Saturday and today were busy. I just sort of blew off Sunday (I got up late and had to real "get up and go").
Saturday was outside stuff and not much went well (some did).
I started by soaking the ground around the birdfeeder pole, using a 5 gallon bucket with a small hole drilled in the bottom so that the water would drip slowly but deeply. And then did it again. When I installed it, I had the thought that a base of 10" black iron pipes in a square would keep the feeder pole upright forever. Not quite, as it turned out. It tilted any way. Frost-heave, I suppose.
The idea was to get the soil muddy at the base so I could wiggle it level again and then use stakes and rope to hold it level while the soil dried. It is said that "everyone has a brilliant idea that will not work". This did not work.
When I wiggled the post, it seemed to move slightly. But then the pole broke! The feeder fell to the ground and also broke. The seeds spilled everywhere. Really, both the top and the base separated from the seed box part. I laid on my back (the weather was decent and I was warm), watched clouds passing overhead and asked to myself "why me"? Why now? I had other things to do...
I shouldn't have been surprised at the collapse and breakege. I built it 25 years ago and have made a few half-assed repairs on it since then. Not to say "sour grapes", but I was planning to build a new one anyway. Now I just have a more immediate reason to do so.
The bird feeder is back up, temporarily. I pounded a 6' metal rebar stake into the ground 2' and used some zip-ties to attach the birdfeeder pole to it. Then I applying a heavy layer of outdoor wood glue to the base and fit the seed box onto it. Scooped up all the seeds I could and added them in. The top was actually undamaged so that fit back on.
Then I used rope around 2 trees to triangulate pressure on the new support stake to get the birdfeeder pole level again. It should last the Winter. By then, I will have built a new one. Same design, I like it.
The barrel and flat disc defeats the squirrels completely. The board across the center bothers the blackbirds and starling somewhat (because they are large and don't fit under well) and the overhanging top keeps the seeds in the tray dry. And it is made of cedar, which discourages bird mites.
And that was just the start of the day! The weather forecast is for a snowy Winter. So I decided it was time to bring the snow-blower into the garage. I pulled it out of the toolshed. I pulled the starter rope a few times and nothing happened, but it also has an electric starter.
So I dragged out my heavy-duty outdoor extension cords. I could find the snowblower plug. Fell free to laugh, but I had pulled out the roto-tiller, which has no electric starter! I sure had to laugh at myself about that one.So I got out the actual snowblower. Plugged it in. It started right up.
Which matters, because it is heavy and is nearly impossible to move unpowered. I had to make space in the garage (which seems to get more clutterred every year). But there is a usual space for it. I just had to move the stuff that was there to "elsewhere".
Got the Holiday lights (blue) lit again. They stayed up last year. Partly, I was lazy, and partly my neighbor (who helped me so much when I fell off the extension ladder almost 3 years ago) screams at me if I so much get on a 6' stepladder. But I plugged them in an outdoor outlet, and set the timer. They come on right at dark.
I also had a female (the ones with berries - some people don't know that) holly tree with some drooping branches and I pruned them. One big branch is hanging on the front door. I put 2 smaller ones per side of the mailbox post. I tend to try to look natural.
Speaking of holiday decorations, I have seen people driving around with wreathes on the front of their cars. I used to laugh, but I found a white one with pinecones at Walmart at a decent price and decided to do it. I like it!
And that wasn't the end of the day. The street end of my driveway is "barely" lower than the street and lawn. Rain collects there. I use a small grub-hoe to scoop a path into the lawn for drainage. I really have to set in a perforated pipe there for better drainage. But Sunday was not that day.
I ended Sunday with 3 loads of washer/drier loads. Then made dinner. After that, it was just TV and cats on my lap til bedtime. And two joined me there all night.