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| Of course Mr Raccoon came back last night. Luckily, he didn't chew the hose to shreds. |
Sometimes it is advisable to have a quiet way to euthanize an animal caught in a trap. The three-minute video linked above shows one way to do it. Trappers call it a "dispatch pole". All it takes is a 160 body-grip trap (a.k.a. a Conibear trap) and a long, forked stick. It makes less noise than a pellet gun discharging.
Another option. Five minute video. Link to mounting clip he used
Watering
The weather-guessers promised us 0.4" of rain. Maybe we will get it.
I watered last night anyway.
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| The darker brown in the background is where I was watering. Lighter dirt is not wet |
Potatoes will survive in dry soil but they thrive when you pamper them by never letting the soil get crispy-dry. You cannot let the soil moisture levels fluctuate wildly if you want smooth, uniformly shaped, not-lumpy potatoes.
I saw my first Colorado Potato Beetles yesterday. NOT-yippie!
Work-ticket
Today's work-ticket was to move two brush piles that were getting in the way of cutting the grass. The total area was about 600 square-feet. That is not a lot of area in the overall scheme of things, but it disrupted the orderly management of the areas around them.
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| This is where the north brush-pile was. |
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| This is where I dragged the brush to |
One brush-pile as 40 yards from where I was dumping the brush. The other as about 90 yards.
I really wanted to burn the brush in-place. It irks me to have nutrients migrate away from where they can be used and end up in a swamp where they are of less direct benefit. Sometimes wisdom is knowing when to settle for "It works" rather than hold out for "Optimum".



















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