Thursday, August 31, 2017

Exploring the land

A couple things have happened this week to make this place out here feel a bit more like a home. The water for the house is now off the to do list! We have running water, including hot water and a working shower! It feels good. We've also been given some furniture, household items and yard equipment. We're now able to furnish another whole room with our additional small couch!  And we have a large tv, and a much better working wheelbarrow. We are super grateful to be equipped in this way, by all these extra items.


Speaking of yard work, we tackled a carragana bush one afternoon this week. It was oriented outside our living room windows, in the middle of the yard. The tree and bush plantings of the previous owners have been a little baffling to us and we've been happily anticipating some reworking. We won the battle, chipping away at shoots and roots with hoe and shovel and pitchfork. Our tools took a heavy toll - we snapped a shovel handle and broke a pitchfork tine, and hurt a back and both of us went away rather sore from it. But the ground is level and the rocks removed and the view much better.


Quite by accident we've also been rediscovering the joys of exploring, taking alternate routes home and stopping at broken old buildings (no shortage of those around here) and pretty spots.  The fields have all changed their tones - everything is dryer; the bright yellows are gone in favour of paler, grassier hues. The farmers have started their harvesting and taking the wrong road can mean parking at the edge of a field to let a parade of combines and trucks go by.  We stopped one evening to explore what we thought was an empty old house. The lighting was perfect and I was kicking myself for not having my good camera. The house looked pretty structurally sound although the back room was falling apart both from below and above. There was an old stove in what was the kitchen and some funny flooring designed to look like a rug in one of the other rooms. Every room was a different colour, and every window was at least partially broken. We were surprised to discover a stairway upstairs since the place didn't look big enough to have a second story.  We went to explore but were quickly and effectively chased into retreat by a hissing animal, which in retrospect we suspect was a raccoon.  Someday our curiosity may get the best of us and we may go back and check. The barn was also in a lovely state of decay, full of equipment and machinery and peek holes to spy on them.





That's not the only wildlife we've run across these days.  Drives home in the soft light of evening have found us discovering a moose browsing through some treed-in marsh, and some elk standing half hidden in a field of green. One evening on the acreage Jeff pulled me outside and we stood in awe as an owl silently glided around us, alternately stopping high on a branch and then taking a wide arch. We had been talking about wanting owls around for a while, not just because we want to encourage all creatures who eat mice to come for long visits, but because they are also magnificent. It's these moments of awe-filled discovery that make living out here really rewarding and beautiful.



These days the kinds of birds that we see around here have shifted.  we still have the swallows, but it's generally quieter, and we see (or hear) birds I expect are just passing through on their way south, like the geese every morning now consistently squawking by in their telltale V's.  There's starting to be leaves on the ground, and today I found a tree that's not just a tinge lighter but fully yellow. You can feel the season begin to change, and the shift of fall coming.


Wednesday, August 23, 2017

Ups and downs

We have been home from Calgary a few days now.  Here has been a taste of that time, in the ups and downs:

We had a great drive back! But we came home to the power being out.  But we were prepared with lanterns this time!  We caught a mouse (we thought perhaps we were done with mice - apparently not). We saw northern lights! The squirrel unplugged one of his holes. My tiny tomato plant has grown so much! We tripped over a new pocket gopher hole, and they re-holed and mounded the dirt floor garage. We caught a pocket gopher in the trap Jeff set!


Aphids are eating my beans, and flea beetles are eating my greens. I got to spend a bunch of time on the Internet and I got so much done! We are both fighting nasty colds. But we have extra help with the plumbing! I wanted to paint more canola, but it's done flowering. It is super cold in the house with the cooler weather. I went to a quilt shop with lovely fabrics today (buying fabric may have had something to do with the cold)!



Today my day was largely spent on garden related things - research and on my knees picking aphids off beans and discouraging the flea beetles from my arugula and now my kale too. This is not the first time I have been disappointed in my vegetables. Once I nursed a tomato plant I had started from seed into October just to get a couple fruit off it and feel like my effort was worth something. Last year my carrots were pathetically small, although this year you can barely tell I'm growing carrots at all they're so tiny (it's not looking good). So it's probably not a bad expenditure of time to sit down and do a bunch of research, plus reading is more conducive to my attempts at drowning my cold in endless cups of tea. I'm also learning things about companion planting and already thinking about what next years garden could look like (bigger, for one. Better, for two).

The menfolk are in the basement getting damp and working on plumbing. On the bright side, there is water actually coming through the taps now, although not all the kinks have been worked out yet. Progress!


Friday, August 18, 2017

Away & Return

We've been in Calgary for a week-ish attending an important and memorable wedding, connecting with family and friends, collecting things from storage and doing some shopping. This morning I woke up and actually missed waking up in our house in Saskatchewan.  This week I have felt like I have a foot in both places, somehow moving towards both places. We are in Calgary, but are headed back to Saskatchewan, but are also making plans to return here in September. Lots of mental jumping back and forth.





We are on our way! And I am looking forward to returning to that pretty green and yellow land. Time now feels a bit shorter and I am hoping to do some more art before its Calgary time again.  I did manage to squeeze in one bit of Plein Air painting before we left. My easel and I went exploring the country roads and in the heat of the day (an especially hot day - unwise, I know) and spent a couple hours tackling the canola fields in paint.  The rest of my panels are all prepped & ready and I am ready for  more painting. Plus every nice painting I do means a nice thing on our otherwise rather bare walls.



Somewhere in the rest between our guests leaving and our hurried prepping for Calgary, Jeff and I gave in to our curiosity about all the feathery creatures that frequent our trees and buildings and wires, picked up a book and some binoculars and have the beginnings of becoming birdwatchers.  It's a nice compliment to our anti-gopher and squirrel stance, and makes me at least, feel less like I am against every animal around. And there are so many birds! They probably even outnumber the squirrels and gophers (which, by the way, we return from Calgary eager and better equipped to counter). We had already recognized the few birds we were familiar with; robins, chickadees and woodpeckers, but we discovered that we probably have three kinds of woodpeckers (downy woodpecker, sapsucker, and a mystery one). We also spotted hummingbirds (the green ones), yellow shafted northern flickers, barn swallows and a couple mysterious fluffy brown birds. We may also have tree swallows.  Clearly more binocularing is required, and maybe I'll try to gather some photos for you instead of just feathers.



We did manage to pick up some much needed items in Calgary: gopher traps, more garden implements (to replace and supplement the borrowed), a trimmer, extra sweaters, more plants, more tea (okay - much wanted), some new housewares, and all the things we forgot the first go round (we hope).  We stumbled upon a yard sale in the wedding middle-time and even found a wheel barrow wheel at a price we were happy with, which we definitely needed.  We feel well equipped, strengthened by good company and generally eager to get back to the acreage work.






Sunday, August 6, 2017

Friends!

All our missions and tasks have taken a pause this week as we host friends for a visit. It is baffling that we possess such good friends that they would choose to come visit us and spend their holidays in this (currently quite) rustic place. It is wonderful to see them, a taste of home, and wonderful that they have come and have come armed with a fresh view of this place and an enthusiasm for weeding and old things.

We spent a few days camping in Waskesiu, and it was lovely. The lake was refreshing and warm and the campground was spacious and quiet, with the sites being nestled happily in the trees.  It was good to camp, and it felt friendly and familiar. If it weren't so humid and generally wet it could have been Alberta. There were even some hikes to be had!  We explored a bog with some amazing (including carnivorous!) plants, and many plants that are unfamiliar to me, which is always a delight. Plants seem to be the theme this week and I'm going to have to replenish my library book supply on the subject to fill in some of the mystery.







Before we left for camping I mustered the courage to brave our forest of (potentially tick-bearing) unreasonably tall grass to go exploring towards our wetlands. It seems like Jeff goes exploring every other day and he always tempts me with tales of flowers that sound lovely and unfamiliar. Whether he knows it or not he's been baiting my curiosity.  So between the two: waskesiu and our marsh, my camera and I have now enthusiastically collected a small image bank of unfamiliar flora. A collection to puzzled over and slowly turned from mystery to knowledge. Just another thing for my spare time.


Now we are back home at the acreage. I have spent the day tackling things like laundry, groceries, dinner and weeding. Although my garden has been chugging along in terms of growth so have the weeds, and I am growing many more green things in my garden plot than I want to. My veggie garden had become pretty much overrun, and thus a very intimidating task.  Today I had help in the battle and two of us tackled it and made some seriously good progress.  It's not that many days until our midway through summer trip back to Calgary so it is good for the weeds to be stopped now, before we go.