On Being a Farm Wife (and other hazards) Joyce Bupp And I’m supposed to believe this tale 7 You go away for a day and come home to these stones. Highly unlikely stories Stories with no documentation Stones with no rhyme or reason Except this one is too unlike ly to have been made up And the tellers are The Farmer and our daughter. Not that it was an unusual time for stories. After all, it was the first week of buck deer sea son in Pennsylvania. The week when every one that got away weighed 200 pounds and sported a 10-point record rack. But this was not a whitetail buck-that-got-away story. This was a bird story. Bird tales (no pun intended) are routine in our bird/wildlife loving family. At least once a week one of us relates the latest antic of our resident fisher-bird, the great blue heron. Like the day when he/she (how does one tell?) erupted into flight out of the dying cattails which rim the goldfish pond, just ahead of The Fanner headed out to move cows with the fourwheeler. And landed up on the hill, in the middle of where the cows X-Series Pulverizer AND HAS LONG BEEN THE INDUSTRY LEADER. * Available in widths from 6’ to 46' to accommodate any size farm operation * Choice of 20” notched or crowfoot ductile iron roller wheels with five year * Create an ideal seedbed with fewer trips across the field limited warranty against breakage ■ Choose the roller wheel that is best suited to your soil conditions " Telescoping drawbar reduces drawbar length as desired from 19'5" to 12'11 ’ on the XL and XXL graze every day A strange place for this skinny, steely-colored fisherman with the wide wing spread and feathery long neck It obviously intended to monitor the meadow and beat a hasty retreat back to waterside the moment that fourwheeler was over the hill When not spearing The Farmer’s goldfish, Mr. Blue Heron spends much of its time terrorizing the creek minnows which live in the stream in the meadow. Strangely enough, it also likes to hang out on top of the silos and spent most of one recent day enjoying the view from atop the old, empty one on the adjoining farm where our daughter’s family lives. Livin’ here is so good that occasionally it even brings a friend along for lunch. Nor is it unusual for someone to relate sightings of the king fisher swooping over the water to snag a snack and flap away. Or to hear the shriek of the red tail hawks as they float over the fields hunting mice. Or to spot kestrels, doves or bluebirds, nuthatches, woodpeckers, tit mice, chickadees, blue jays or cardinals. Mockingbirds stealing BRILLION HAS MANUFAC blueberries Or finches gobbling seeds from the hanging heads of the sunflowers in late fall Not much about birds sur prises us anymore since wo live m close company with our back yard feathered friends Actually, The Farmer thought what he saw was a new cat joined up with our assorted and colorful collection And puzzled over where this strange, plump, dark-striped tabby had come from, since we currently have none of these favorites And it was sitting on the corner of the deck —outside the railing —this strange “cat” was Which on closer investigation proved to be an owl 9 A very large owl A very large, very beautiful, very fat, great-horned owl Sitting on the corner of our deck in the middle of the yard in broad daylight Yeah, right. Whooooooo does he think he’s kidding 9 He related that the stunning discovery stopped him in his tracks and he backed off so as not to scare the visitor. A few hours later, the owl had disap peared, but a racket stirred up in the backyard by several crows sent him to the other side of the house. There, in some ever greens along the woodshed, sat the owl, unperturbed by the irate crew of crows. When The Farmer tried to sneak closer to show the big bird to grandson Caleb, the owl had enough of being the center of attention. It soared off over the meadow and perched, very visi bly, not very high up in a big, old tree. Our daughter says she has the evidence, a photo snapped with her camera as she headed home on the field road, right URED PULVERIZERS SINCE 1895 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 11, 1999-B3 under when the owl was keeping five been harassing them watch It was so busy eyeing about having made up this Darrah the Dog, sniffing around whooooooole owl's tale at squirrel trails, that it ignored But j g ra h binoculars everv the two-legged critters time I hear crows Ida’s Notebook isser December is another month full of birthdays and anniver saries. Too bad that I do not own a greeting card factory. It seems that I’m always trying to calcu late when to send a card so that it will arrive in Atlanta or Richmond or somewhere else on the right day. I don’t even want to count how many extra cards are sent in a year. But, I do know that I buy four rolls of 100 stamps each year. There are sisters to write to and both children and grand children to be remembered. The cards in the stores are quite expensive and so at Valentine I make cards for the 14 grandchil dren. It is almost like being a child again as I cut out flowers and draw hearts on construction paper. When I was younger my mother had me make scrap books out of old magazines. And, my oldest children also pasted pictures in scrapbooks to keep them busy as we did not buy the latest toys for them at a store As a youngster my sisters and I played a game called “Snap ” It consisted of numbers cut out of a big calendar and then pasted on cardboard - no money spent at a store Just recently I found the small box of cards that we used to play “Old Maid ” That game led to bad feelings sometimes Recently, I attended a birth day party for a friend of mine. She will be 90 on Christmas Day As she lives in a retirement community there were many guests in wheelchairs. However, she is quite nimble and jumped up from a chair to greet every one. 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