This will be a gossipy, newsy kind of post.
Zeus gave us a scare. He started suffering from hot-spots that he kept biting at and wouldn't leave alone. He also had some skin eruptions near the hot-spots that were hard and woody.
We noticed Friday, not the best time to take him to the vet. They were closed Monday.
The thoughts running through my mind were "Cancer". When we take him to the vet, what if they recommend putting him down RIGHT NOW? The kids are off on Memorial Day holiday. One was in California. Another was near Higgins Lake.
In an attempt to buy time, we started hitting him with a near-max dose of (Benadryl is a common trade-name). I also bought a topical spray that contained Lidocaine and Hydrocortisone. I also dosed him with nitenpyram to eliminate fleas as a potential contributor to the problem.
And in two days our pup was sort-of back to normal. He still has the woody skin condition but the hot-spot disappeared and he isn't chewing on himself. But he is back to meeting me at the end of the hallway at 5:02 a.m. when I wake up. He is back to doggy smiling and tail-wagging and trying to jump up and kiss my face. "Bad dog. Down!"
I think we dodged a bullet. The worst case would be if the kids didn't have the opportunity to say "Good-bye" to Zeus and if I had to explain Zeus's inert form to a very curious Quicksilver.
Replant and thin no more
I replanted the Blue Lake pole beans. About half of them haven't come up yet. I planted a bit to the side, and only where a plant might still be thinking about coming up so I wasn't killing any beans that I had already planted.
I burned brush today
No explanation needed.
One of the eye-openers was burning some bamboo. That stuff sounds like gun-shots when it burns. I suspect it is the air inside of the joints heating up and causing a shock-wave when the joint ruptures. It even has a random staccato like a fire-fight.
Keeping a weather-eye out
Orchard grass pollen is my kryptonite. It usually hits June first, give or take a few days. It pollinates like crazy for a week and then much less so after that.
I have some chores that will keep me busy in the basement for that week.
Books
At my friend's mother's funeral, one of the siblings read a prepared statement. A line impressed me "All of us have vivid memories of sitting on our beds while Mom read Little House in the Big Woods, Lord of the Rings and other books to us. We learned to love reading listening to our mother read."
I wasn't able to find our house's copy of Little House in the Big Woods today but I did find a copy of Pippi Longstocking. I woke Quicksilver from her nap by starting to read from it.
When Mrs ERJ came home, she found the LHitBW book and I read about 20 pages from it to Quicksilver.
She was mesmerized by both.
Incidentally, she has her 4th birthday this week. And unlike me at 4 years of age, she knows EXACTLY what deer meat tastes like.
Stick with what works
Quicksilver and I play a game. We go for a walk. I say "Quicksilver COME HERE!". If she drops what she is doing and bee-lines to me; she gets on M&M. If she lollygags or drags her feet; no M&M.
The first two commands that are usually taught to dogs are "COME" and "STAY". There are reasons for that. It keeps them safe.
I am not proud to admit that I was once building a swing-set. I was making it from 12' long, treated 4"-by-4" timbers. Southern Belle, who may have been 9 at the time, was helping me by steadying an "A" frame when things went pear-shaped.
I shouted "GO!" and pointed. She bailed out. No argument. No questions. She dived and maybe even did a rolling somersault. She instantly "got off the X". There were no broken bones. No brain injuries. No bruises. No bad memories.
Later in life I was to learn her instant, unquestioning response was an aberration in children. Of my four kids only one of the others might have responded the same way.
There are times for discussions and debate. There are times to vote and negotiate. And there ares time when the only thing that matters is crisp, vigorous execution. My goal is to have Quicksilver's muscle-memory slaved to tone-of-command so that the urgency will be instantaneous. The path to obtaining that deep knowing is paved with peanut butter M&Ms. Your mileage may vary.
Grafting updates
The apple graft percentage keeps climbing as the "slow" scions decide to push buds.
When I teach people to graft, one of the hardest things to drill into their heads is that the MUST remove the shoots that keep pushing on the rootstock. Those shoots communicate with the main stem with growth regulators that suppress other buds from breaking dormancy.
As one veteran grafter put it, "You have to convince that plant that it is going to die if it doesn't let the scion push those buds". Hard, but true.
Pecan update
I was surprised to see catkins (pollen emitting organs) on a Kanza tree and a Liberty pecan tree that I grafted just a few years ago. It will be a hoot if they set some nuts. They might not fill to commercially acceptable standards, but they might still produce viable seed nuts for germination.
Last winter was a test winter. Local weather stations recorded lows in the range of -24F to -25F.
I had a mixed bag. Some trees that I did not expect to die, died. And vice versa.
Barrels
One of the five barrels I bought will not be usable. Somebody dumped coffee grounds into it and the sediment has proven difficult to remove.
Southern Belle said "My neighbor sells barrels. You should have told me you wanted some!"
Duh! Communication is not one of my strong suites. However, that means that I only have to drive about three miles to get the fifth barrel I need for my project.
Random flowers
I keep looking for clover and birdsfoot trefoil seedlings where I frost-seeded this spring. I am seriously wondering if the seed I used was sterile. I cannot find any evidence of the (literally) millions of seeds I scattered over multiple locations.
I do see lots of hop-clover* in places where I seeded. LOTS of hop-clover.
Prior to seeding I limed, added P and K and sprayed boron.
There are two possibilities. One is that there has always been a huge spring flush of hop-clover and I never saw it because I never looked for it.
The other possibility is that there were always hop-clover seeds germinating but they fizzled due to the inhospitable soil fertility.
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| Iris versicolor I planted this about five years ago and thought it had died out. I was happy to learn that I was wrong. I saw it while dragging wood to the burn pile. |
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| This is a peony. Quicksilver was fascinated by the ants that were attracted to the extrafloral nectar glands. I wonder if peonies would be useful for feeding parasitoid, nectar-feeding wasps. |
* Hop-clover are several very similar species of Eurasian legume species (Common Hop CLover, Low Hop Clover, Little Hop Clover) that are short, short lived and quite inconspicuous. Even the names are repeatedly redundant and exceptionally forgettable.


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