May
8th, 2005:
I’m
stuffed! A bunch of the family came out for Mother’s Day and we went to
the Beach Café for lunch, had some of Marg’s carrot cake in the
afternoon, and to the Golf Course for supper. Too much!
We
got a few light rains the past couple of days, but a real good one for
half an hour yesterday morning. Must have been about a half inch in total.
That washed things off nicely. Unfortunately, it also pointed out the fact
that our downspout is plugged, so I guess it’s ladder time.
Finally,
a break in the weather! Sunday was miserable, cold and windy, but Monday
morning, though it started out about –7° in Prince Albert, the sun came
out and the wind died. It turned into a lovely day. It hit its peak on
Thursday, sunny, calm and warm. It’s been a little cooler and cloudy
Friday and Saturday, plus some wet periods, but today was sunny with light
winds, and about normal temperatures.
The
trouble with those nice spring days is that sooner or later someone is
going to decide it’s perfect for doing yard work. So, I wound up clawing
up the planter south of the house. Being in favor of leaving the forest
floor natural (no cultivation), I asked Doreen why I was doing that. Her
answer: “Because you are bigger and stronger and heavier!” I asked if
that meant I was also smarter, to which she asked: “Who is doing the
clawing?” She has this funny idea that the soil should be loosened up
occasionally, and a top dressing of steer manure applied. Oh, well -
if it keeps her happy!
We
went to Prince Albert last Sunday, stayed overnight with Cathy, and came
home Monday afternoon. We went in for the Transparency Battle, a photo
club event that our Club participates in. The Northern Images
Photographers, who did an excellent job, hosted it. None of our Club’s
entries scored particularly well, but we saw a lot of excellent
photography, enjoyed a great lunch, and did a lot of visiting.
In
the evening, we went to the Watsonaires concert, an annual event for us as
my sister, Cathy, sings in the group. As usual, they put on a terrific
concert, with all kinds of talent besides their own singing. I
particularly enjoyed two pipers and two drummers performing “Amazing
Grace”, and the Watsonaires singing “Battle Hymn of the Republic”
with trumpet accompaniment by thirteen-year-old David Boyle. I almost
stood up and saluted, but Doreen restrained me.
We
were surprised and pleased to see former Porcupine Plain resident, May
Janzen, also singing with them. We hoped to see her after the performance
to say hello, but missed her.
Brian
Shuya phoned yesterday to say he had a western tanager at his feeder. We
went dashing out without breakfast and managed to catch sight of it in a
tall tree, but from a distance. Margaret, however, had managed to get some
very decent pictures of it with her digital camera. Lovely bird! I hope it
stays around, but it is outside its normal range, which is west and south
of us.
We
put on a slide show of our own images at the Porcupine Plain Library on
the 27th, and thought it was quite well received. I have
several short slide shows on many topics, including the Crooked Bush,
Greenwater Park, the Pioneer Fair at Irricana, Elevators, wildflowers, and
a bunch more. A basic showing takes about half an hour but can go to an
hour or more if people stay awake long enough. If you would like me to put
on a show at your seniors’ residence, or clubroom, within about fifty
miles of Greenwater, give me a call. I love showing off!
The
Beach Café officially opened on Friday so we went there for coffee. There
was a good crowd, and coffee and cinnamon buns were on the house -
can’t beat that! (And, oh! Those cinnamon buns!)
Fishing
season is open again, and there were vehicles parked at the Steiestol Lake
parking lot. Also, two people fishing off the peninsula, but I didn’t
see any boat trailers parked. I guess the off and on showers don’t make
for nice boating.
A
fox ran out onto the road in front of me at Bjorkdale yesterday, but a
strange-looking one. The front half of its body looked like a red fox, and
the back half looked like a coyote. They stay red all year, don’t they?
So it wouldn’t just be shedding winter fur. Maybe it’s a cross fox. It
would have been pretty cross if it had stayed on the highway a few seconds
longer.
Some
of Greenwater’s geese are back -
we saw eight on the beach yesterday and a couple more on the rocks farther
east. Also, the purple martins are back. I think Jim said they just showed
up Thursday or Friday. There’s lots of green in some of the trees, and I
can hear hammers, saws and backhoes. It must be spring!