Archive for February, 2008

Mule Deer: a guy can change his mind

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A young male pauses at the edge of the field before going down the deer path.  He doesn’t see that another male has started down the same path going the other way.

Once they see each other, it’s too late to back down.

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They can’t resist a good antler shove, seeing as they’re guys and all.  The loser goes around 

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stepping high through the deep snow and continues on his way.  And the larger male reconsiders and follows the smaller guy out.

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I whistle: Hey you guys, give me a better shot than your hind ends 

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And the deer says, Just ignore her; she’s been taking pictures for months.  Sorry for making you jump into the snow and all… did you notice how big my antlers are getting?  Wish I could find some shrubbery.   

Things that look alike but aren’t

 The dog and the parrot looked different but were alike.

Afrian grey's head

 

Here are two things that look alike but are different.

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This is the Butcher’s Guild in Antwerp, Belgium, the Vleeshuis completed in 1504, and here is a closer shot of the brickwork called bacon because of its alternating layers of sandstone and brick.

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Here are the cliffs across the valley

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and from farther away.

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There is something about this southwestern snow and sandstone confection that those Belgian butchers would have just loved. 

Streamside

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We’ve had steady warm wind for a few days, and the snow is disappearing.  Yesterday, the stream opened up.   Those tracks are from a dog or coyote that’s walking on top of the snow; the deer still can’t get through here.

 A week ago, it looked like this:

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and I was floundering around to my waist in snow; this week the snow is no more than knee high and it feels as though Spring might be dreaming of waking up.

More on Donny’s sheep

Here are a few more pictures of Donny’s flock of sheep, and another of his folk-art installments.  This ewe is above the gate’s WHO,

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which resolves to WHO ENTER HERE

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And what you can’t see is that the left side of this gate, under snow at the moment, says ABANDON HOPE, YOU

so the gate to his front yard reads “Abandon Hope, You Who Enter Here.”  Which he’ll clarify is from Dante’s Inferno, written over the gates of hell. 

On the other side of the gate–the side that you see as you’re leaving–it says “Come Back Soon”, the existential Yin and Yang of farm life. 

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In the winter, the sheep spend time in front of the house: there’s a sheep shed to the left above the house and the barn is down below.  I have no idea how he managed them between dogs.  This Rascal isn’t even a year old, but she has star quality.  These sheep are moving along two by two exactly as she asked them to. 

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Ahem.

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Donny has an old-style flock: nearly all of his sheep have their tails (see the big sheep tail on the left?), and the rams run with the ewes so the lambs come over a longer period of time. 

And here’s a nursing ewe checking out the scene from the barn. donnyewe1.jpg

My friend Donny

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 My friend Donny was a neighbor in Vermont, a bachelor farmer born in the house his great granddaddy built, still farming the same land.  At 79, he uses the check for spring lambs to pay taxes like he always has, and raises heifers for a living; he mucks out the barn by hand.  He and I have always understood each other.  I’ve brought him cakes and fruit breads for sixteen years, and if I were 30 years older and born on a farm in Waitsfield, that man would never have been a bachelor.

Donny has had a hard winter.  He started using a cane, and went blind in one eye when a heifer kicked him in the head.  He’s always full of stories, and we talked for an hour and a half in the road. 

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And then he had to go throw bales to the heifers and muck manure. 

Donny has an eye for folk art, and has cultivated a curmudgeonly exterior for a long time.  Here’s an old story of his: sometime back in the 1980s, the Postmistress said that everyone had to have their name painted on the mailbox, including Donny.  He said, I’ve lived here all my life, and so did my daddy and my granddaddy too.  If ye don’t know where I live by now, to Hell with ye.  And he painted a name on his mailbox: Attila the Hun, now nearly faded away.

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Here’s another Donny story:  in the 1930s, a friend of his found a bear cub and raised it as a pet.  It was very attached to these boys, but when the bear was one year old it was too big to have around, so his father said that they couldn’t keep it anymore.  They put the bear in the back of the pick-up truck and drove it to the next town, and the bear was back the same day.  So they put the bear in the back of the truck and drove it to the next county, and the bear was back the next day.  So they drove the bear clear across the state to New Hampshire, and the bear came back the next week.  So the father shot the bear when it was up in a tree, and they had a Hell of a time getting it down.   

He’s had a good lambing season with two cossets, a new noun for me.  Those are the bottlefed lambs that live in the kitchen (one was a rejected twin, and he found the other wandering motherless in the barn)  (cosset-verb (used with object) 1. to treat as a pet; pamper; coddle. - noun 2. a lamb brought up without its dam; pet lamb. 3. any pet.  [Possibly from Anglo-Norman coscet, pet lamb, from Middle English cotsete, cottage-dweller, from Old English cotsǣta : cot, cottage + sǣta, -sǣte, inhabitant; see sed- in Indo-European roots.] )

His cossets are out of the kitchen now, and you can pick them out because of their dirty faces and the red stripe painted on their back.

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There was good news this visit, too.  Donny’s new dog is shaping up well, and seems to be road trained.  His last good dog died when I lived there a decade ago, and he’s been alone ever since–his pups kept getting run over by cars.  This dog seemed to understand the rules, and has paths in the snow on either side of the road.  Named Rascal. 

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And there’s a Plattsburgh boy in his early 20s living in a yurt, helping out in exchange for a place to set up his tent.   Here’s another Donny story:

Donny had <Misery Manor> carved into a stone on the stone wall in front of his house some thirty or forty years ago.  

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How much do you think it cost to get that carved, he asked.  I guessed $100.   $600, he said.  He saw me coming from a long way off.  He had just done a big job in Boston, 20 feet in the air.  

These are a few of Donny’s lambs this year

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and here’s goodbye, with him taking his cake up to the house before he gets back to work. 

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May you live long.

Happy Valentine’s Day

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Things that are alike (but don’t look it)/ Berner Blues

I’m in Vermont for five days, and Bob and Sam have no problem but the dog falls apart.  When I’m gone she spends her days moaning under my bed, mourning my absence until I return.   Bob suspects that someday she’ll expire from overexcitement at the airport.  

Bernese mountain dogs are farm dogs that understand property management the way bird dogs understand pointing.  The females bond with one person that they use as their reference point, and they do whatever they’re told; Jessie hasn’t needed a leash or collar for years.  She keeps deer, bear and turkeys out of the gardens, she makes it safe for me to hike alone, and she is ardent in her devotion.

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“When a dog isn’t on task,” announced Sam, “it’s only job is to conserve energy.”   If he’s right that explains Jessie’s behavior: without the object of her affection she has no task, so the only thing left for her to do is to sleep. 

Afrian grey's head

I have a friend with an African Grey Parrot.  He’s a nice parrot with lots of tricks, and devoted to his owner.  But when my friend travels, the parrot plucks the feathers from his chest.  By the end of a long trip the parrot looks so sad and abused that he’d make a good PETA exhibit.  That small grey bird  and my big dog have more in common than you’d think.

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Ditch water

In the arid states west of the Mississippi, water is owned like a house or a car.  It’s real property that is bought and sold separately from the land it flows over.  If you have a stream or a ditch running through your property, you can’t use the water unless you own water rights. 

 Each water right has three parameters: the location that the water is taken from the river, the amount of water, and the date that the right was first granted.  The date matters, because it’s a first in time/first in right system.  In dry years, the people with the oldest rights get water, and the people with newer rights don’t.  Western cities filed for water rights decades after the ranchers and ditch companies did–their population growth is more recent– so city water rights are more recent too. 

From the earliest days of statehood, ditch companies filed for huge water rights and dug channels to deliver water to farmers far from the river.  In La Plata County, 96% of the water is owned by ditch companies and ranchers.  In some of the dry western states, as much as 90% of all the water in the state is owned by early agricultural claims–no wonder the cities run dry!  This is our ditch.  Isn’t it lovely? 

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Our ditch has rights that date from 1880 (according to the neighbors,  it was dug by Navaho Indians the winter of 1879).  The ditch company’s water rights are earlier and larger than Durango’s, so in a dry year our ditch shares provide us with irrigation water before the city has drinking water.   Most ditches are empty during the winter, but this ditch is always full.  And some of that water flowing in it is always mine.  Love that ditch.

The water level is wholly controlled by humans, and ditch management has been wonky this winter.  In the picture above, water is almost up to the footbridge.   Two days later, the water is a foot lower and the snow is two feet higher.  It looks like some kind of hydrological balance, but it’s not.   

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Everybody says “I love you”

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Today Maharishi Mahesh Yogi was cremated by the confluence of the Ganges and Yamuna rivers in the north Indian city of Allahabad.  There lies a man who loved flowers even more than I do.  

My husband studied with Maharishi back in the day, and received calls from around the world with his passing.  In some ways Maharishi was part of the best intentions of the ’60s, spreading the gospel that meditation could bring about world peace.  That love is all there is. 

A few years ago a friend brought up something I’ve been mulling ever since: whenever kids are dropped off for school or sports, they say “I love you”.  When there are three or four kids and a few moms, there is a whole chorus of “I love you”s.  We didn’t say “I love you” as a constant refrain to our parents, but our kids do.   With the passing of Maharishi, it came to mind that he and the Beatles weren’t just part of a  cultural revolution; they embodied a shift in consciousness, and perhaps that’s the root of the change in family dialogue.  World peace has been elusive, but these days everybody says “I love you”, and that’s a start. 

Beside the stream

A week after the deep snow came, deer still haven’t broken a trail down to our stretch of stream.  I put on full snow gear to get to the banks of the stream for this water shot; in some places the snow was waist-high.

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Five weeks ago this stretch was being used as a bridge

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but not any more.