Eight & 322/Eight & 27
[email protected]
  • Eight & 322
  • Sports
  • Arts
    • Artist resources
  • The Nature of Things
  • Eight & 27
  • News From You
  • Purchase Photos
  • The Photo Dude
  • Editorial
  • About
  • Community Photojournalism presentation

Train of thought derailment

9/16/2024

0 Comments

 
Picture
Sadie
​On a past Friday, I thought I could beat the rain, but I didn’t. We needed the good downpour. However, I was a little uncomfortable being soaking wet and a few acres from the comforts of a dry home. The dogs didn’t mind, they had already been swimming in the neighbor’s pond. 
Picture
Clem
​I thought I could keep the dogs dry during the following Saturday’s walk. I didn’t.
I decided that it was cool enough that Sadie, Clem and Gus didn’t need to swim in the neighbor’s pond.
Sadie, a Newfoundland, was always the hardest to keep out of the water. I kept repeating “Drinks only, no swim.” Unfortunately, sly Sadie would often pretend to get a drink and then lay down in the water. 
Picture
Gus
​That Saturday, treats were used to distract the dogs while I quickly grabbed a card from the trail camera at the pond.

We then proceeded around the pond as fast as possible to stop any last-minute dips. However, we still had another creek to cross that Sadie liked to “fall” into.

We managed to cross the stream without incident with the aid of more treats and the distraction of a chipmunk.

However, the lake effect showers were deceitful that day.

One minute the sun shined.

​Then the wind picked up and the rain came. 
​So much for dry dogs. We headed for the nearest conifer tree, which was a hemlock. I have found that with a light rain, sheltering under a large white pine or hemlock tree will keep you somewhat dry.
Picture
I thought the rain had subsided when we headed out from under the tree. It  didn’t. Thankfully, I had a jacket on due to the previous day’s miscalculations. 
Picture
Sadie
​I thought it would be easy to dry off the dogs when we got home.
It wasn’t.

I got distracted by a fungus that I wanted to photograph. I didn’t notice that Sadie decided to squat in a puddle she found.
​
Puddle squatting is worse than pond swimming as it leads to more mud. When drying the dogs off with a pet dryer,

​I would often get sandblasted with whatever debris was in their fur.
​Thought I had all the trail camera cards last Saturday, but I didn’t.

Apparently in my haste to keep the dogs dry, I put the cards in my jacket pocket and not my backpack.

​ I guessed that somewhere along the way a card fell out of my pocket and into the wilderness.

​I wasn’t’ so much mourning the loss of the card as I was sad that I would be missing a week of photos. 

​​I thought could find the lost trail camera card by walking the goats. I didn’t.
Picture
Wild turkeys
Picture
Milo and Otis
Picture
Milo
 ​However, Milo and Otis got a decent walk around the pond trail circuit. We did not attempt any water crossing during this outing.
Picture
Otis
I thought I knew what the goats would like to eat.

I didn’t. 

​It turned out that Milo and Otis have slightly different tastes than Kyle and Kennedy had. Kyle and Kennedy were never impressed with any of the apples in our yard but loved crab apples. Milo and Otis discovered the apple tree and make a beeline for it whenever they can. Kyle and Kennedy voraciously trimmed the overgrown forsythia plants in the area. Milo and Otis could care less. 
​I thought the goats escaped, but they didn’t. A check of a camera that covers the goat pen revealed some brown figures outside the fence.

​However, the figures turned out to be deer and Milo and Otis remained captive.

After some freedom from the pen, Otis had decided that he was a free-range goat.

​I explained to him that that wasn’t going to happen. 
Picture
​I thought I had enough bird seed in the feeder, but I didn’t.
​
A trail camera placed in the front yard revealed that the birds weren’t necessarily the reason why I was filling the feeders every day.

​A large buck and a doe were draining the bigger bird feeder at night. 
Picture
Gus
Picture
Clem
​I thought had cooperative dogs, but I didn’t.

Clem was cooperative for the sunflower photoshoot. He has learned if he just puts up with the nonsense for five minutes, he will get a treat. Photos of a costumed Sadie(top of this article) had to be captured within the 10-second window of her flinging off the yellow headdress.

​Gus just kept heading toward me with a shameful and painful look. It was as if he was pleading with me to take off the stuffed yellow torture device. 
Picture
Mexican sunflower
​I thought I would have time to photograph some hummingbirds on the flowers, but I didn’t.

I waited around the garden for them to feed on the Mexican sunflowers. I tried to hide, but they spotted me.

Their numbers have dwindled. It was possible that the two or three birds I had visiting my feeder were not my regulars. Therefore, they would be a little more wary of me.
However, my trusty feeder camera was on the job capturing some of the last of the tiny, winged ones before they headed south. As of Sept. 16, no hummingbirds were visiting that feeder.
Picture
Pearl crescent butterfly
​I thought the still blooming Mexican sunflowers would bring in some butterflies. They didn’t.

​While the hummingbirds would feed on the bright orange blooms, I didn’t observe any butterflies. There were a few fritillaries floating around elsewhere. Near the pond, several tiny pearl crescent butterflies were sighted. 
Picture
Common eyelash fungus
Picture
Oyster mushrooms with bugs
Picture
Birch polypore
I thought I was done finding mushrooms to identify. I wasn’t. 

The dry weather seemed to have stunted some fungus growth.

​Nonetheless, I discovered another patch of oyster mushrooms.

​They were about 20 feet up a tree and had gone to the bugs already.

​I spent countless attempts to get a good photograph of some birch polypores that were thriving on the remnants of a thin and broken birch tree.

​ A couple of Facebook friends and their apps helped me identify some common eyelash fungus that I found on an old oak tree.
Picture
​I thought I wouldn’t write about the weather, but I did.
​
The U.S. Drought Monitor graphic released last Thursday, Sept. 12, showed continued abnormally dry conditions for most of Venango County.
“The new Drought Monitor .... shows a slight expansion in drought in OH/WV. A large area of D4 (exceptional drought) still lingers in eastern Ohio.

Unfortunately, no precipitation is forecast through at least Tuesday … which will continue to worsen impacts,” the National Weather Service Office out of Pittsburgh posted last week.
​
However, the office offered a little hope with a graphic posted Sept. 15.

The illustration depicted a 30 to 40 percent chance of Venango County receiving .50 inches of rain from a tropical disturbance off the coast of the Carolinas.

​The disturbance is expected to move inland and affect portions of the region by mid-week, according to the office’s Facebook post.
​
However, updated forecasts only called for a 20 percent chance of rain in the region. Wednesday came and delivered some misty sprinkles. The next chance for rain was predicted to be Monday, Sept. 23.  
According to 
Picture
Picture
National Weather Service data, Franklin’s precipitation to date as of Sept. 16 was 36.48 inches. That total was above the normal of 34.27 inches for that period. The normal precipitation for the month of September for Franklin was 3.94 inches and so far, the region has received 1.91 inches this month, according to weather data.
​

The normal temperature for September was around 74.2 degrees. However, the National Weather Service’s Climate Prediction Center’s Sept. 23-29 outlook called for a 50 to 60 percent chance of above average temperatures. 
Picture
Desmids
​I thought the vernal pool would be dry after more than a week with no rain. It wasn’t.
Upon approach, frogs leapt from the tall grass into the puddle. Water samples revealed quite a few microscopic creatures. Among the most plentiful were desmids.

​According to the Oxford Dictionary, desmids are” a single-celled freshwater algae which appears to be composed of two rigid cells with a shared nucleus. The presence of desmids is usually an indicator of unpolluted water.” However, the neighbor’s pond was still sporting a green cast to it from a continued euglena algae bloom. 
​I thought I would have time over the past weekends to sit on my front porch and I did.

​However, I didn’t have as much time relaxing there as Lil’ Bit did.

He slept and bathed himself in his hammock. I attempted to take photos of his spa day. However, his bathing involved scenes that were too risqué for photography.  
Picture
Lil' Bit
Things don’t often turn out to be what we thought they would be. That’s just the nature of things ‘round here. 
0 Comments

Moving forward

9/5/2024

0 Comments

 
Picture
Monarch butterfly on Mexican sunflower
With the start of meteorological fall Sept. 1, two Pennsylvania centered blogs have already issued their fall foliage forecasts. However, the Pennsylvania DCNR won’t start releasing its popular Fall Foliage Reports  on www.dcnr.pa.gov until the end of this month.
Picture
PaBucketlist.com which is authored by Rusty Glessner posted a graphic that predicts Forest and Elk counties’ foliage will peak the week of Oct. 8 to 14 with Venango and Clarion sporting their brightest colors the following week from Oct. 15 to 21.
Meanwhile, Uncovering PA by Jim Cheney predicted that Venango, Clarion, Forest and Elk counties would all reach their most colorful foliage during the second week in October. 
​Commenters on both blog’s Facebook pages wondered if the leaves would even last until October due to the drier summer in some parts of the state. 
Picture
Picture
Pear crescent butterflies
​The most recent U.S. Drought monitor graphic released Thursday depicted that the northern half of Venango County and all of Forest County were still in the abnormally dry category.

The southwestern corner of the state did not fare so well with some counties ranging from moderate to severe drought.  
​
A check of the National Weather Service data for Franklin showed total precipitation up to Sept. 5 coming in at 34.69 inches which was still above the normal of 32.56 inches for the same period.
​
Another graphic showed Franklin finishing out the month of August with 5.52 inches of rain compared to the normal of 4.24 inches of rain.
​
The National Weather service out of Pittsburgh offered a little hope on their Facebook page. The post said rain is in the immediate forecast, “but will be followed another stretch of dry conditions the second half of the weekend and next week.”  
​As the chances of rain stalled so did the numbers of hummingbirds visiting my feeders.

As we move forward toward fall on the calendar many of our winged friends started their annual migration. The hummingbirds were no exception. However, I was able to get my new hummingbird feeder up before they leave for the winter.
Picture
Jewelweed
Picture
Ruby throated hummingbird
It includes a video camera triggered by motion. During installation I was surprised when “it” started talking to me during the mounting process. Here it was my husband who was setting up the technical aspects of the device. He discovered that the camera had a speaker and could double as a security camera if needed.
At first, I questioned why a bird feeder would need a speaker… so you could talk to the birds. I could only imagine it being used as an intercom with a conversation like: “Humee to the house. Humee to the house. The feeder is out. The feeder is out. Over!”

“House to Humee. Running low on sugar situation is dire. Over.”
​

While I don’t plan to use the speaker much, it was so awesome to be able to see the hummingbirds in action up close. 
​Meanwhile, I moved forward with my plans to fill the empty goat pen. After months of staring at an unoccupied shed, I finally made a move.  ​
Picture
Otis
Milo and Otis came to live with us at the beginning of August. They were still trying to get used to the dogs. They adjusted to their new home within a week. They are both around three years old. Milos is a long-haired buck, and Otis is a short-haired wether. 
Picture
Milo
​Otis has wattles. Wattles are skin appendages found on some goats. Internet reports claimed they were evolutionary remnants of a gland that common day goats no longer needed. They serve no purpose and aren’t unhealthy. However, some breeders for appearance purposes will remove the skin tags when the animals are young. 
Picture
Otis
​A vet visit for shots revealed that Otis and Milo may in fact be a little chunky and will have to cut back on the grain.

We were starting the process of walking without the dogs who get overly excited. The goats were still adjusting and didn’t venture far from their shed. Hopefully in time everyone will get along.
While Milo and Otis enjoyed eating some goldenrod, other late summer flowers were able to bloom despite the drier than normal conditions. ​
Picture
Goldenrod
​In addition to the goldenrod, wild asters, nodding ladies’ tresses and jewelweed decorated the fields and forest with their flowers.

​The winterberry bushes went straight to decorating for Christmas with bright red berries and green foliage. 
Picture
Asters
​Back in the garden blooming Mexican sunflowers attracted a few monarch butterflies.

​They were very scarce this year, but I think I may have seen a few more than last year. 
Picture
Monarch butterflies
​Meanwhile, there was no scarcity of frogs at the neighbor’s pond. I enjoyed a good chuckle on Sadie’s behalf. She takes her frog hunting very seriously. Stalking a frog can take minutes of stealth movements. While cropping a photo of Sadie in the pond, I spotted a frog in the lower righthand corner of the photo. Sadie was oblivious.  
Picture
Nodding ladies' tresses
Picture
Winterberries
Picture
Sadie
Picture
Male goldfinch
​Even if we try to remain oblivious to the seasons changing, nature will surely remind us. Fall foliage and fall migrations will move us forward whether the weather cooperates or not. That’s just the nature of things ‘round here. 
0 Comments

    Author

    "The Nature of Things" features the writings and photographs of Anna Applegate, who is a lifelong resident of Pinegrove Township, Venango County. She is a graduate of Cranberry High School and Clarion University. After a 15-year career in the local news industry, she made a change and now works at a steel finishing plant in Sandycreek Township. She is a avid lover of animals and nature, and a gifted photographer.

    ​Very happy to be able to share Anna's great "The Nature of Things" blog.

    Check out Anna's other artwork here!
    Picture

    ​Sponsors
    Picture
    Picture
    Picture
    Picture

    Archives

    February 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    November 2023
    October 2023
    September 2023
    August 2023
    July 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly