That's very cool!
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That is so amazing!!Our bees have been posted! We braved the rain yesterday to lug yet another stump through the yard & into position behind the chook house. They will arrive today or tomorrow & I have learnt my first amazing & bizarre thing about our new acquisitions: bees fly out of the hive backwards when first released. This gives them the visual orientation they will need in order to return to the hive. Animals just gobsmack me!
Okay, so now all the chickies get to roam their new yard with some sense of security... at least on my part.. I finished netting the entire top... well, today we had a couple of incidents... a hawk flew over pretty low but the hawk was being chased by a mockingbird so he was distracted and didn’t notice the gals.. the gals noticed the hawk.. and went running! Then I watched the hawk making circles over the property behind us and saw him head our way... well, he saw something over there and dove for it... whew! That was close! Then a giant Great Blue Heron flies through the trees and you talk about watch those gals run!!
... it was pretty low and just looked enormous! But the funniest of all is when they hear a car horn!!
... and if a car alarm goes off you’d think it was Armageddon! I have no idea why they are scared to death of a car horn!? They ALL freeze!! Even the new ones.. so I wonder what that’s about
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I want a baby alligator... we had one growing up.. we had it for about two years so it was a tiny thing.. that’s what I want.. a tiny one.. one of my boys snagged one while fishing at our camp.. I’ll find the pic... too big for me to keep!Yay bees!!!!
Your pictures certainly do paint the picture of a tropical paradise, so your son isn’t that far off! But mud flatsdo yours smell awfully? They do here in the PNW.
This just prompted a half hour long discussion between Andrew and I on the differences between the tide extremes, regularities, and beach charactistics between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans here in Canada. And lots of questions about what they would be like in the Southern Hemisphere. Almost enough enticement for him to get over the fear of the wildlife down there to investigate? I wish!
He’s ok with bears, moose, and cougars, but mention any venomous reptiles and he gets all buggy for some reason. (Probably because I’m so fascinated by them and love them so much) if I could get a few baby alligators through customs here I could build them a little greenhouse for the winter, and that would discourage the hikers![]()
Thankfully the mud doesn't usually smell @ all & even when it does it's not too bad, just a bit briny. Our bay is called Ooncooncoon [place of shallow waters] & it's one of the few places sea grass grows instead of seaweed & the dugongs come in to graze. YD & I, when she was super little, were walking way out on the edge of the mangroves one day & saw a shark separate a baby dugong from it's mother ~ not a good outcome for bubs.But mud flatsdo yours smell awfully? They do here in the PNW.
My son is the one to discuss that with. lol He has fished both coasts. He is up in the gulf just now [of Carpentaria ~ top end of OZ] & I know the tides drop & rise really, really fast & are incredibly dangerous. The indigenous people island hop in tinnies & every so often someone gets caught in the rip & goes missing.And lots of questions about what they would be like in the Southern Hemisphere
if I could get a few baby alligators through customs here I could build them a little greenhouse for the winter, and that would discourage the hikers
Hey, Bob.Evening Jeannie![]()