For those following the news on the murders that occurred near the farm, here are two items.
Cleveland.com Interview With Grandma
TV Special on Oxygen March 31
Tuesday, March 26, 2019
Sunday, March 24, 2019
Bobcat Escapades And Other Adventures
A bobcat did show up on camera again this week.
It was nice of him to show up during daylight.
Same photo - cropped a little bit for a better look.
But the real adventures were with this bobcat. I was doing some trail maintenance, pushing some brush piles around and I got it well and truly stuck. Spinning in the mud, tree against the back, wouldn't move. I shut it down to take a look and then I couldn't get it restarted. It was one of those days. I gave up and left it overnight.
The next morning, I figured out the glow plug timer that was keeping me from starting. Once it was running, I got the bucket up and found this stump under the frame. Luckily it was loose enough that I could get it out by hand. Once the stump was out of the way, I managed to walk it up the slippery hill. Whew! I had visions of calling the bobcat dealer and saying "do you rescue machines stuck in the woods?"
I saw a Facebook post from ODNR saying that there are Private Lands Consulting Biologists available. The one for my area was Emily Archibald. I eventually contacted her and she convinced me to mow 1/3 of the prairie plot each winter.
I hope to meet her at the farm one of these days to see what else she suggests. The mowing is sort of an alternative to burning. Burning takes a bunch of permits and isn't easy for your basic landowner to do. And I have experience with a little fire getting away from me.
As long as I was out mowing, I decided to do battle with the black locusts that are always invading.
They want to take over the fields and they have thorns that will puncture a tire.
Not a very good picture of the thorns. Anyway, I cleaned up some field edges since the weather was cooperating so nicely. I also got the bobcat around some of the atv trails and I managed to avoid getting it stuck again.
There is wind damage all over the farm. I cleaned a lot of that up too.
Sometimes just branches, sometimes whole trees.
Up by the roots.
Blocking trails.
While BBQ'ing, I had a crowd out in a fallow food plot. I'm not sure what they're eating but they're pretty desperate right now. Greenup can't be soon enough for them.
On another night, they almost came in the dining room. Notice the bird feeder - it was opened like that each morning. Were the deer nosing around in the feeders at night?
Videos of them frolicking Deer Frolic Deer Frolic 2
There are buds in the orchard - even on this cherry tree that is on its last legs.
Pear tree has been under attack too - woodpeckers I assume.
Poop of the week.
Another example of human artifacts on field edges - tires.
I flew the drone again this week.
I was up to the 400' limit for private drones.
This is a fairly long tour video. Drone tour
Straight down like a satellite view.
Another shorter video Drone 2
And another Drone 3
Still no turkeys on camera (other than this one).
I'm not sure where they went. Maybe as the clover greens up they'll find their way back.
I had a little bit of ear corn out last week. It was popular.
Getting a little testy over it.
Fisticuffs.
It attracted all kinds.
One buck left still wearing his antlers.
Most have dropped like these guys.
The usual predator suspects. Coyote.
Fox.
And then there are the domestics.
Sunday, March 17, 2019
A Little Foodplot Maintenance
It's early for spraying plots but I thought I would try a targeted approach on some of the grass clumps in the clover. I'm using clethodim.
I also did some frost seeding to keep the clover plots fresh. I used this bag of seed since the mice had nibbled a hole in it.
I just sort of broadcast the seed over the existing plots and hope that freeze/thaw makes good seed to soil contact.
I also encountered a few obstructions on trails. Recent high winds have taken a toll.
I only found this one old, small, nibbled antler. Probably last year's.
I put out just a little ear corn to get them thru this last period before green up. The clover is barely sprouted but there were 5 deer out in the field last night nibbling it.
I did the camera tour on foot this week. It was about 11,000 steps.
This was a curious discovery. A bone twisted in barbed wire. I have no idea how long it's been there but I don't think that there could have been a deer stuck in that wire without being noticed. So would someone pick up a bone and twist it in the wire for some reason?
A pretty good size burrow made by something - ground hog?
There was a little ear corn between me and the Ranger. It had been there overnight and appears to have gone untouched.
I resorted to driving around with the backpack sprayer to get some areas with the grass killer.
This week's wildlife news:
NYT Opinion - Northern Rockies - Carole King
BBC Kenya Elephant Queen
BBC - Chickens Kill Fox
Grizzlies Awaken
Pop Sci - Eat More Roadkill
Deer Cull in Maryland
Nat Geo - Cougar Leftovers
QDMA - EHD vs CWD
Wolf Delisting
Somehow, I missed setting the clock on this camera.
But the deer are using the atv trail too.
Coyote
Little buck - hasn't dropped yet.
One side drop.
Three does wander out.
Followed by two more.
This camera wasn't producing much - I'm trying another nearby spot. It may just be on its last legs.
Busy night in the pond field.
Dogs.
Fox
Fox
Fox
Coyote
Two coyotes
Fox
Bobcat
What all those predators are looking for - bunnies. I get as many bunny photos as I do squirrels.
Some sort of bird triggered this photo - upper left corner. I'm not sure what it was.
Camera tour on foot.
The harrier was back this week. Saw him on Sunday.
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