Turns out we do have one tree on one roof after Hurricane Helene.
Fortunately, it did not break through the corn crib roof.
River and Blondie under the roots
The dogs think the tree roots are a great cool play place.
-jsq
Turns out we do have one tree on one roof after Hurricane Helene.
Fortunately, it did not break through the corn crib roof.
River and Blondie under the roots
The dogs think the tree roots are a great cool play place.
-jsq
Small saw path, or big saw path?
Small saw, she said.
16-inch Ego electric chainsaw on water oak deadfall
In her defense, we did saw a bunch of smaller stuff before we came to this deadfall. And that EGO 16-inch electric chainsaw will saw bigger logs than that. But I prefer the bigger saw for that sort of thing.
Meanwhile, on another log, the pale dogs were doing their circus act. Continue reading
This oak tree was still on the phone line, blocking Quarterman Road, almost a week after Hurricane Debby. So a bunch of neighbors removed it.
Neighborly chainsaw cleanup of oak on phone line 2024-08-10, SW Quarterman Road, by Brooks, Ashley, Larsen, Barzallo, and Quarterman families
Here are some video snippets:
https://youtu.be/n41Tm07huCQ
Thanks to William Brooks, elder and younger, Dennis Ashley, Tom Larsen, Alexandria Larsen, Racheal Brooks, and Max Barzallo.
Thanks to Wild Green Future for the grant that bought the WWALS 24-inch Husqvarna 460 chainsaw that I used to saw the main trunk. Turns out the oak heart was mostly rotten, which may have something to do with why it blew over.
-jsq John S. Quarterman Continue reading
Gretchen’s latest sale acquisition: a red flying saucer.
Here’s a bit of video:
https://youtu.be/Ez0yqAm6cfo
Continue reading
We went from drought to soggy in a week.
The crawfish like it.
Dogs like mud.
-jsq
Update 2024-06-16 The snake experts say it’s a black racer (Coluber constrictor). I’ve come around to that identification, because it doesn’t have the narrow neck and wide head of a rat snake, and its body is round in cross-section, not loaf-shaped. Also, it struck like a cornered black racer. See this reference. I was just surprised it didn’t run away fast like a typical black racer. Maybe four dogs made it think cornered. Anyway, black racers also eat rodents, so happy munching, snake.
All four dogs didn’t like this rat snake at the workshop door, although only Blondie and Honeybun feature in these pictures.
It appears to be an eastern rat snake (Pantherophis alleghaniensis), with the white under its chin and side of head and otherwise black body.
It did try to strike at the dogs when they got close, but once I called them off it slithered back under the bench, and onwards.
Here’s a video:
https://youtu.be/e5AvoYPQmTE Continue reading
A small turtle crossing the path to the garden. It’s maybe 4 inches long.
That’s Sky’s dog leg.
None of the dogs noticed until I’d been looking at the turtle for quite some time. Blondie, Honeybun, Sky, and River sniffed and moved along.
I think it’s a box turtle, but I didn’t pick it up to see, since it wasn’t in the way and it was in no danger.
-jsq
A turkey egg is somewhat larger than a chicken egg.
One of our dogs brought it to us. We couldn’t find the nest to put it back.
No, it wasn’t that dirty when we first saw it. We were digging potatoes, so that’s garden dirt.
-jsq
What kind of turtle is this? It’s about 5 inches long, so presumably quite young.
The triple ridges with radiating patterns look to me like an Alligator snapping turtle, Macroclemys temminckii. I don’t see anything else among the 29 turtles of Georgia that is even close.
I don’t know what it was doing out in the open, 500 feet from the nearest water, which is our cypress swamp.
Anyway, it provided yet another opportunity to remind our dogs: no turtles!
-jsq