The evil twin…

Lately Georgie has been at odds with the world.  He bites the dogs, challenges Bob and sometimes me, and beats up Polly in the nighttime so badly that I’ve had to separate the boys from the girls for sleeping!

Yesterday, while I was busy writing and posting about our weather, Georgie was making mischief.  It was nearly a fatal incident for Frellnick.

I was looking for the promised snow, and just happened to look out the dinning room window to see this!

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Poor Frellnick!

Getting stuck like this can seriously injure a bird.  Getting stuck and lying in wet, slimy mud when the temperatures are dropping to freezing can kill you.

Getting on my muck boots and overcoat, I grabbed the utility shears and went out to rescue him.  Frellnick was cold and trembling by the time I got to him.  He had the netting twisted about both legs, one wing and his neck!  His chest feathers were completely soaked down to the skin and he was simply shivering!

Talking softly to him I began the process of gently unwinding the netting.  He was very calm through this process.  Hearing a hiss, I reassured him that I was trying to help.  I heard another hiss and realized that it was Georgie… hissing at me.   With neck stretched he was heading in for the kill.   I looked up and gruffly warned him away. . .

“You pinch me and your name will be changed to Dinner!”

He stood his ground, but did not deliver on his threat.  Finally freeing Frellnick, I turned him loose, then stood guard in case Georgie  decided to attack him again.

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I watched as he limped away to the front of the house and thought he was OK.

Poor Baby,

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He was unsuccessfully trying to clean off the mud.

Returning to the house I looked out again to check and saw him standing on one foot in the lee of the big oak out front.  He was being pelted by the returning enormous sleet; he looked miserable.  Taking pity on him I went back out.

I set up a corner for him in the barn with plenty of extra straw in his bed, some fresh water, and food.  I toweled him off as best I could and then promised to come back and check on him.  When I returned he was still there and resting in his bed.  I could see that he had eaten, but he had no interest in coming back out into the cold.  I couldn’t blame him!  Later at bedtime he was still sitting, but on seeing Georgie he got up!  He seemed a bit light on his injured left leg, but was standing on it.

7:00 AM:  It is morning, and time to let them out.  I will let you know how he is when I return.

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8:00 AM:  Unfortunately, he is not much better and still prefers to stay in.   A goose’s leg is their weakest link.  The rest of their body is built like a tank, and you would think that their legs would be too, but they are not.  An injured leg that does not heal can mean death.  He is interested in his food and water, and can get up.    That is a good sign!   Today is sunny and clear with a predicted high of 48 degrees.  If it gets in the 40s soon enough I will fill the little goose pool with water and let him bathe.  He needs it!   I think Frellnick will be fine with a few days of bed-rest and spa treatments.

But what to do about Georgie?

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NOTE:  An injured bird will not show weakness.  They will act as if they are fine because to show you’re not well can mean death for them.  I’ve seen this  a couple of times in my chickens and intervened (the other’s will pick them to death).  I’m seeing this display in Frellnick. 

 

 

In the dark with Georgie and Frellnick

Tonight, as every night after the sun goes down, I went out to put away the chickens and geese.   As it often happens, there is no photo-op to capture the moments that happen at “Duck-butt Thirty” of an evening, and so I am left to tell you what happened tonight in the dark…

As stated, each night after sunset I grab a flashlight and head out to put everyone to bed.  I start on the north end of the property and work my way south.  First I put away the girls using my torch to light the way into their goose chalet.  Lately this has been a battle because for some reason Georgie and Frellnick run opposition and chase the girls away from the entrance and into the paddock.  So usually I have to chase them out first, and then guide the girls to bed.

Tonight I had little resistance from them so went about getting the girls in and then walked away to pick up a few things that had blown about in today’s high winds.  When I turned around the boys took off and began dashing at, and biting, the side of the well house!  I had seen this behavior before but never really caught on to what they were doing.  That is until tonight…

They are trying to chase away the big, black geese that are invading their territory!  I turned the light away from the walls and then back again to see if I was right in my theory.  Well, sure enough!  They stretched their necks, and ran at the walls hissing and trying to bite those big black geese again!

So now I am wondering…

Are they seeing their shadows and mistaking them for interlopers?   Perhaps  this is the reason they have been “chasing” the girls at bedtime?   I will have to pay closer attention tomorrow at Duck-butt Thirty and report back in my next post.

😉

*Fall is Not Easy: a colorful view of the farmlet

Here on the Farmlet it seems that every fall, just when we start getting some great color, the wind comes and takes it all away.  This fall was no exception and to make matters worse I find myself lame and on a walking stick.  And for those who are wondering, “YES, I am going to the Dr. tomorrow because it has been a week and I am not improving.”

However, wind and lame knee aside, I decided I would give it my best shot and get out to see if I could capture what remains!

Lil’ Bit tiptoeing through the wet leaves.

A festive chicken yard

The newly revamped front flower bed. 

NOTE:  It used to be harder to find native plants, shrubs, and perennials, but all of a sudden the deep South is “getting it.”  I am back in my element!  Not all is native, but the bulk of it will be when I am done!

*Winged Sumac 

This is something I have wanted in my garden for some time, but had not found a local source for it.  I don’t know how it got here perhaps a bird, or the tornado storm, but it is definitely a welcome native.  Do you know why she is called “winged?”

Notes from the USDA Native Plants Database:  “Sumac serves primarily as a winter emergency food for wildlife. Ring-necked pheasant, bobwhite quail, wild turkey, and about 300 species of songbirds include sumac fruit in their diet. It is also known to be important only in the winter diets of ruffed grouse and the sharp-tailed grouse. Fox squirrels and cottontail rabbits eat the sumac bark. White-tail deer like the fruit and stems.
Sumac also makes good ornamental plantings and hedges because of the brilliant red fall foliage.

One burnished tree. 

This one can be viewed closer by clicking on it.  😉

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Happy Autumn!

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(I had fun, even if the results are less than spectacular!)

NOTES: 

  • Today’s title “Fall is Not Easy”  comes from a favorite children’s book I used to share with my little students during the season.  If you have little ones Pre-K to 3rd grades (+ or -)  then perhaps you would like to preview this entertaining book.  Look HERE
  • Why is Winged Sumac ‘winged?’  Have a look at the USDA Plant database PDF – HERE  and the site information HERE

 

Saturday Sanpshots: up close and personal

Yesterday about 6 PM I was out with the geese in the front yard

Honestly, you’d think they hadn’t seen grass before!

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When we moved here I never gave Lantana a thought in my gardening plans.  My reasoning was that in this environment if it would not be perennial,  it was  not worth my time or my interest.

I was wrong…

I had forgotten how quickly it grows, how happy it makes the hummingbirds and butterflies, or how colorful it can be.  It blooms all summer and just looks nice!  So, for 99 cents a plant, this color combination was worth it as a temporary color fix!  These colors remind me of rainbow sorbet on a hot day.

Not remembering if it had a *scent or not I went in for a quick sniff…
and immediately jerked back!  It seems that the quarter sized bloom clusters are a nice place to hang out if you are a miniature crab spider!

Consider this,  if the compound flower is only quarter sized, and you are small enough to grace the surface of only one of the individual flowers, well then,  you are very tiny indeed!  Don’t see the spider?  Click the photo for a closer view!

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*The flowers do not have a scent, however the bush itself is highly aromatic, having a pungent, spicy aroma when brushed against.