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US Fish & Wildlife’s Woodcock Singing Ground Survey

It was a cool day and supposed to get cold overnight—below freezing. Would it be warm enough 15 or 22 minutes after sunrise to start counting woodcock? The air temperature has to be a minimum of 40 degrees. It was 50 degrees at 6:30 pm, looked like it wasn’t going to drop quickly, and so off we went to Amity to count woodcock.

Woodcock are a small migratory, wading, woods-living bird. They’re difficult to see, often not making themselves known until you almost literally step on them. They let you know of their presence by bursting up into flight a few feet in front of you, causing swear words and heart palpitations.

I don’t remember how many years I’ve been volunteering in the US Department of Inland Fisheries & Wildlife’s Woodcock Singing Ground Survey but it must be nine or ten by now. I run two routes, Amity and Danforth, both in Aroostook County, with help from Steve. He’s my chauffer and extra set of ears.

Woodcock start peenting, a gravely, nasally sound they make to attract females, around sunset during their breeding season. At the end of the peenting cycle they burst nearly horizontally into the evening sky. They fly as much as 250 feet off the ground during their dance. When they reach their desired height they fly in an erratic pattern (could be mistaken for a bat) for several seconds before returning to the ground to restart the sequence.

Counting begins 22 minutes after sunset if the sky is three-quarters or less overcast (sky condition). If the sky is more than three-quarters overcast, counting starts 15 minutes after sunset.

Counters record the time of sunset, the time counting starts, mileage, wind, sky condition and precipitation. Notes are made on anything that might interfere with our ability to hear. We don’t count in high winds or rain. If possible, we count in perfect weather conditions so that we can get an accurate count of how many males are in the breeding ground.

The route is predetermined. Each year you start in the same place and stop in the same ten spots. Each is four-tenths of a mile apart. You count for exactly two minutes.

We started counting at 8:09 pm because the sky was overcast. Stops one and two were quiet. I watched a snowshoe hare hoping around at the first stop. It’s unusual to not hear at least one woodcock at this stop.

Stop three started at 8:16 pm with three peenting males. This stop is on a long stretch that allows sound to carry. An oncoming car blocked out some of the time I counted but I’m confident there were three birds peenting. A barking dog in the distance didn’t block sound.

American woodcock, photo by Robin Follette

American Woodcock

The number of birds peenting are counted, not the number of peents. Let’s say I’ve done this for ten years, always running two routes each year, each route consisting of 10 stops. In 200 stops I’ve seen one woodcock. We’re counting by sound. It’s easy to count the number of birds because they’re far enough apart to distinguish between them.

Stops four, five and six each had one bird. I wished the dog would stop barking so I could hear well. I admit, barking dogs are a pet peeve of mine. Stop six had a lot of loud frogs which might have kept me from hearing peents in the distance. This doesn’t change from year to year. There’s always a boggy area with a lot of frogs.

Stop seven turned up one woodcock and something, probably a deer, walking away through the brush away from us. A barred owl hooted the entire time. “Who cooks for you? Who cooks for you-all?”

Stop eight had two birds and was easy to count thanks to almost complete silence.

Stop nine had one, possibly two males peenting. I recorded one because I’m not sure of the second. Thank you, Mr. Barking Dog. I look at the ditch on the north side of the road for moose at this stop. We saw two young moose there several years ago, and I always hope there will be another. Highly unlikely that it will happen, but I hope anyway.

The last stop, at 8:41 pm, had one bird. That’s unusual.

There was less traffic than usual, and while loud, the frogs weren’t as loud this year as in years past. There was very little logging truck traffic. This was the best year for this route. It averages around 60% of the stops having birds to count, and this year it was 80%. I have no idea what this means for the woodcock population. Maybe the numbers are up, or maybe I happened to hit it on a good night. Or something else.

We usually see bear, moose or deer when counting. We heard what was probably a deer, and on the way home saw a yearling bear cub run from the side of the road into the woods. It’s the first bear sighting for me this year.

I’m counting in Danforth tonight. Of the two routes, this one is my favorite. I’ll be out toward the wind farm in an area with less traffic and more deer.

Perennial Garden Gets a Facelift

Originally published in Lancaster Farming

Just two weeks ago I was impatiently waiting for winter to leave and spring to arrive, and this morning I’m a little sunburned, have muscles that haven’t ached in months, and a mosquito bite on my foot.

The garden is still a little too wet to drive the tractor on to rototill, and I needed some soul-soothing gardening. The little six by twelve inch patch of daffodils haven’t bloomed well for a couple of years. I knew they were crowded but I just didn’t get to them. Breaking the rule of dividing spring bloomers in the fall, I found the spade in the garden shed and started digging. It’s no wonder they weren’t blooming, there were 60 bulbs in that tiny space. I separated them into two groups, roughly making each group equal in bulb sizes, and relocated them. I’ve always thought it would be pretty to have spring flowers under the hydrangea trees. The trees are bare and unattractive in the spring. The trees are on each side of the steps leading to the sun porch. I turned over the soil, added compost and replanted the bulbs. The plants draw the eye away from the trees and make the area more appealing.

I remember planting tulips years ago but can’t remember the last time they had flowers. I found them, crowded from years of neglect, and guessed there to be about a dozen bulbs. There were <gasp> 70, some of them the tiniest bulbs I’ve ever seen. I picked a spot in the perennial garden, just beside the sun porch and hydrangea trees, and started digging.

The half wine barrel was rolled out of the way and placed on top of the remnants of an ancient maple tree, a six inch high stump. I tossed rocks and weeds into the barrel. It won’t need as much soil when I fill it thanks to the rocks, and the weeds will decompose to add nutrients to the soil. They’re deep enough to not be able to survive. I’ll fill the barrel with pansies, a solar light and flowers yet to be determined.

I don’t think all of the tulips bulbs will survive as some were the size of a pea, but I planted them anyway. Spacing them appropriately meant moving into space the hostas use, and I’ve wanted to move them to a new spot, so I dug them up and tossed them onto the grass. They were so crowded they were a thick mat of roots and took a lot of effort to pry them from the soil. Two patches of hostas when separated turned into a dozen new plants, relocated to the northwest corner and north wall of the house.

The daylilies I ordered from Fedco needed to be planted. That was simple, until I took a good look at the crowded daylilies already in the garden. I replanted the seven or eight of the best plants and piled up the rest. A neighbor who walks daily stopped to talk and was happy to take some of the extras. She mentioned how much she loved her peony. I glanced at mine. Overgrown, of course. I offered her a piece. She went about her walk while I sliced through the plants with the spade. When she came back I had a daylilies and two peony plants bagged and ready to go, and had relocated two more sizable pieces.

It was 70 degrees, not a cloud in the sky, and no humidity, a perfect day to work outside. I retrieved a pot of Cappuccino rudbeckia I started from seeds sent by Renee’s Garden, and planted a dozen seedlings. The 1020 tray of Johnny Jump Ups was next. I planted 13 clumps of plants. I pulled weeds, dug up grass rhizomes, cleaned up Creeping Charlie and scraped away moss. The only plant that didn’t need my attention was the bleeding heart given to me by my daughters on Mother’s Day 17 years ago (Taylor was almost three, Kristin going on 12, seems like yesterday.). Eight hours after digging up the daffodils, I don’t know how many trips to the compost pile, countless holes, pulling, tugging, dragging the 150 foot hose (heavy with water) 150 feet from the high tunnel to the front of the house, planting, weeding, and sunburn, the perennial garden doesn’t look like much. It certainly doesn’t look like I worked there for eight hours.

There are empty spots left that I’ll fill with tender annuals after the first of June, when the frost danger is low. Or, that was my plan. When I looked out the bay window this morning to see how the new seedlings managed their first cold night outdoors, the Stella D’Oro daylilies caught my eye. I thought they looked like they could last another year but this morning, now that I’m not tired, I think they need to be tended to. I’ll relocate them to the line of hostas, a row in front of and between each plant. When I got up to refill my coffee cup just now I noticed the liatris and Dutch iris bulbs I bought a month ago. I’ll get those planted while I’m out there. There might not be room for those annuals.

Dear Fiction

Dear Fiction,

New relationships are intense, thrilling and consuming. We’ve spent a lot of time together while I pushed aside long-standing relationships in an effort to get to know you intimately. We’ve had fun, haven’t we? You gave me imaginary friends, places and occasions.

Last weekend, at the Black Fly Writing Retreat, I began to admit our relationship isn’t working out. I took the worst of my work with you to the retreat with high hopes of learning how to “fix” some of our problems. Cynthia made working with you so much fun at the March workshops. She gave me hope. “Good strong writing,” she said. In between our workshops with her, though, I miss my old friend Non-fiction. You’re just….you’re so much tedious work. Our relationship doesn’t come naturally. The occasional workshop flings aren’t enough. Last weekend, the amount of help I need to fix our issues didn’t come.

“What novels have you read lately,” they asked. The looks on their faces when I admitted to reading very little fiction in favor of nonfiction fueled the nagging in the back of my mind. We’re not working out. I’m not in love with you. And there’s something else. My heart is with Nonfiction. It’s not you…it’s me. I’m fiction deficient. Ok, it’s you, too. There are so many real, exciting stories and feature articles and educational pieces I want to write that you don’t excite me anymore.

I’m not saying it’s over for good. I might be back one day. For now, we have to break up. I’m putting Libby and the lodge back in the trunk.

It’s nonfiction that I love. I’m sorry it didn’t work out.

Sincerely,

Robin

Sage Advice

Sage advice: don’t plant more sage than you need. I’ve cut enough to last a year and it’s only May 10. The plants (sprinkle seeds, neglect thinning) over wintered in a high tunnel. I’ve been harvesting it since late March or early April.

sage herb

Remember to thin seedlings.

English shepherd herding ducks

You Can’t Herd Ducks in a Pond

“You can’t herd ducks in a pond,” I told her. Ava, our OCD English shepherd, insisted on herding the ducks as they swam in the pond. She raced around the edge, barking her fool head off, back and forth, getting tangled in the Joe Pye growing on one bank, crashing into birch and choke cherry trees on another bank. She’d go into the water up to her belly but that was it. The banks are steep to keep cattails from taking over so she didn’t have to take many steps in to reach her limit.

“Stop barking! Oh my gawd, Ava, STOP BARKING and get up here.” And she would. She’d stop barking and come to me because she does what I tell her to do…most of the time. She doesn’t always believe me. I said, many many many times,

“AVA! You CAN’T herd ducks in a pond.”

What do I know?

English shepherd herding ducks

When someone says you can’t herd ducks in a pond, show them that you can if you gather up the courage to teach yourself to swim.

Eastern Wild turkey and Remington 870 Super Mag Bone Collector

Hunting Wild Turkeys

The day started with a 3:30 am alarm after a nearly sleepless night. My knee hurt enough to keep me awake and make me grumpy. Then I pulled muscles in my back while getting ready to go. Wasn’t this just going to be a great time. We knew where the turkeys should be and I wasn’t missing out on a hunt.

We drove to a spot close to home, got our gear out, walked into a great spot and got ready. Steve set up our decoys, Ethel, Lucy and Ricky. This was going to be the morning I got my turkey…my first turkey. I settled against a hardwood tree and Steve moved further into the woods, behind a few feet and to the right. He was ten feet away.

Steve made the first call, a ye-GOBBLE-lp. A tom gobbled before the yelping was done. I smiled. This was my day.

Something scurried in the brush right behind me. Skunk? It’s always the first thing to come to mind when I’m on the ground and hear something in the brush. It moved away, and I stopped thinking about it until Steve said, “Rob, look at the rabbit.” A snowshoe hare ate while we hid in the brush.

After a few minutes of back and forth yelps and gobbles it became obvious that there was more than one bird. They weren’t in a rush to get close. Steve called for ten minutes, then suddenly got no response. After the third unanswered call I wondered if they were moving toward us faster or were done with us. Seven or eight minutes passed before I heard a gobble further away.

I’ve been disappointed so many times when hunting (I’ve shot only partridge so far), and completely blown the one chance I’d had to shoot a turkey two years ago, that I don’t get excited when I think I might be going to finally shoot. Still, it was a let down when the answer came from further away.  We didn’t have a lot of time this morning.

Movement in the woods caught my eye. I couldn’t see them, just movement through the brush. “Here they come!” I heard dead leaves rustle, watched, waited, watched, and was a little disappointed to see a whitetail doe step into a clearing. She looked at the decoys, first with her tail up, then down, her ears relaxed. “Deer,” I whispered so Steve could see her. He called again to find the turkeys, and it didn’t bother her. Then I moved, just a little, and she heard me. I stayed still while she stared. Busted. I was going to be busted by a deer. She took three steps toward me. Steve called again and this time, a loud round of gobbles came back. The deer continued to watch the decoys. There were several of them and they were much closer. After several minutes I moved to startle her, convincing her to leave before the turkeys were in sight. Flag (tail) up, she bolted toward the road, and a yearling I hadn’t been able to see followed her.

Steve called again and this time, a single tom gobbled back. It wasn’t from the birds we’d heard. This one was directly to my right and further away. I listened a couple of times and decided it was coming up the road behind us. Steve moved to put himself in position to shoot.

It didn’t occur to me that this wasn’t going to be my day after all. I was glad that Steve was going to get his first turkey of the year, and we’d be having turkey breast for supper.

This one meant business. He came into sight quickly, spotted Lucy, Ricky and Ethel, and strutted in circles, puffed up and displaying like he ruled the forest. Steve brought the shotgun up, ready to shoot as soon as the tom gave him an opportunity for a good shot. It walked down the narrow path, into the clearing, and I smiled. He was big.

Steve hesitated, lowered the gun a few inches, then picked it back up and looked down the barrel. It was interesting to watch this first hand rather than on television. I’ve never been with anyone when they’ve taken their turkey. The turkey walked directly into the clearing, neck stretched forward, head out for a perfect shot, and Steve lowered the gun.

He lowered the gun. He didn’t shoot.

The tom walked out of my sight, close to the decoys, and I didn’t see him again.

Turkeys came out of the trees to my left, which was then behind Steve, and into sight. I clicked off the safety and raised the shotgun, a Remington 870 Super Mag Bone Collector Steve gave me for my birthday last month. I made sure I didn’t have brush between myself and the birds. My strict rule: clean shot, or no shot at all. I counted twice; five jakes. They looked about the same size. No one bird seemed larger than the rest.

Steve hit the button on the call and gave another yelp.

Five jakes gobbled at once, 25 feet from me. That excited me. They hesitated as they looked at the big tom and three decoys 20 feet ahead of and to the right of me. Steve called again. One jake took the lead while the other four stayed still. I thought I’d wait until one bird stood directly in front of me so I could be sure I didn’t miss. The pattern is very tight with the turkey choke. I was turned to my left a bit. I could be patient, but opportunity knocked. One more call. The jake in the lead took a few more steps, put his head up straight and tall, and I pulled the trigger.

“I got him!”

“Where’d he go?”

“Right there!” He didn’t go anywhere but down. One clean, perfect shot to the head. He didn’t know what hit him.

Eastern Wild turkey and Remington 870 Super Mag Bone Collector

Eastern Wild turkey and Remington 870 Super Mag Bone Collector

I did it. I got my first turkey. It really was my day.

Eastern Wild turkey and Remington 870 Super Mag Bone Collector

I shot my first turkey today mostly thanks to Steve. Ya, I made a great shot that I’ll shamelessly brag about for a while but I got to make that shot because Steve chose to pass on the big tom to give me a chance to see what was coming through the woods. I wouldn’t have been upset if he’d taken that turkey. We still have almost a month to hunt. I’d have been happy for him. He lowered the gun, and he let me have mine.

Eastern Wild turkey and Remington 870 Super Mag Bone Collector

My first turkey!

My small turkey weighed 14 pounds, 14 ounces. I’m calling it 15 pounds. I have one permit left. It doesn’t matter if the next turkey is bigger. As long as the population is thinned so they cause less damage to crops, the high tunnels, young fruit trees and gardens, weight is just a number.

Stalking the Wild Turkey?

We were up and out early this morning. We had a specific spot in mind after seeing six jakes in one place and a tom in another last evening. Steve wanted to go for the jakes but after looking at Google Earth, we decided against it because it was too close to homes. We’d have been fine legally but we know what it’s like when idiots people hunt close to our house. Just because you can doesn’t mean you should. We find shotgun shells on the road in front of our house during bird season, but that’s another flip out story.

We set up Ethel, one of our decoys (Lucy and Ricky stayed in the truck because of the distance we had to walk.) and found a place to sit. Steve called. Nothing. Called. nothing. A pileated woodpecker landed in a maple to my right and a little behind us. It whinnied loudly for ten minutes. Sound carried well across the still air. If there were a cluck, yelp or gobble within a mile, we’d have been able to hear it. Nothing. We sat for an hour, then headed home so we could get ready for work.

I spotted a turkey through the trees. “Turkey,” I nearly yelled, followed by “tom!” I jumped out, put one shell in my 870 Remington Super Mag Bone Collector (12 gauge) and was watching the bird 30 seconds after spotting him. Steve used the wet box and on the third call, he stopped and gobbled. I had the shotgun up and safety off, but he didn’t turn to come to the call. At 150 feet away, through the brush, I didn’t have a good shot. Nothing less than a clean kill shot is ever acceptable to me. If I don’t think I can kill my prey with one shot, I’m not shooting.

Steve called to get him to gobble so I could find him again, but he didn’t answer again. I never imagined stalking a turkey. I’ve always been sitting on the ground, decoys out or at least a box call in hand, waiting for them to come to me. Not this morning. This bird kept walking in as much of a straight line as turkeys walk through brush and trees. I pulled my mask out of my pocket and slipped it on (ugliest piece of hunting clothing I own), loaded two more shells and walked up the road to a side road that cuts through the woods. Walk, stop, listen. Walk, stop and listen again. Repeat. I heard him snap twigs and walk through dead leaves and spotted him 200 feet away. I changed my direction but couldn’t get closer. I heard him a second time after he’d gone over a bank and made his way down the ridge but didn’t see him again.

It was fun. I’ve learned a couple of things while turkey hunting. First, I don’t say “never” now. I said I’d never belly crawl through a field to get to a turkey. Ticks, slugs, dew, cold, wet. No thanks. I belly crawled through slugs, dew, cold and wet the next morning, with my shotgun, when I could hear a tom making that odd humming noise they make in their chest cavity (what’s that called?) over a rise but couldn’t see them. This morning I learned you can stalk a wild turkey. I’m kind of proud of myself. If it hadn’t been quite so brushy I’d have come home with a turkey this morning.

Porcupine & Posies

When like gets prickly, stop to smell the yarrow. His glowing halo is from the setting sun.  Taken with the Canon PowerShot SX50 HS.

Porcupine yarrow

Don’t forget to stop to smell the flowers.

Full Pink Moon

April Full (almost) Moon

Full moon was last night but I was sound asleep when it rose above the tree tops around my house in the woods. Tonight, on the way home from smelting, the moon rose, bright orange and beautiful. I grabbed the Canon PowerShot SX50 HS, put all three dogs in the Jeep, and drove to the FAA beacon up the road. The moon rose through the trees while one dog trembled on the floor, another insisted on resting her head on my arm while I tried to shoot, and the third turned circles in the back. Adding to the self-induced insanity of three dogs in a small Jeep, the two in the front were still wet from herding ducks in the pond earlier this evening. It’s a good thing leather seats dry fast and clean well.

It was worth it. The sky is clear and the moon is beautiful.

Full Pink Moon

Full Pink Moon

Full pink moon, Canon PowerShot SX50 HS

whitetail doe and fawn

Doe, a deer, and a fawn…

Doe, a deer, and a fawn…

Did you start singing that? I did while typing. You can sing it all day now that I’ve suggested it. You’re welcome.

We went scouting for turkeys. That was almost a flop with only one hen spotted. We did find deer. Steve said, “Look at that deer!” It took me a moment to find her through the trees. She watched us watching her and stood perfectly still while I took pictures. I used the Canon PowerShot SX50 HS.

whitetail doe

She looked over her shoulder often but I couldn’t see anything.

whitetail doe

whitetail doe

She reminds me of a kangaroo

We moved on to avoid disturbing her too much and got back to the business at hand – finding turkeys. Jokes on us, right? Turkeys? Ha ha.  We reached the clearing, found nothing and headed back to the main road. Steve spotted the doe again and this time, she had company.

whitetail doe and fawn

The doe and her yearling fawn.

whitetail doe and fawn

Whitetail fawn

Look closely as its left ear.

They turned and walked away when they were tired of people watching. Apparently two people sitting in a big red truck are not very interesting.

whitetail doe and fawn

Whitetail doe walking away

 

A Treeless Tree Stand

Oh….um….

Treeless Tree Stand

No amount of camo is going to hide this stand.

On Being an Introvert

I’m still here. I haven’t packed up and moved on, I promise. Being an introvert thrown into the big world with lots of people quite often lately, the little bit of time I’m home alone is spent decompressing and getting some work done. I need to submit the piece I’ll have workshopped at Black Fly Writing Retreat by 5 pm this Friday. It isn’t quite ready so I’m working on it.

I’ll be teaching a campfire cooking class for Washington County Community College, probably in June.

I’ve been back and forth to Bangor a lot lately, Augusta more often than usual, and Boston. The Jeep gained 900 miles on Saturday, Sunday and Tuesday. It’s good to be home the rest of the week. I’m starting to get back in the groove after not having time, and honestly, lacking desire, to write much. A couple of things have been said lately that made me realize how much I open myself up to when I write about things few people experience, and do so as openly and honestly as I do.

This article, Misreading Introverts, describes me almost perfectly. Myth #3, Introverts are rude, is one of the often misunderstood aspects of my personality. Sugar coating something with fake emotions is ridiculous. Be real and just say it. It’s not a big deal. I will assume you mean the best when you say something, and I will most definitely take you at your word rather than what you meant to say; please do the same for me.

I’m very content being alone 70 hours a week while Steve is at work. It’s not that I don’t want him home, it’s that I’m just fine being alone. Taylor can be home on break and not leave her room much during the day. Her door is probably open, and I can see her from where I sit on the loveseat, but we don’t need to interact just for the sake of interacting. Presence is enough.

Myth #5, I don’t like to go out in public. As much as I love it out here in the woods, sometimes I need to go out in the public and interact with people. I don’t go shopping unless I need something, then I prefer to go alone or with someone who also doesn’t like shopping. Get in, get what I need, get out. No browsing. Shopping doesn’t entertain me. If there’s a good reason to go out, like a concert (we saw 15ish bands in 2012), a class, a day of hiking or lunch with friends, I’m all for going out. And I’m all for coming home to the woods.

A couple of people have commented in the last two weeks about me never leaving home because I’m antisocial. I work from home so I don’t leave five mornings a week. I don’t need or want for much of anything, ever. We’re fairly self sufficient and grocery shop about once a month. If we run out of something and can’t wait til the next shopping trip, Steve picks it up on his way home.

Myth #7 – ding ding ding! That’s me! I don’t follow the crowd and sometimes prefer playing devil’s advocate because I usually see things from the other side of common.

Myth #9  Introverts are not thrill seekers and adrenaline junkies. That’s definitely not me. I’m considering skydiving for my 50th birthday next year. I hunted black bear on the ground behind a piece of camo burlap for a blind, and I was alone. Nobody for miles. Yes I was nervous at first but it was exhilarating. Having a loaded rifle helped…  The too much talking and noise can get on my nerves after a while if it’s idle chit chat. I want conversations with depth, not small talk. Add perfume or cologne (why people smell up a public place is beyond me) to the talking and noise and I probably won’t be able to stay long. I love whitewater rafting and can’t wait to zipline this summer.

Being an introvert probably makes it easier to spend seven or eight hours sitting in a tree stand without moving than it is for an extrovert. I can get so far inside my own head, thinking, watching, making mental notes, observing the tiny flying bugs that show up one at a time until there are thousands of them in a flying swarm at sunset that I don’t notice how much time has passed. I’ve always been able to entertain myself. It’s probably why I find “I’m bored” so damned annoying…I don’t understand boredom.

I think I’m ready to start writing again, probably as openly and honestly as before. I guess I needed a break.

astia zucchini blossom

Wordless Wednesday: Astia Zucchini

astia zucchini blossom

Astia zucchini blossom

Note to Self

I thought I’d share the reminders I gave myself a few times last week.

Choose your battles.

Choose. My. Battles.

Wordless Wednesday – Singing from the tree top

American robin

The setting sun made the robin look more red than usual. He was so high up in the tree I couldn’t see him well, and so red that if he hadn’t been singing, I wouldn’t have been able to easily identify him.

The woods of Maine

Am I the one behind the times?

Backwater. Backwoods. Out of touch. Out of date. Woods queer. Stuck in the past. These are terms used recently to describe people like me. Obviously, they are not terms of endearment. They’re not positive images as they’re being used in these conversations.

Here’s a little about me, in case you’re a new reader. I hunt, fish, paddle, forage and have a one-acre garden. I raise chickens, ducks and turkeys for meat and eggs. I’m a dumbass with a smart phone I barely know how to use to make a call (it’s not set up well).  I don’t care to know more. I can make calls, text and send pictures. Apps? I have a great flashlight… All the other apps came pre-installed. My name is Robin, and I am an app failure…and I like it that way.

Fawn Runner Ducks

Fawn Runner Ducks

I’m on Twitter. I thought I’d enjoy sharing #TreestandTweets but it was annoying. I’m not sitting in a tree to tweet; save that for birds. I’m there to hunt and be aware of my surroundings. I have followers but I don’t follow the rule of following back everyone who follows me. I’ve never been to a Tweetup and have never felt the need to, even “for my career.”  I have a Facebook page for my writing but don’t post there a lot. No need to inundate anyone with reminders about me; they know where to find me.

Out of date. I’m anti-genetic engineering, anti-Monsanto, anti-food lot, anti-antibiotic in factory farms…I’m anti-factory farms. I know what’s in my food. Like a growing number of people who are paying attention, I provide at least some of my own food.  If you aren’t already providing some of your own food, you are behind the times.  I can feed myself with food I grow, raise and buy locally. So I’m out of touch, backwater, backwoods, stuck in the past, but I can feed myself.

I’m out of touch. My kids didn’t get cell phones until they were driving. We live 20 miles from the high school, further from their jobs. They had cell phones with limited amounts of minutes so that they could call us in an emergency. We <gasp> were pretty insistent that they communicate with people face to face. I’m not used to this commonly accepted bad habit of ignoring people in favor of someone else.

I’m out of touch even with a cell phone. If your phone rings in a restaurant and interrupts someone’s meal I won’t hesitate to tell you we are not in a phone booth. If someone else is more important than the people you are with at the moment, do the unimportant people a favor and leave. Get off the phone and communicate face to face.

Backwoods. You bet! Forty-five acres in the middle of thousands of acres, no neighbors in sight. I can feed myself from the land. We heat our home with wood, a renewable resource. I’m not depending on anyone to keep me warm. Or fed.

firewood

We burned four cords of firewood in the winter of 2012-13.

Woods queer: (adjective) a milder form of insanity that results from living in a rural isolated environment, typically the woods or forest.  Ok, I’ll claim that, but I don’t think I’m any more insane than the city or urban queer. We’re all a little insane (but some of us don’t know that yet) no matter where we live.

Backwater. Backwoods. Out of touch. Out of date. Woods queer. Stuck in the past. Happy. Satisfied. Fulfilled. Content. Well fed. Warm. Self sufficient.  It works for me.

The woods of Maine

I live here.

 

Red-winged Black Bird

red-winged black bird

Blowing in the wind

Red-winged blackbird

The spring-arriving birds didn’t bring spring with them. You can see the snowflakes against his black feathers.

Red-winged blackbird

Gusty winds and snow. Where’s spring?

 

 

Raccoons: Cruel Predators

While you read this, especially if you’ve never lived in the woods, please remember the poultry. When I got my first chicks in 1997 I did it knowing their safety was my responsibility. Raccoons will find a way into a place when you think no way exists.

5:15 am. Three dogs paced and whined at the bedroom door. I was awake but the bed warm and cozy, and the house was cold. I didn’t want to get up. They were insistent so I got up, let them out, made coffee, and soon heard the bark of death from Ava and Scooter. I pulled my boots and down vest on, grabbed the million candle power flashlight and went out. Eighteen degrees, too cold for April.

Sebastian sniffed at the base of stove-length cedar logs waiting to be split as kindling. His hair stood on end down his spine and he growled. He’ll be 13 in a couple of months and has bad hips; he’s in no shape to chase predators but he’ll find them and bark at them. When Seb’s hair is on end I know he’s serious. Something had been in the shed.

Ava and Scooter barked at the rabbitry door, sniffed at the ground around the door, desperately wanting to get inside. I turned on the flashlight, unlocked the door and swung it open. Sebastian joined them in the brief hunt that turned up nothing. We checked the barn next; nothing there either. Satisfied that nothing was nearby, I went back to the house to build the fire and have coffee, leaving the dogs outside.

The bark of death started again a few minutes later, this time from inside the shed. They were certain something was overhead. Ava climbed the small woodpile, disappeared beneath the huge and under the cluttered workbench used for making six foot Christmas wreaths years ago. If there was something in the mess beneath the bench it was never going to be found. Scooter barked at something I couldn’t see. Boots and vest on again (I was still in my jammies), flashlight in hand (5:40 am), I went to the shed door. The shed, by the way, is attached to the corner of the house, 1900′s style. It’s at the end of the back porch.

The dogs were convinced something was overhead but I couldn’t see anything. I brought them into the house so they’d stop barking and let Steve sleep. They wanted nothing to do with being in. After 10 minutes of whining and pacing, we went out. They saw something and chased it into the woods. I was grateful for the frigid night and the ability to walk on top of the crusty snow as we made our way through the woods. They ran well ahead of me and returned without being called. Whatever it was, they were satisfied it was gone. We went back to the warm house.

Steve woke up, stumbled through the house on his way to the bathroom, did a double take out a window. Piper, our 22 pound cat, hurried into the shed. Or so Steve thought. Piper was asleep on the loveseat in front of the now warm wood stove.

Key the bark of death in the shed again. Steve is 6′ 3″. He can see and reach more overhead in the shed than I. He got the .22, banged around on some boards stretched between rafters and yelled, “Rob! It’s a raccoon.” I brought the dogs in. Seb and Scooter are afraid of the loud noise guns make. Ava came in so Steve wouldn’t have to keep track of her.

I have no tolerance for raccoons. They’re the number one predator on my homestead. They rip wings and legs off live birds, eat the limb while the chicken, duck or turkey suffers, then go back for more. Yes, I know, it’s nature’s way. I’m honestly not one to interfere a lot with nature. Still, the way a raccoon will torture a bird compares to the way coyotes eat the hind quarters of live deer.

Standing in the door where Steve knew I was, door cracked a little to listen, I heard the first “POP” of the .22 followed by a thud. He’d hit it, and it fell to the floor. “Little bastard,” was followed by a second “POP,” banging and crashing as the raccoon went to the worst possible place, under Steve’s seven foot wide, eight foot long workbench. Steve came in, giving it time to die.

Ava slipped out the door behind Steve when he went to get the dead coon. I wanted her to see it, check it out closely like she did the bobcat, to know what she’d been chasing. She found blood and the scent in seconds and disappeared under the workbench. I called her to come back a split second before the low, guttural growl and hissing started. The raccoon was wounded but no where near dead. Dammit. As much as I dislike them, I don’t want raccoons or anything else to suffer.

Steve started to climb under the bench to get to Ava, but knocked things over, trapping her under the bench with the raccoon. It growled and hissed. We didn’t hear her bark or growl. Steve had a clear view of the raccoon but Ava was too close to it for a safe shot. He grabbed the ax to his right, climbed onto the bench, and brought it down hard toward the raccoon’s head several times, but it was just out of his reach. He scrambled down as I cleared a path for Ava and brought her out. She was traumatized by being trapped with the coon and the thrashing and banging of Steve hitting an empty bin several times while swinging the ax.

A shot to the head killed the coon.

What a disaster. We’ve never had an encounter with a predator go so wrong. We normally deliver an instant death.

Ava tremble and twitched, her eyes darted back and forth and she had the spacey, out of it look she gets when she’s stressed. Ava has epilepsy. Her eyes dart and she twitches when her brain is on overload. Stress aggravates her epilepsy. We snuggled on the couch to soothe her but it wasn’t enough. Her eyes continued to dart back and forth so I gave her an aspirin. She couldn’t lie still on the dog bed. We went for a walk because exercise helps her slow down.

We let Ava see that the raccoon was dead, hoping it would help her settle down. That didn’t work. We didn’t let Scooter and Seb see it because there was too much blood. No need to have them exposed to it unnecessarily.

english shepherd, raccoon

Checking it out from a safe distance.

This raccoon didn’t live an easy life. She lost part of her tail. She had numerous scars, probably from fighting. A wound on her face looks like it abscessed. The canine tooth shown in the photo is broken. It should look like the long teeth in this photo.

raccoon with wound on its face

It looks like this wound abscessed. Notice the broken canine tooth.

She didn’t appear to be pregnant and definitely wasn’t nursing so there aren’t starving kits to wonder about for the next week.

Seeing the raccoon didn’t help slow the impulses in Ava’s brain. She’s sleeping now thanks to a full dose of Valium that helps her brain settle down. Being scared didn’t step her from wanting to work. I took her out to check on the poultry and collect eggs before the Valium kicked in (exercise, keep her moving, most seizures happen when she’s still). She scooted out the door and tried to get into the shed to look for more raccoons. I’d already closed the door to keep her out. She’s a brave dog.

I poured a little bleach on the blood spot. I don’t know that it will kill any live rabies virus immediately but it keeps the dogs out of it. Rabies is highly unlikely, there hasn’t been a reported case closer than 20 miles away.

So far this year we’ve had problems with a bobcat, the raccoon, and something we didn’t catch or identify. We’ve lost seven birds to predators, an all time high for a year let alone 10 weeks. A fox hunts nearby but doesn’t come too close thanks to our dogs presence. We’d never kill the fox just for being in the area. I’ve seen an owl twice and a hawk once but they’re not causing problems thanks to the dogs chasing them away. So what’s next? Bears are out of hibernation and hungry. The trash is locked up and the bird feeders are empty. They have no reason to stay when they wander through.

Whitetail Deer

One of a half dozen whitetail deer I saw yesterday.

deer black ears

Robin’s Nest

This robin’s nest, made last year, is in good shape. If I get back to it later this spring I’ll look to see if another bird calls it home.

Robin's nest

Waiting for new occupants?

Canon PowerShot SX50 HS