But I wanted to remember a sad day.
But I wanted to remember a sad day.
Marcia commented "But I suppose your neighbors are at work and just don't even think about the dog all day". Actually, I think the dog was obtained just for the children. Here is what I have observed...
The woman living there is a single parent. There are 3 elementary-aged children. I have noticed a guy (I presume an ex) seems to visit every other week and do some yard chores and takes the kids away for a weekend. The woman and ex seem to get along well enough, but his car is never in the driveway for more than a few hours.
The children seem quite happy. In the Summer, there is a trampoline and a small aboveground pool. I hear them yelling in play, they run all over the backyard and they love their new dog. That is all wonderful!
But I am guessing the Woman does not like the dog all that much and may be annoyed with its endless barking as much as I am. It seems to me that, as soon as the children leave for school, the dog is sent outside and only brought in at dark.
It's one of those "the kids wanted a dog" things... So it does what dogs do. It runs around a lot. It protects its people from threats. It accepts the schedule set by its people, etc.
I don't blame the dog in any way, but I sure have known quieter ones!
My side-neighbor lit up Christmas lights last night. My own house lights are still up from Christmases ago. Turned off of course. The main floor hangs 2' forward from the basement and they hang on cup hooks. I just never bothered to take them down. You can't really see them from the street when unlit.
And they are nothing fancy, just a string of small blue lights on a timer. I have a shrub and a tree I planted 2 years ago and put a cage around each to protect them from the deer. I may add regular old-fashioned lights around them this year. Blue. I like blue. The neighbors all do red/green lights, so the blue stands out a bit. I am a bit non-standard sometimes.
I'll light them up December 1st. I'm not crazy for these 6 week ahead of time decorations. Too far ahead of time, and decorations seem to lose the connection to the holiday. And I'll attach the nice sturdy white plastic wreath to the grille of the car then too.
And I have a door-hanging Nutcracker to remember this year. I have a top-of-the door hook. And it doesn't blow around. The front door is metal and I have a bunch of powerful magnets.
Laid down long strips of packing paper around the front yard island (with the Saucer Magnolia and the 3' boulder). The paper will smother the grass. I'm adding 2-3" of soil on that. That will hold it in place. Then I'll plant most of the 2 colors of 300 daffodils I received recently through that.
My bulb-planting drill auger will go right through the paper without tearing it up.
Then, with 3" of soil on top, all I have to do is rake soil back over all of them.
The rest of the daffs will go in the back yard to break up the large single-color daffs patches planting years ago. I thought it was a good idea at the time to plant 4 different types in dedicated squares, but it is kind of boring. So these new daffs will get planted among them for better and broader coverage and color.
The hyacinths and crocuses will go in cages to protect them from the voles. The hyacinths among the daffs around the birdfeeder.
The crocuses with be in cages too, but in the back lawn. They bloom before I need to start mowing the grass. I like seeing them in the lawn.
I have 2 forms I use to make the cages. One is the wire mesh cutting pattern. I first made small paper samples. Then, when I got that right, I made a full-size cardboard version to cut the mesh with tin snips. And then glued some scrap wood together so that I could fold the mesh around the wood block.
It sounds easier than it is, but it sure is easier than fashioning each one freeform! And it is worth it. hyacinths and crocuses can live more than a decade if the voles can't get at the bulbs. In fact I have a few of each (unprotected) that are 25 years old.
But "a few" is not "enough. So it was time to replenish them.
I have completely given up on tulips. They are lovely but most of them don't live long. I may try them again next Fall. I have the thought of pulling up the 6' edging (that is sitting only 3" deep) and re-setting it down to ground level.
Voles use mole tunnels to get around. And moles don't usually dig tunnels 6" deep. So if there is edging 6" deep, the moles won't tunnel there and the voles can't use the tunnels to get at hyacinth and crocus bulbs. So no mole tunnels, no vole finding bulbs, and long-lived hyacinths and crocuses!
Motorcycle Man hasn't been driving up and down the street often lately. Maybe he got older or bored. Maybe he is old enough to drive further away. I cheer for whatever the reason is!
But no problem goes away than a new one crops up. The side-neighbors got a yappy dog months ago. It's not that I mind dogs all that much. The neighbors on the other side of me have 2 large ones and they bark too. But they are only outside briefly, so the barking doesn't last too long.
The yappy dog is in their backyard almost all day long. And barks all day long. And when I am outside, it runs along the fence barking at me. It probably weighs about 20 lbs, but it is convinced it has to protect the family from me. So it never stops barking!
It makes being in my own yard annoying. I am a relatively quiet person. I try not to disturb my neighbors. As far as I know, it is a rental house. I keep hoping they will move away and take the dog with them.
That's enough for now.
Can anyone recommend a good heated cat mat? Everything at Amazon seems to get 4+ ratings an I have not had much luck with the last 3. It's like a few months and they fail.
In every election, someone wins and someone losses. My choice "didn't win"... So we will have President Trump (again), a Republican Senate, probably a Republican House, and a Republican Supreme Court.
I won't get into the politics involved. I'm not here to start any political or social arguments (I do that elsewhere). But I will say that I am thoroughly depressed and worried. There are likely to be some domestic and international consequences that many people are not going to like.
I will not be watching the political news channels much for a while. I read The Washington Post newspaper while I eat lunch. Just skimming the headlines of the various articles will tell me everything I need to know for a while...
There is plenty for me to do in the yard before Winter sets in, and plenty to do in the house after that. I will post about that.
Change to Standard Time took time, but went well. Except the wristwatch! The evil thing has 4 buttons which are all a bit confusing. Sure, I keep the instruction pamphlet in the box. But the instructions are nearly impossible to follow.
I spent an hour Sunday night trying to simply change the hour. I couldn't get it to work.
The instructions say to press and hold the A button in Timing Mode. What, like through the whole process? Or just for a while? Then, it says press B (with the A button pressed or released?).
Supposedly, the hours flash first. No, it switches to 24 hour time. The C button is for start/stop. Should I press that to start changing the time? The D button is supposed to advance any mode you are in. Pressing it just changes 24 hour back to 12 hour time.
So I gave up for the day.
Monday, I had some better luck. Sometimes doing the same thing over and over does result in changes! Suddenly, I saw the hours blink. I was able to reduce the hour by one. HURRAY!
Another continuing problem has been laptops. My old one had 23 letters that came loose and I coud repair that even with superglue. A replacement (refurbished) would just not work (and I waited too long to return it).
So I bit the bullet and just bought a real new one. It is charging up now. I'll connect it to the main internet connection later to get updates and my personal choices online later. It will be nice if I can use it in front of the TV replying to blogs again while watching Univ of Maryland men's and women's basketball and Washington Commander football games all Winter.
I like to vote on Election Day itself. It is so easy here, you are in and out in 15 minutes. And I love the "I voted sticker. I have been collecting them this century.
I have a preference, of course. But more importantly I vote.
I've researched every item right down to the School Board. I have my choices made. This isn't a contested State at the Presidential level, but some down-ballot issues are important and those matter too.
So if you haven't already voted, go to the polls and VOTE.
Personally, I would say "vote for the non-Trump candidate of your choice", but vote. But if Trump is your guy, vote for him. Just vote!
It matters that you participate. You can't complain about an election if you don't vote.
I am about to make breakfast. Too eggs sunny side up, 2 country links, and two pieces of raisin/cinnamon bread with milk and green tea.
Then I am going off to vote. If I did nothing else for the rest of the year, that would be OK. Voting is that important.
And then I'm going to get good and drunk tonight, sleep for 12 hours, and hope to wake up Wednesday with results I hope for...
Some graphics...
I am leaving now to go vote...
I mentioned previously that I have about 500 Spring bulbs to plant. That is going to take some time, but my drill auger does make it a lot easier to create 6" holes. And that I have about 2 cubic yards of topsoil/compost mix to use up. I bought it loose-dumped into a trailer for filling 11 ten gallon pots and way over-estimated the requirements.
Well, at least I have good use for the excess. My raised framed garden bed soil has settled 4" lower over the years. And I can cast some of it thinly over Fall-planted meadow and pollinator seeds I have to plant soon.
But I messed up an order with the local DIY store. I have cheap 6" plastic edging around a bed in the front lawn. It keeps heaving up in Winter and has no strength and is hard to mow around. So I looked at concrete edgers
that are designed to allow curves (notice the round right and the curved left). And 12" pavers to both support them and create a "no grass zone" on 4" inside and out of the border.
Have you ever planned to order something, then decided not to, but discovered you did? Well, a 4'x4'x4' pallet arrived Wensday while I was still in bed (I never even heard them unloading it). Now I have to pull up the bad plastic edging, dig a 2"deep x12"wide trench around the bed (about 60') for the pavers to sit at ground level (so I can mow across the edges and have no grass growing there), and pile the edgers on the top.
And with Standard Time arriving, I have less time for outdoor work. I may have to start getting up earlier!
I am going to be so totally worn out in the next couple weeks.
I hate it when Daylight Saving Time ends! My schedule doesn't change, I just have one less hour of daylight. Since I watch TV after dinner (and their schedule doesn't change) I go to bed at about the same time. It just gets dark an hour earlier. And since I get most active after lunch, I have an hour less to do stuff outside.
I personally wish we would just stay on Daylight Saving Time. I know it benefits some people, but I am sometimes very selfish. The change bothers ME.
It will get dark at 5 PM here, limiting my outside activity. And I still have lots to do outside. More about that in a couple of future posts...
But I have so many clocks to change. The analog ones are not that tricky but I have some everywhere. And there are a few digital clocks to change. I've been switching to radio frequency-adjusted ones but there are still old ones around. And I always forget the one in the car!
My wristwatch drives me crazy. There are 4 buttons on the sides and I can never find the instructions, so I have to look it up of the manufacturers website. And it always takes a few tries to get it right because it is hard to tell when the tiny buttons have been pressed sufficiently.
And I am a bit obsessed about precision. I read once that "a person with one clock always knows what time it is; a person with more clocks is never sure".
OK, I'm just annoyed by the change... 😖
I find it harder to do yardwork these days. Bad knees, bad back, muscle cramps from gripping tools tightly... I think I have pushed my bod...