dave1949
Super Star Member
Why are there so many houses for sale in that small area?
They are running low on Yankees? :laughing:
Ya, I'd guess foreclosures have something to do with it.
Why are there so many houses for sale in that small area?
the Deer usually crawl into the cedar Swamp where they are protected from the Wind.
Every year but last winter there has been a deer snow trail coming from upland and headed toward some sheltered low areas at the back of our lot. There's no cedar swamp back there but there are some fairly tight gullies in good cover that the wind probably mostly passes over.
I don't know why the snow trail was missing last winter. They say deer movements are pretty habitual, moving through the same areas seasonally. Last fall the deer discovered the sedum plant in the garden that's been there 4-5 years now. They ate that down to a nubbin. It's a non-woody stem that dies completely back every year anyways but I'm wondering if they will be messing with it this summer.
This variety of sedum:
https://encrypted-tbn2.gstatic.com/...V2ZifzzPJFZZho7NazN2KxFLop2naMsStAvStE_1HwUcJ
Sun City AZ Real Estate - 516 Homes For Sale - Zillow
:laughing:
I don't know if I'm quite ready for Sun City yet, but maybe the day will come. Close up the house for a couple months, head southwest. The HOA fees are cheaper than RV insurance.
There will more food available come spring they break out of the deer yards go there separate ways,probably not touch your Garden.They came and ate my Brussel sprouts and celery,glad they had something to eat.
Drew,wow, was tied up all day and just went through four whole pages. I'd better not go for more than a day.
Geez it's cold here, bone chilling cold. I believe it just tucked under 50, to a pipe threatening 49....
But going down like everyone else.
today was outside day and I sure got some exercise, in the low fifties. Cleared falldown wood out of the front woods near the driveway, carefully weaving in and out of trees and finding a path in and out.
And being very, very careful when backing up. I doubt that cab glass is very forgiving. I haven't learned the woods yet, so I went very slowly.
My teenage helper was here today so we worked together for about three hours, including firing up the Echo 600 with a 24 bar and getting the two largest cuts in a twenty five foot horizontal trunk of still living red oak. Once cut, I pushed the stump back into its hole to see if it will resprout as it had already done. I might have torn out a few too many roots today but time will tell. Farmer's field on the other side so no big rush. The big challenge is the tree went down on a barb wire fence that was nowhere in existence. Nor did I find it, luckily. I decided to quit while I was ahead; that's a heavy saw and the tip just went through the other side on the second cut; on the first the weight of the log brought the trunk down, straight down. Lucky. Didn't bind. Second cut not so lucky; even double cutting I got the saw stuck, so out came the fel and the deed was done. I took the two large double length pieces I cut and dumped them behind the barn, near the woodsplitter. I'll cut them up another day and split them with help.
Even going vertical with a log splitter is challenging with huge rounds. Lot of horsing heavy weight around; not exactly what I should be doing. Despite loving it. I can't wait to get that log splitter going.
When I called my elderly MIL tonight to check on her, very cold in PA where she is too, and she said the best thing to do with a big stump was put a table cloth on it and have a picnic.
What a fine idea. .
stay warm everyone. and safe.
You probably aren't far off on that ... version 1.0 of the logsplitter was started back around 10 years ago. I didn't really research what was being used all that closely, in terms of H-Beam ... but following U.B.'s advice, I went large ...RS, nice to see the main supports of the Eiffel Tower getting worked on.
Sun City is for snowbirds. Friends of mine used to live there for the winter, visited them there once. Most of the yards are manicured rocks. A few have grass, but it needs constant water.
Schools closed tomorrow because of dangerous Wind chills -40+sounds like a lot of the state of Wisconsin.