This wheat on the road is riper than ours. |
The scene changes everyday as the grain silently bakes in the sun.
Wednesday
morning, Mike said that the calling cards at the pond just didn’t look like horse.
More like cows, he said.
Wednesday
evening, as I was opening windows upstairs to let in the delightful evening
breeze, I saw moving spots off to the south. I dashed downstairs and grabbed
the binoculars, and by that time they were close enough to see three or four
black cows heading our way.
About
8:00, Bess set up a ruckus out front. It’s wise to pay attention when Bess is
upset. Sure enough, she and a rattlesnake were taking issue with each other
right there off the front steps. I put Bess in the house and watched the snake
while Mike got his tongs and pail. As he was handling the snake, three black
cows took the opportunity to scurry towards June’s place across the far end of
the pond. I could almost imagine that they were tiptoeing, like a cartoon. “Let’s
go now. If we’re quiet, maybe they won’t see us.”
Taken at the corner (not our barn) |
When
I was a youngster, I didn’t sleep outside. It was just me, and it didn’t sound
like fun to sleep out by myself. I think I was right about that. But back in
the day when my older half-siblings were young, I think they did sleep outside
some during warm summer nights. My mother was concerned about snake activity in
the evening / night and insisted that everyone sleep on a cot rather than on
the ground. And all sleeping bags / bedding had to be picked up and stored
during the day to be sure no snake was lurking.
I
hadn’t seen bunnies this year until the other morning when I spied one near
Mike's shed. It subsequently disappeared under the shed.
About
6:00 Thursday evening, Bess began barking from her perch on the porch, and so I
checked. A horse had entered the yard and stood at the foot of my fenced compound.
I hushed Bess and called for Mike, but by the time he arrived on scene, the
horse had turned tail and was moving southerly, skirting the pond by some
distance.
Looks like a snake -- gives me a start |
“Wait!
Come back,” I called. “Don’t you want to visit.”
Was
it the same horse that visited previously? That other horse had a white face. I
didn’t think it had a white face, and I didn’t think it was as big a horse.
Then,
as I was finishing my shower – it was again approaching 8:00 – Bess was outside
barking agitatedly, and I could hear the rattler. I threw a towel around my wet
self and ran downstairs to alert Mike, who was watching tv and blissfully
unaware that danger lurked. Once again, he picked up the snake and hauled it
off.
The white-faced horse |
And
then this morning before 6:00, I looked out the window to see the white-faced
horse munching weeds behind Mike’s shed. Then he moved out into the yard, and I
managed to quietly get a picture of him. When he saw me, he bolted, running
behind the woodshed, through the grove, and up into the west field behind the
house.
Well,
I’ll tell ya. A rattler will alert you to its presence and is usually not
aggressive, but the yellowjackets, now – that’s another story. They ARE aggressive
and territorial. Mike has been stung several times, and they make my gardening
unpleasant. KW
5 comments:
Such excitement! I'm glad nothing more exciting has occurred with the rattlesnakes. Funny that the horse was so skittish. He/she must know that he's breaking the rules.
Both horses, if indeed there are two, are geldings. They at least uncomfortable when a human is on the scene. Otherwise, I think they are quite happy to much away on our vegetation.
I'm glad that Bess wasn't hurt by a rattlesnake. She doesn't like them.
So they are just running wild? The horses of course. The snakes surely are... er, slithering.
I can surmise where the rattlers are coming from, but where are the horses coming from? Surely, you don't want them to be roaming all over the place, and your farmer shouldn't want them in the fields.
We have noticed that other neighbors seem to take the roaming of horses and cows in stride, and while Farmer Kyle wants to be advised, permanent solutions don't come about. And it's all a bit elusive. The cows and horses quickly disappear into the draws. They can be there and we'd never know.
And -- we have also noticed that livestock owners don't seem to take the situation seriously. I suppose if they're feeding elsewhere that's good for an owner's budget.
I think it's a cultural attitude, perhaps a hang-over from a bygone era when everyone tolerated everyone else's roaming livestock.
And then there are the deer, about which we can do nothing short of a depredation hunt which probably isn't all that effective.
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