to a wild state when they formed a pack.  I didn't want any of them to be euthanized if there was a concrete plan to prevent this from happening again.  The owner sounds like she has this plan.  I told her that I would keep an eye out for if they ever were caught wandering and she appreciated that.  Fingers crossed that everything settles down.  Life in the country...

On Sunday, Bruce and I decided that we needed to get away from here for awhile.  So we picked up sandwiches at the local deli counter and drove up to Calaveras Big Trees to walk the trails amongst the redwoods.  And it was good!


Yup.  Bruce and I have turned into Ma and Pa Kettle.  When this happened is a mystery, but the transformation is complete.  I am mortified to admit that I spent many minutes on making fun of my spouse's too-small and extremely ridiculous hat.  I only realized how unflattering and lopsided my own was when I downloaded our pictures.  I now must humbly admit that my beloved husband and I match.

Long sigh.









We ate our sandwiches at a table surrounded by pines.  The breeze was blowing through them and it sounded exactly like shushing of waves moving across the sand.  Exactly.








The water in Beaver Creek was low, but we saw trout darting in the shadows and the sound of the water was music to our parched ears.



































A kind of tree squirrel called a chickaree racing up a tree trunk.  Bruce snapped this turbo-charged shot and somehow actually managed to capture the image of the squirrel before it disappeared into the canopy.


We had a very much needed fun day.  No chores (until we got home),  no school work, no computers.  Just us wandering around the woods.  Nice.

Sunday, September 14, 2014

A Sad Day


                                                                                                                                                                           
I'll start by telling about the sad thing that happened yesterday morning.  Bruce went out to do chores and heard dogs barking in our lower pasture.  When he went down he saw that a pack of dogs were savaging one of the llamas that we let roam on our property.  He recognized them -- one of them was a Great Dane that we have often seen.  The llama was down and they were pulling hunks of its fleece out as it lay.  Bruce shouted at them and they took off, but returned almost immediately.  He went inside, got a gun and shot it close enough to frighten the dogs away and this time they ran home.



He came inside to tell me what had happened.  I was reading a book in bed and had heard absolutely nothing -- not even the gun shot.  The window was shut, but still...how could I not hear a gun shot from outside our bedroom window?

The llama had no blood from any wounds, but didn't seem able to get up.  It was breathing hard and had obviously been run to exhaustion.  I brought it a bucket of water and it drank.  A good sign.  We left it to rest and went inside to call the neighbors who owned the dogs.  The wife was devastated when Bruce told her what her dogs had done.  At first it seemed like the llama would recover, but when I went down to check on him, he drank more water but then groaned and rolled over on his side.   He looked like he was dying.  Our neighbor came over in tears.  She called her vet.  She called a friend who came and brought a sedative to relieve some of the animal's stress.

But the llama died with the neighbor sitting next to him.  He was an old guy and I think that his heart just gave out.  She stroked his face and neck and cried as he lay stretched out.  A little later on the neighbor who owns the llamas came by to see it before it was hauled off by the man who takes away dead livestock.  Later, the woman called to tell me that she was taking two of her dogs that to the vet's to be put to sleep.  She said it was one of the worst days of her life.

And that's the story of why Saturday was not such a good day.


Today Bruce and I went up into the mountains in the truck to get away for a little while.  It did us good.  I'll tell that story tomorrow.


Saturday, September 13, 2014

I'm Back

It's been awhile.  I'm not absolutely certain of why I stopped blogging.  Could be that I've started doing Facebook more -- not so much posting there, but reading all the trivia, watching the cute cat videos and "liking" the many (both sublime and inane) things that were likable.  This has taken a huge swath of my free computer time.  It's easier (much less thought required) than blogging.  Facebook is a bit like sitting down with a glass of wine and watching Project Runway:  enjoyable but not terribly productive or substantial.

It also could have something to do with the fact that the summer has been has dreadfully, depressingly dry as feared after yet another rainless winter.  I lost my enthusiasm for writing about Frogpond when all there seemed to write about was how the pond was now a crater of dried, cracked mud, the willows and cottonwoods were yellowing and dropping leaves and the turtles and frogs were nothing but distant memories.  The well is failing as the water table drops.  It is a struggle keeping the trees and gardens going -- all the plants are regularly stressed and drooping as I can't water any of them as often as they need.  I run myself ragged trying.  I'm tired of seeing dusty leaves slowly turning brown and dropping.  It's not fun to watch; less fun to write about and (I'm sure) even less pleasant to read about.

That said, I've missed this blog.  I'm ready to come home to it.  Ready to embrace the sad for what it is.  Ready to look for the loveliness amidst all the dust and dryness.  Ready to write!

Flowering Amaranth

The birdbath

Ripening Pomegranates


































Today something sad happened at Frogpond.  I'm not ready to tell the story -- not on the day I come back to blog.  It will wait until tomorrow.  For now, I'm glad to be back here.  Hello to anyone who still checks to see if Frogpond Chronicles is still around.  It is, and thank you so much for coming by!

Saturday, August 9, 2014

Bambi Strikes Again


I should have seen it coming.

The four muscat grape vines that I planted this spring had a slow start but had become established and were doing great.  Tendrils and leaves unfurled and the vines were spreading out onto the fence.  Each plant even had its own adorable cluster of baby grapes.  I should have taken a picture.

The deer also were delighted by the grapes progress.  So delighted that they hopped into the garden one night and ate my poor vines down to half their former size.  And all four clusters of grapes are gone.  Of course.

So yesterday Bruce erected yet another temporary fence -- this time to block out the marauding deer.  I know that they're just hungry and doing what any creature must do in order to stay alive.  I'm not angry (maybe just a little at myself for not seeing this coming) or upset -- just resigned.


Rock, heat, wind, gophers, deer, weeds, drought.  As I've said more than once, Copperopolis is a hard scrabble sort of place to have a garden.

Monday, August 4, 2014

Last week of Summer Break

This squirrel has taken residence in a pine in our side yard. 

The lantanas I planted in half barrels is thriving


Today is a blessedly cool, overcast day,  only supposed to reach the mid 80's.  This is rather amazing for Copperopolis in August and a great relief after almost a week of temperatures over 100 every day.  Actually, if  we had a shower or two, this would be very like the weather in Hamburg!



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These last two pictures are of a hummingbird playing in the drops of water from a small sprinkler.  They are the otters of the bird world -- playful, clever and mischievous!

Friday, August 1, 2014

Germany

On Tuesday I got back from an absolutely splendid two-week visit with Anke and Wolfgang in Hamburg.
My First Beer in Germany

Anke and I in Front of an Old Mill

So much green...

Elephant at the TierPark

Old Main Gates of the TierPark

Upside-Down Walrus at the TierPark

Lübeck Cathedral

Lübeck Puppet Museum

Sculptures by Ernst Barlach

The Janisch House

Sweet Donkeys at the Donkey Park

Wind Mill on the Way to the Baltic Sea

The Baltic

Anke and Wolfgang

Old Part of Hamburg

Anke Studying the Map!

Hamburg Harbor with New Opera House in Background





























































































Anke and Wolfgang schlepped me around to see the sights here - there - and everywhere.
















































The Airport
























It's hard to believe that only a few days ago I was half-way around the world.  Modern travel is pretty cool -- disorienting, though.  I'm still waking up at 3:00 a.m. ready to bounce out of bed and eat lunch.  An interesting sort of jet lag!

It did me such good to see my family across the ocean.