We awoke this morning to a white wonderland of snow covered trees, bushes and grass. On the flat parts of the land we seem to have about two inches of snow, but the real beauty is the covering of each tree branch or bush, even the grass stems have their own individual covering of snow. Surprisingly, even the barb wire fences are covered with a tube of snow . The oaks are the most spectacular, lacy white on the few leaves remaining and each branch defined, with the larger branches showing dark on their undersides. The juniper look more like the Christmas pictures with large lumps of snow clinging to them.
As we ate breakfast this morning before going to church we watched the birds out the side windows as they hopped about looking for seeds. I almost split my sides laughing as I watched a Lewis's woodpecker try to land in a bush. Of course it expected to land on the top of the snow and instead its feet went right in until they hit the branch. After a second or two of contemplation it took off in a flurry of snow from its wings to try for another branch with the same results. After about four tries it finally found a dry branch, rested for a minute of so then flew back into the oaks to land on a trunk and start pecking for bugs.
Meanwhile a scrub jay was digging for seeds, sending snow every which way as it dug through it to the ground. Over to the side a pair of juncos were hopping up and down next to a tall weed trying to knock seeds out of it. They finally gave up and just flew up to hang on the stem while they picked the seeds out from the dried flowers. The dried sunflowers are too covered with snow to get to the seeds, but often we see the small finches clinging to them as they bend over until the bird is upside down picking at the seed heads.
Susannah and I plowed out to the wood shop to check on the feral cat that I think has been living out there. Saw it a couple of days ago when it took off as I approached. Looked like a pretty, long haired, dark gray cat it it got cleaned up a bit. I have been leaving dried cat food under the shop and something has been eating it, but I haven't seen the cat again. Footprints in the snow this morning seem to indicate that it has been living under the RV and traveling to the wood shop for food. Guess we will keep leaving food for it in the hopes that we can eventually tame it a bit. Besides, we could sure use a few less mice out there. In fact Susannah caught a couple of rats out there. Either that or the mice have gotten into the steroids. No, not the black rats of the city, we have several varieties out here including kangaroo, pack, cotton, and probably a few others. Wouldn't mind something making a meal of the ground squirrel that is tunneling under the well house and RV pad. Might even tolerate a few coyotes for that.
Speaking of coyotes, they have been getting a bit bold lately. Even saw one right next to the RV where Susannah has her compost pile. Chaco saw it about the same time I did and took off after it like an arrow. Thought for sure he might get a bite of its tail since he is pretty fast, but apparently it was neck and neck to the fence line and then Chaco let it go. Maybe that will be enough to discourage it from coming around. Doubt it though, all the neighbors are reporting seeing them along with missing cats, dogs, and chickens. I understand their pelts bring around $40, so some of the locals might have a little extra Christmas cash.
We are also on the outlook for a large mountain lion. It is not to unusual to catch a glimpse of one now and then, or hear a howl, but this one seems to also be getting a bit bold. When one stops being shy, it can become a problem. At least one steer has been killed by it, so it kind of has a price on its head. I told Susannah to make sure and take the dog with her when she goes back into the woods and quite a few around here are carrying guns when they go into the woods for any reason. Personally I would rather avoid it then have a confrontation. I did some cat tracks that were pretty good size, maybe three inches across last year. Never decided whether they were lion of bob cat.
We let the fire go out in the stove last night, it got too hot in the house to be comfortable. Still it was 71 degrees inside when we got up this morning. But it is about time to relight it, sit back and watch it and the snow, and have a cup of hot tea. It feels good to relax and rest today. I will be putting up a new 43 foot high vertical antenna this coming week for the Ham radio and have been laying the radial wires for the ground plane the last couple of days. 32 wires each 65 foot long doesn't sound like much, but it is two thousand feet of wire that is now laying out there, and I am tired. So I shall say good afternoon, and go enjoy the fire.
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Hi Mike,
ReplyDeleteA mountain lion - wow. I've never seen one in real life. You have much more interesting wildlife there than here.
You have a ham radio? My friend Susan posted a picture of the tall antena her son, a ham radio enthusiast, has put up on her property - link - is it going to be like that?
Well, I know that there are mountain lions in the area, but I have yet to see one here. My preferred view would be a glimps, including the tail, as it went the other way :). And yes, there is a lot of interesting wildlife out here.
ReplyDeleteThat is quite a tower that Susan's son put up. My antenna will be like the small pole that you see on the top of the tower. I am afraid that the cost of such a tower is well beyond my means, and it looks like there is a second one in the background. When I was back in Virginia I was associated with a Ham club that had a 100 foot tower, and I think it cost them well over $100,000 to have it put up. Darn, I am going to ruin my keyboard drooling on it :).
I was looking at a 30 foot light weight tower and was discouraged by the 4'x4'x4' block of cement that it required. That is a good sized hole to fill with cement. And then I am not sure that I could climb it anymore. Oh well, I can dream.
So the higher the tower, the farther you can get a signal on the radio? Maybe you could attach the antenna to a helium ballon :)
ReplyDeleteIn general the higher the better, but there are a lot of if's, and's, or but's :). A lot depends on what type of antenna, and what frequency. Very high frequencies, like TV generally require the receiving and transmitting antennas to be in sight of one another, so the higher the better.
ReplyDeleteLower frequencies depend more on what type of antenna and what it is being used for. Some antennas work best close to the ground, like a wire strung out for a mile or so across the desert sand or the arctic snow.
But I figure you can always hang an antenna from the tower, hard to put it higher than the tower! And yes, people have hung antennas from ballons or even from flying kites. We hams have been known to do lots of nutty things.
By the way, how did your sister's interview go?
She decided not to take the job as it wanted a person to work more than 40 hrs a week with no over time and I guess it didn't pay that well, so she didn't do the interview after all (big sigh of relief for me). She still has a couple of months of unemployment and she's been teaching herself how to make stuff with Flash, hoping to find a job that has to do with programming.
ReplyDeleteMerry Christmas, Mike :)
ReplyDelete