Pear-sauce
I netted 7.7 quarts of pear-sauce from 1 qt of apple cider and 22 pounds of Asian pears. The sauce was much thinner and runnier than apple-sauce. That shouldn't have surprised me. Asian pears have a texture that resembles watermelon.
1.5 ounces of freshly grated ginger was too much for my tastes but Quicksilver thought it was "yummy-treat", perhaps because she didn't have any expectations.
Trail-cams
I found the stash of trail-cams my deceased brother left me. They were in plain sight in a clear, plastic bag. I was looking for a box. Duh!
More pictures of Skinny Girl and her two fawns last night and several raccoons foraging beneath a chestnut tree. So far nothing with head-gear (antlers).
New deer hunters
One of my nephews is about to take up deer-hunting. His buddy runs a food-bank in Mulliken, Michigan and Hanna-Davis Meats will process deer that are donated for a suggested $50 donation.
My nephew has property and is geeked about collecting "meat" on his own land. Looking at overhead imagery, he has a cottonwood tree in a fence-line 70 yards downwind of where deer travel from point-to-point of cover. And the cottonwood tree is about 150 yards upwind of his house. Easy-peasy hunting, change into orange when he comes home from work, walk out to the tree and settle into a tree stand 8' above ground.
Deer hoists
My plan is to mount a manual winch in the roof-truss of the pole barn on the property I am managing. The winch is a Reese boat-trailer winch with a 1500lb rating. It uses a synthetic strap rather than a steel cable.
I don't know if God will smile upon us and we will harvest any deer off of the property, but God favors the prepared. It will be pretty slick to back the truck into the barn, do a little bit of rigging and be able to lift the critter up into the air. It will be even better if we can do the golf-ball-dead-weight skinning trick. Yanking the hide off the critter really helps them cool down quickly.
Deer exclusion experiment
I drove fence posts to create a 12'-by-24' deer exclusion area. The long axis runs north-south. Based on conversations I had with Lucas I sprayed half of the area with herbicide to knock-back what little vegetation was there but left the other half as a control. The half I sprayed was a 6'-by-24' long strip on the east side of the enclosure.
Species that I saw included Blackberries, Black Locust, Poison Ivy, Goldenrod, Violet, Smooth Brome and Orchard Grass.
The reason for the Herbicide/not-Herbicide is that the vegetation that has a head-start is biased toward deer-resistant and it unintentionally penalizes the less deer-resistant. This experiment mimics in a very small way what might happen to the forest floor if Chronic Wasting Disease wipes out 85% of Michigan's deer population.
As a tiny bit of background, I had a small colony of Dogtooth Violet and Bloodroot on my property but it extinguished. I am fond of both of those species and would like to have them come back but doubt that that can happen at existing deer densities.
One thing I don't plan on doing is to add any outside seeds. This is purely an experiment in seeing what the native seed-bank can accomplish. My expectation is that I will have lots of bird-borne seeds (from various berries) and some wind-blown seeds (which tend to be sun-loving pioneer species). There may also be a few stray seeds that walked in between the cloven-hooves of deer.
Chainsaws on a pole
Based on the overwhelming response in comments, I bowed to the inevitable and purchased a DeWalt Pole Saw.
The pole comes in three sections. It seems unwieldy with all three section but I am pretty sure I will be able to do a lot with just two sections.
Wedding Showers
Mrs ERJ came home with five pounds of desserts (brownies, cookies and caramel fruit-dip). She brought home sandwiches and kabobs and vegetables.
Man, I just can't eat like I used to. That stuff is going to kill me. Fortunately, Mrs ERJ agreed to make the desserts disappear.
If your pole saw tool addition is like ours, you will wish you had tried using one earlier. The fallen limbs - branches can be piled up for quickie brush piles, adding valuable hiding spaces for birds and rabbits habitat. But also mice, rats and possums - do not build too close to your domicile.
ReplyDeleteAgree with Anon - you'll wonder why you waited so long to get that pole saw. Being the cheapskate that I am, I bought a Kobalt at the local Lowes, and it's been a great tool to have. Battery run time is longer than I care to be pruning stuff above my head.
ReplyDeleteI want the pole saw !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteThe golf ball trick does work. And good ideas on the planning...
ReplyDeleteI found the Golf ball trick using the winch on the front of a buggy is just plain decadent. Plus the rear hitch mounted hoist saves me a lot of unnecessary solo lifting. But I age faster than I digress.
DeleteMF
kudos on investing in pole saw infrastructure.
ReplyDeleteI'm neck deep in Pear butter and Apple butter production, me.
Doggone frost that never came this spring is about killing me this autumn. WAAAAAAAAYYY too much fruit.
Just got home from a looong lunch with my buddy that lives over east of you in Tyrone Township whose wife's family is here. He was really into stories about what a problem you all are having with deer down there. You definitely need some wolves to thin them out and keep you up at night. ---ken
ReplyDeleteThe thing to be super-careful about with pole saws, especially long-reach pole saws, is getting the saw cut in a pinch point because you are standing on the ground, and must cut the overhead limb at an angle. Under-cutting first is a must - but it isn't always successful ! And a pole saw stuck into a tree 15 ft up, with no ladder around, is a real bummer !
ReplyDeleteAs with any chainsaw, let the saw do the work. Don't try to muscle it to cut faster. I am sure have more power than a battery.
ReplyDeleteWhile I have never run out of chain oil while using one, I have run low before the battery ran out.
Easy to start chainsaw. No pulling cords, choking, or flooding it out.
If you start using it on thinner stuff (twigs, vines, shrubs) they will be dragged into the chain drive gear and slow you down!
sam
Congrats on the pole saw - hope it meets your expectations. Do yourself a favor and use a hard-hat when trimming overhead branches - even a small-ish branch hitting one on the head can cause serious bleeding. Ask me how I know...
ReplyDeleteFor years my husband used a handsaw on a pole for trimming. Lotta work. A couple years ago I got him a battery pole saw, and he likes it a lot. Much less work. It doesn’t have the reach of his old saw, but it’s faster and easier to use.
ReplyDeleteSouthern NH