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

A little bit of caution and a whole lot of luck

12/30/2024

0 Comments

 
Picture
Sadie
I can't recall many "Oh, sh*t," moments in my life. I do believe most of them came about during winter driving. However, my most recent "Oh, sh*t" moment happened Christmas Eve while walking in the woods with the dogs. 
For about a week before Christmas Eve, Gus was excitedly exploring some timbered treetops along our route. In one area, he stopped and barked.

I kind of ignored his barking for a while and called him back to the path. I figured it was a deer bedded down in the tree branches that he couldn't get to.

On Christmas Eve, I decided to go check out what he was fussing about. I was a little concerned that it could have been a porcupine and didn't want him to get into trouble.

​I climbed the bank and went over to the downed trees. I held the dogs off just in case there was some kind of critter in there. 

There was a large hole formed in the branches. I peered in, but not too close.
​
Just I as I stated, "Gus, I don't see anything," a bear head appeared on the other side of the hole.

It actually took me a few seconds to recognize that it was a bear. It had never crossed my mind that was what Gus was barking at. I would have never gone anywhere near the area or let Gus there either. 

I was way too close for comfort and being in the timbered area, there wasn't any great escape path. 
​
"Oh, sh*t.... no, no, no. We have got to go!" I exclaimed.

I quickly gathered the dogs and back down the path toward our trail. Thankfully, there was no attack.

​There was no growling and no pursuit after us by the bruin. 
We avoided the area for the next few days.

​Nonetheless, my curiosity and stubbornness of not wanting to shorten our walks, led us back to the area.

Gus went into the vicinity. He was using his nose but was not as excited as the time before.

​I have trouble deciphering the difference between squirrel excitement and bear excitement.

He went to the den but was just sniffing around. I guessed that the bear vacated the den in search of a quieter area to hibernate.
​
This incident made me recall how the canines acted on the day after the incident.

​On our Christmas Day walk, the dogs were increasingly interested in trailing something onto neighboring posted property.

​I surmised that said bear moved into an area where we don't traverse. This was a win-win situation for all involved.
Picture
Gus Gus
Picture
Picture
I marked the area of the bear den for future reference.
Picture
Picture
Picture
The late Kyle (black and white) and the late Kennedy.
The Christmas Eve event was a close call, but it was not the norm.

I have been walking dogs daily for at least 15 years. This broke down into 5,475 days, give or take a few for a couple of skipped walks.

​I could count on 10 fingers the times that we have run into or experienced bear sightings. A good number of them were in our own backyard. Some didn't even involve the dogs, but mostly the bird feeder. 
​
Thanks to an alert neighbor, we avoided a situation that probably would have been more than an "Oh, sh*t," moment several years ago.

​The dogs, goats and I were headed across the field toward home. My mom summoned us from her back door and said the neighbor across the road warmed her about a bear in our yard.

​Even though it was during daylight hours, the bruin was snacking on a suet feeder and couldn't be spooked off. We could have really been in trouble, as from the angle I would not have seen the bear and would have sauntered unknowingly into the area with two dogs and two goats.

Thankfully the bear left, and we returned home. However, upon entering the yard, the late great Kyle, immediately alerted to the bear's scent. Kyle had seen bears before in the yard and wasn't happy.

​I think if Kyle had been on our Christmas Eve walk this year, I definitely would have been alerted to the presence of a bear in the near vicinity. 
Picture
The late Buford
Picture
Coyote
Picture
Fisher
Picture
Fisher
Picture
Coyote
Over the years, there was one time the dogs treed a bear. I called them back and the bear left. This was back when the late Buford was on the trail.
Picture
Sadie
When we first got Sadie, the Newfoundland, I kept having to remind myself that I had a black furry dog and I wasn't seeing a bear. However, on one walk, I saw something black ahead and thought, "What is Sadie doing up there? She was behind me." Upon further observation, I exclaimed, "Oops, not Sadie." It was a smaller bear fleeing from my rambunctious posse of pets.  
Picture
Fisher tracks with dog remote for scale
We've been pretty lucky as far as wildlife encounters over the years. Perhaps that may have been due more to some divine intervention than luck. While trail cameras picked up coyotes, foxes, fishers and more. We don't usually see them.

​To date, we have never run across a coyote even though their tracks often cross our paths. Recently I spotted some fisher tracks. However, tracks were the only thing we saw of the critter. We may have seen the tail end of a fox or two over the years as they hightailed it out of our way. 
Picture
Mostly we encounter deer. The dogs are not allowed to pursuit deer. I don't wish to have to travel to the next county to locate my wayward canines. They have been instructed to "stay" over the years.

Nonetheless, one year a small buck was bedded down right were we entered the woodline. Of course, instinctively the dogs were ready to go. I yelled, "No." Everybody stopped, including the buck. I told the dogs to "stay" and instructed the buck to slowly leave the area.

​Surprisingly he listened. He swished his tail and cautiously walk away.
Picture
Gus and Clem
I wished I could have said this would work for all wildlife situations. However, I am more of a realist than that. 

The moral of this story is to be alert and aware. One should also be very cautious. Most importantly, one shouldn't trust Gus.

​That's just the nature of things 'round here. 
0 Comments

Naughty or Nice

12/18/2024

0 Comments

 
Picture
Wiggles
"Twas" many nights before Christmas and the creatures were stirring all around the Applegate house. They were being pursued by a crazy photographer lady in search of some holiday hat photos. Some of the persecuted were nice about wearing Christmas décor.

Others were not-so-cooperative. 

This year one of the best photos came from a not-so-nice feline expression.

​Wiggles, hands down, exhibited the best “bah humbug” expression I have ever photographed. The 13-year-old calico seemed to be saying that she was way too old for these shenanigans. 
While we have six cats total, only one more feline could be rounded up for the holiday humiliation. 

​Lil’ Bit begrudgingly donned a Santa hat against his will. He sat peacefully before escaping hat-free. 
Picture
Lil' Bit
Picture
Clem
An early December snowfall provided and excellent backdrop for the canines' Christmas photos.

Clem, the pro poser, was nice as ever during the photo session.

I had purchased an extra-large elf costume. However, it didn't fit around his chest or hind end.

​It was only secured around his neck. Nonetheless the dedicated hound dog, took things in stride. 
His stoic poses in a Santa hat always make me giggle. 
Sadie,below, begrudgingly wore the elf costume.

​She looked like the epitome of Christmas costume suffering. 
Picture
Clem
Picture
Sadie
Picture
Sadie
She also grew bored with the candy-cane striped antlers. 
Picture
Gus
Picture
Gus
Gus Gus struck a serious Santa hat pose as well. He also had a cute reindeer antler shot. The latter was due to his chomping on a treat at the time of the photo. 
Picture
Otis
I managed to capture a photo of Otis, the goat, in reindeer horns. Thank goodness it was a Sunday closed to hunting. I could only affix the horn headband once he was nose-deep in the treat bag. 
Picture
Milo
Meanwhile, Milo escaped the clutches of the holiday hat fiasco. I can get him to eat out of my hand, but once I try to place a hand on him; he runs away. That's just the nature of things 'round here. 
0 Comments

Snow: Love it or Leave it?

12/16/2024

0 Comments

 
Picture
Gus
Picture
Picture
Gus, Clem and Sadie
​On social media, some folks seem to have a love or hate relationship with snow.

Here at the Applegate household, the canines love the snow. However, the goats are not so fond of the white stuff.
​I like the fact that snow provides me with photo opportunities.  

I don’t care for the challenges it brings while driving.

​However, I am willing to forego the disadvantages of snow for some great photos.

A couple of snowy days earlier this month had me anxious to get out and about in the weather. 
The snowfall around Dec. 5-6 was awesome for pictures.

​ Clem, Gus and Sadie delighted in roughhousing in the white powder. 
Goats Milo and Otis did venture out after most of the snowflakes stopped falling.

​I was able to snap a photo of Otis near a Christmas goat flag which may have been quite ominous for him.

There was not much green for them to eat except for evergreens. 
Picture
Otis
They seemed quite fond of white pine boughs. However, I noticed their beards appeared to be greasy. I discovered that it was pine pitch. I had no idea how to get pitch out of a goat’s beard and had no intention of trying. ​
Picture
Milo
​The snow on Dec. 11 was the most picturesque so far this season. Everything was outlined in white.
Picture
Picture
Picture
The scenery had changed completely in just a few hours. I have gotten turned around in some of these snowy scenes as the landscape becomes somewhat foreign to me.
​
I’m not the only one who appreciated this type of scenery. 
​“Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” by Robert Frost was pretty much spot on for describing late evening winter views.

Frost’s words, “The only other sound is the sweep of easy wind and downy flake,” rang true that evening of Dec. 11.
​
I wasn’t the only one taking photos. 
The trail camera also snapped a couple nighttime shots of swirling snow. ​
Picture
​Nonetheless in terms of snowfall totals, the snow event on Dec. 5-6 had more of the white stuff. According to the National Weather Service’s weather station at the Venango Regional Airport, there was a total of eight inches of snow over those two days.

​That early December snowfall surpassed the normal total of 6.2 inches for Dec. 1-18.  
Picture
​Meanwhile, December totally snowed in November’s numbers. The weather station reported that for November of this year there was only a trace of snow. That total was below the normal tally of 2.6 inches.
November was also lacking in the rain category. The total for November 2024 was 3 inches which was slightly below the average rainfall of 3.41 inches.

The U.S. Drought Monitor report released Dec. 12 still listed most of Venango County in the abnormally dry range. However, the year-to-date precipitation accumulation for Franklin was set at 46.97 inches on Dec. 7. This was still above the average of 44.82 inches for the same period, according to National Weather Service data.
Picture
​With the eight inches of snow melting and recent rainfalls, the Allegheny River started to fill its banks. The river at Franklin was forecasted to crest Dec. 17 at 9.17 feet. The river had ranged between 3.25 feet and 5.9 feet in late November and early December. The level started moving upward Dec. 9.
​
Meanwhile, the river was open with no ice formations. The neighbor’s pond had ice and then it didn't. 
Picture
Picture
​Cold snaps provided some nice abstract ice formations. Frost formations were a little harder to come by as I only ventured out in the evening when temps usually were warmer.

As temperatures bobbed up and down, forecasters attempted to determine if the region would have a white Christmas.

I gazed upon several predictions. Some ranged from snow to freezing rain. Weather.gov as of Dec. 18 was calling for a high near 38 on Christmas day with a chance of rain. 
​
The National Weather Service's Pittsburgh office posted on its Facebook page that the city's chances for a "White Christmas" this year were looking low, "but you can always still ask Santa for a miracle."
​
The post continued that Pittsburgh's last "White Christmas" was in 2022. However, the office said this year will definitely be cooler than last year. 
"Last year, the high temperature on Christmas Day was 60°," the office posted. ​ There may be folks that don’t want snow for Christmas, but I’m pretty sure that no one really wants freezing rain on that day either.
​
This winter season we have already used the snow blower twice. That was the total number of times it was used all last winter. I wondered if that meant that we were done with the heavy snow this winter. If we aren’t done with the snowblower just yet, this winter will no doubt set the record on the number of times the device has been used over the past few years.  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

    Archives

    April 2025
    March 2025
    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