Sunday, 28 September 2014

Out and About and Under

I did not spend as much time in the field as I would have liked, but we did drive up to Florenceville-Bristol to see the fall colours. The trees grew greener as we drove west. In the Juniper area the colours are nearly at their peak, but down in the river valley, things are still moist and dark.

I spent a good deal more time this weekend under the sun porch, trying to turn this  . . .


into something more like this . . . 


If you don't see much difference, I can't really blame you. All I can say is that it takes a lot of digging before you can do the carpentry, and a lot of carpentry before you can do the insulation. Winter is coming on much too quickly this year, though I must say the last three days have been absolutely balmy--mid-20s and sunny. 

Sunday, 21 September 2014

The Moral Woodlot: Pride


If trees were people, they would be sinners. Today: Pride and its fall.

I will raise both arms to heaven
And challenge the skies
Daring all wind, all weather.



"Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall." Proverbs 16:18

Tuesday, 9 September 2014

Arboreal Mortcat

The dogs were uneasy during our evening walk. Even Valla the Destroyer seemed spooked. She actually raised her immense bulk and clawed at the trunk of a tree. At first, with the sun low in the sky, I could not make out what crouched in the branches of a slender maple. A dark shape moved hectically amid the foliage and then froze into stillness.

Its cry was haunting; I can only describe it as a memory of anguish.






I moved closer, cautiously. It turned its head slightly, tracking me as I advanced. Its hollow stare was black and terrifying. There was no doubt in my mind. Though sightings have been rare, this could only be the Eastern Arboreal Mortcat.

Monday, 8 September 2014

Autumnal flowers

The wildflowers by the Crick look rather lovely this year . . .

but there's always that faint yearning when I see fading flowers in the fields--yearning and perhaps fear: winter is coming. The angle of the autumn sun is a warning.


Sunday, 7 September 2014

Lawnmover

I finally finished the lawnmower. This is the Co-op one that has lain in pieces for 15 years, and has been on the Lucia pallet-table all summer. Now I have a 6-hp monster, massively heavy, that I don't really need--but it's finished!!





With overhead valves and manual throttle, it's an old-school grass killer. It might just be the dogwood demolition tool I've been looking for.
UPDATE: As of June, 2016, this is our main push mower. I mounted a fixed discharge chute after cutting a hole in the side of the deck (it was originally rear-eject with a plastic chute that always clogged). The original blade adapter wasn't up to the job, but the heavy duty replacement turned the machine into a very reliable and powerful mower.

Saturday, 6 September 2014

Culvert

6 September
Today, I finished the culvert by the tractor shed. Boris came tantalizingly close to completing it this summer, so I gave it the final push, digging down another six inches and levelling off the ground around. Now I can buzz to and fro with brush and fill.

Saturday, 5 July 2014

Arthur

Around 10:00 on Saturday (5 July), Security insisted the university close. As I left the SUB, I noticed a tree in the Quad uprooted and blown down. Once home, I actually started to download the new version of Kaspersky, a process that was interrupted at 11:08 when the power failed. Shortly after, I headed back into town with jerrycans to pick up gasoline. I took highway 8, but near Killarney Road Hill, I was stopped by water bursting out of the hillside and flooding the road. I crossed at Durham Bridge and tried again, fording some ominously flooded stretches until I was again forced to a stop: a great tangle of trees and power poles had fallen, and the lines were broken. I made my way back to Stanley, took the Royal Road in, gassed up at Costco (about a 15-minute wait), and started home once more. This time I made it most of the way down the Limekiln before running into a major barricade of fallen trees. Many had covered one lane of the road, but this was more extensive. One truck simply drove into the ditch the get around the trees, but it had to return shortly after, burning his way back up onto the road to report that there was another  blockade ahead, and another. I headed back south, hoping that highway 8 might be clear, but I came upon a road crew with a chainsaw, and so I followed them back, helping to drag boughs off the road. They got me close enough to take a run at it--over branches and and through someone's yard. At last I was home, and I brought out the generator. It ran surprisingly well, considering how long it had sat idle in the workshop. This was its first ever use--it didn't even have oil in it! On Saturday and Sunday, I just used extension cords to keep the fridges and the freezer going. On Monday, we made our way into town, and I tried to get a 220V twist-lock plug at Harris & Roome. They very kindly phoned down to Liteco on Carleton, and we hurried down to buy what turned out to be the very last such plug in Fredericton. I used Lucy's 12/2 welding line in reverse to run the well pump, and I ran a new line to run the hotwater heater. We continued to use extension cords for the two fridges and the freezer. The only problem was with the Noma cord reel's breaker, which popped several times when we plugged in battery chargers. The generator itself handled the load without complaint.

In the end, we had only three trees leaning badly, at least one of which will have to come down--the balsam fir. The maple on the west side of the driveway may eventually come down as well. I think the elm by the workshop may have to go also; it split at the main fork. 

Photos to follow.