Esme and I went out and tried to secure down the chicken yard a bit more with zip ties and bricks etc et al... two more opossums were in my hen house last night and my big Beau rooster (second in charge, half-blind) did his best to alert me and face them off but they wouldn't leave until I came out. He has a terrible noise he emits when they are out there - between that and the dogs I'm up even if asleep. We'll see if we've managed to close up the places they were getting in at or we'll have another round of checks and fixes. The other bigger rooster, (pictured below, I don't really have a name for him, but maybe Sarge) was on top of the henhouse with all of the hens pushed up under his wings keeping them safe, so both roosters were doing what they could.
KnitOwl
Monday, February 16, 2026
Sunday, February 15, 2026
mid February tools
This is called a 'hoedag', it is a gardening tool that is a hoe on one side and a set of tines on the other. I have been calling it, in my own mind, some sort of conglomeration of 'hoedak' or 'hoedar' and today, I decided to go look up what it was actually called. Surprisingly, I have not just made up a name and used it (as I have done with some things all my life, as a way of keeping it organized in my own head) - but it really is a 'hoedag'. Where did I pick up that name? It certainly wasn't on any of the tools when I bought them - I remember looking, and even asking myself at the time - what do I CALL this? Unlike my hori-hori knife, which I also use so often in the garden, and use the name from what was on it when I received it.
It is mid February, and the ice age has ended, at least for now. I hope for all year. In those hopes, I put a small patch of turnip seed out in the front garden with this hoedag this morning. I had given some chickweed that was growing by the front steps to the chickens yesterday and watched them run around and peck at each other to get some. They looked so miserable and wet this morning in the rain, that I decided it was worth some of my co-op 'old but might sprout' seed even at these temperatures to plant a little something - just to ask Spring to keep rolling along to warm.
Mark had made a good pork roast with all the spices a few days ago (Esme helped grind those up and measure them), and we made stir fry with it. I bought a new rice cooker a few weeks ago with a gift certificate, and it finally came in the mail. I think I like it - but I want to see if it will cook lentils as well as rice. The book has nothing about that - but I've seen some things on line. I also wonder if it will cook soaked adzuki beans - if so, that would be 'golden'.
the sauce for the stir fry, as usual : 1 tbsp brown sugar, bit olive oil, about 1/4 to 1/2 cup of water (I often add more later), 2 splashes of soy sauce and one splash of balsamic vinegar, and about a half a tablespoon or bit more of prepared brown mustard - mix that all together and put in with the vegetables and pre-cooked meat, and when it has all come to a good cooked mixture, add the recently cooked (but not just cooked) rice, a bit more water and when that has heated back to sizzling - make a hole in the middle and crack one egg. Let the white cook for a moment, then drag the egg through the entire mixture and put the lid on to steam while turning off the heat. Serve immediately. This had zucchini, red bell pepper and onions in it, as well as the pork roast and rice cooked in the rice cooker the night before.
And before we go out to town today, I am making some soup. Mark had given me a large rind of fat in the refrigerator off of his pork roast two nights ago, and it was time to do something with it. I put a pot of split peas on the stove with olive oil, celery seed, and pulverized brown mustard seed in it, as well as the fat rind. In a couple of hours I can blend it up and put it in quart glass jars to use for the week. Pease porridge in the pot, nine days old - not quite, in glass jars put up in the fridge shelf :)
This is the little mortar and pestle that my mother-in-law gave me a few years ago. I use it to grind up seeds like these in small batches to use in cooking. Whole brown mustard seed, from an Indian cooking spice kit I bought years ago, and did not have too much use for it particularly, until I began grinding it up in small batches.
for languages lately, I've done Spanish, German, Turkish and Lithuanian.
I had the opportunity to try to speak to someone in Spanish, they asked me if I could say whatever it was en espanol etc... but all I could think of was half German, half English, and something else in Spanish that had not meant the right thing in the past. For actual usability, I really do need to take some face-to-face Spanish lessons covering things I actually need to say. Maybe some day here.
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
rolling
Getting back in the swing of things, now that the ice is finally gone. There was even some still on our road this morning and, taking the back road on the way back in, we saw some even this afternoon at 70 degrees. I'm very glad I didn't try to take the back road route to the highway that other day - I turned around and took the shorter, more hilly route that I had already been over once in a wild ride, because I knew what it looked like and the back road route is longer, a bit flatter but so narrow there is no place to turn around if you come up on something you can't manage.
We restocked our feeds, and are halfway through restocking our propane. It will be tighter this month, especially trying to restock, because of the missed paychecks from the ice storm. I bought eggs for the very first time in a store in what has to be years - because I was going to make some cookies and our hens haven't laid in months - they were laying one every three days or so before this ice storm but of course during it, nothing at all. Opossums may be to blame - as well, time will tell. I'm glad to have the chickens themselves mostly healthy and bumping around pecking in their yard as pets, even without eggs.
Esme had been very worried about her classes at the trade school with the state of emergency and yet their strange attendance policy. However, it seems like that will work out - and she can catch up. It took a lot of reaching out and frustration to get them to actually talk to her before she showed back up at the doorstep - which she wanted to know before she got there etc.. but finally the answer was : 'yes, it will be in a way excused because it was weather emergency, but it will still be marked on the papers absent'... I saw her put her hands out and say 'What does that even mean?' to me in sign language. I agree, kid. I agree.
For languages I have been doing mostly Japanese (at the highest level I have reached) and Turkish (low profile, and vocabulary work) and a little vocabulary work in Lithuanian.
Now to catch up on the rest of the things at work - some chores, restock and pinch our pennies for a few weeks until we know everything will work out better and / or the taxes get done and we see our return.
Saturday, February 07, 2026
january ice storm tennessee 12 days on : we break out finally
Friday, February 06, 2026
afternoon february 6 - january ice storm tennessee
I took an afternoon walk at 2 pm, as well - and it was getting better - the creek was roaring with all the runoff - but we're still wondering if it is better to wait until the entire day has had time to clear things. We aren't at the point where anything is critical, we're just 'out of most things' and finding other things to use, instead. We have water and power, and Mark has been doing okay with his extra heaters.
this is still a skating rink down to our house from grandma's mailbox
then it gets pretty clear, up until this point
just past the 800 house
looking back at the 800 house from the 600 hillclimbing up the 600 hill
february 6 - january ice storm tennessee
I went out at 8 am to see what the weather was like - and how much melting might or might not have happened. I didn't even go up to the mailbox yesterday, it never melted enough to warrant - and the mail also didn't run to us yesterday, from what I saw. They already posted in the announcements that they won't run the garbage trucks this week. It might get up to 50 today, but it said 36 yesterday and it never got up to even 32 before 2 pm in the afternoon. With the sun setting at 4:30 to 5, we need more than that to melt.
long shadow at the top of our drive it is glare ice all the way down the slope but it was white 'zamboni' ice the other day so at least we can see some of it has been moving and the thickness has gone downthis is that big crackly loud ATV (mark says Gator type machine) that ran by the other morning - Mark asks why I would photograph it, I said because that is what I am doing right now, photographing and waiting for the meltthe other hillside on the other side of our driveway - it is a very long way down there but the top has cleared in the sunskating rink ice looking towards the sun - at least we have sun today, it had been overcast for several of the days when we could have moved some of this frozen liquid off looking down between the two ridgesso much is in shadow nearly all the day here between the trees that we are lucky when the sun can melt some

















