Except that I couldn't get the floppy phone line (light gray) to go through about 8" of wall and insulation. I thought for awhile, the way a chimpanzee sits next to a termite mound and thinks.
Then I went and got a long bamboo chopstick.
I'm an artist and writer who lives in the Appalachian foothills of Ohio. With this blog, I hope to show what happens when you make room in your life, every day, for the things that bring you joy. Strange...most of them are free.
Thurs. Feb. 27, 2020, 7 PM: "Saving Jemima: Life and Love with a Hard-luck Jay" at Mt. St. Joseph University Theater, 5701 Delhi Rd., Cincinnati, OH 45233. Doors open 6:30 pm. For info call Colleen McSwiggin (513) 244-4864
Mar. 11-15, 2020: Bird Friendly Backyard workshop and Saving Jemima talk at Joint Conference, N. Am. Bluebird Society/Bluebirds Across Nebraska, Holiday Inn Convention Center, Kearney, NE. Right in the middle of sandhill crane migration! Call (308) 237-5971 for reservations.
Mon. Mar. 23, 2020, 6 PM: "Saving Jemima: Life and Love with a Hard-luck Jay" at Morgan Co. Master Gardeners Event, Twin City Opera House, 15 W. Main St., McConnelsville, OH. Free and open to the public. Call (740) 962-4854 for information.
Sun. Mar. 29, 2020, 3 PM: "Saving Jemima: Life and Love with a Hard-luck Jay" at Sunday With Friends,, Washington Co. Public Library, 205 Oak Hill St. NE, Abingdon, VA 24210. For more information, call (276) 676-6390
Apr. 30-May 2, 2020: Julie Zickefoose at New River Birding Festival, Opossum Creek Retreat, Fayetteville, WV. Friday night keynote: Saving Jemima. Curtis Loew, miracle curdoggie, presiding.
May 7, 2020, 7 pm: "Saving Jemima: Life and Love with a Hard-luck Jay" at Campus Martius Museum, Washington and Third Streets, Marietta, OH. Booksigning after. If you missed the Esbenshade lecture/ People's Bank talk in November 2019, this is your event!
Weds. May 13 2020, 5:30 PM: "Saving Jemima: Life and Love with a Hard-luck Jay" at Roger Tory Peterson Estuary Center's event at Essex Meadows, 30 Bokum Rd., Essex, CT 06426 This event is open to the public.
Thurs. May 14 2020, 6 PM: "Saving Jemima: Life and Love with a Hard-luck Jay" at New Haven Bird Club's Annual Banquet, Amarante's Restaurant, 62 Cove St., New Haven, CT 06512. This event is open to the public!
Sat. May 16, 2020: "Saving Jemima: Life and Love with a Hard-luck Jay" for Bergen Co. Audubon Society at Meadowlands Environment Center, 2 DeKorte Park Plz, Lyndhurst, NJ 07071 Time to be announced. Call (201) 460-1700 for more info.
Sun. May 17, 2020, 2 PM: "Saving Jemima: Life and Love with a Hard-luck Jay" at White Memorial Conservation Center, 80 Whitehall Rd., Litchfield, CT 06759. Call (860) 567-0857 for information.
Tues. May 19, 2020, 7 PM: Good Reads on Earth Author Series, by PRI's Living On Earth with Julie Zickefoose and Saving Jemima at Mass Audubon's Drumlin Farm Wildlife Sanctuary, 208 South Great Rd., Lincoln MA 01773. Includes audience participation, and will be taped for airing on public radio! Get the book first, read up and call (781) 259-2200 for information.
Thurs. May 21, 2020 6 pm: Julie Zickefoose, "Saving Jemima: Life and Love with a Hard-luck Jay" at Bigelow Chapel, Mount Auburn Cemetery, 580 Mt. Auburn St. Cambridge MA 02138. Call (617) 547-7105 for more info.
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11 comments:
The slow but steady road of recovery. You're getting there. I'm so glad to see tiny shoots and leaves, glad for you.
I'm so glad to hear that you stomp on things and kill them DEAD. My beloved husband is always giving me a hard time about being Ms.Wildlife on the one hand, and killing stinkbugs with utterly no compunction whatsoever on the other. But I HATE. THEM. And they smell, and they don't belong here. So if they come near me, they die.
Also delighted by all the nice new green bits. And the new early warning device. I guess the first night you leave your cell phone on, you'll discover all the things that go DING that you forgot about... HA!
Impressive tool work there, Julie! I'm so glad that things are recovering and your anxiety is easing regarding your beloved greenhouse. A true Christmas miracle!
Best,
Irene Snyder
This is our first year with a small infestation of brown marmorated stinkbugs, Ms. Kimb, and they get instant encoffinization in a Kleenex, and that satisfying crunch. I know you've been enjoying them for several years in VA. Gawd. What will come next, boils? I expect the stinkbugs will get a LOT worse before they recede. Headed down to that corner with the dustbuster as we speak. We would make bad Hindus.
Setbacks are opportunities. They don't seem like it at the time, but looking back you'll be less traumatized by the event. Now you have an alarm. I'm sure people will send you cool stuff to put in your groan-house. And you'll find more cool stuff, too.
Glad to see you MacGyvered a solution to threading the needle - my friends tell me that should be my middle name...
Glad to see the green leaves sprouting. Plant reincarnation sort of...I wonder if this go-around you will have some surprises?
So, so happy to see all the little green things popping back into your life to recreate the beauty that once was. And, glad to know I'm not the only one who won't tolerate the ladybugs in my nooks and crannies. xo
The new life emerging does not surprise me, as you provide fertile ground and open invitations. As for the invasive bugs, I beg pardon upon my soul, but two BMStinkbugs were flushed by me today. I'd squish 'em, but they really do stink!
If this helps at all, you can turn off those notifications on your iPhone so that they don't pop up annoyingly. That way you only see them when you actually have Facebook open.
Yea, those stinky bugs. I grew up in southern Arizona, and my mother HATED those big ole desert centipedes. Up to 6 or more inches long, nasty venomous bite, and a penchant for hiding under her washer and dryer. She would have taken stinky bugs any day of the week over THAT. Every thing in the Sonoran Desert, stinks, stabs, bites or looks just mean. And I loved it as kid. Mom, not so much...
I love the mental image I getting of you dancing a tarantella on the ladybugs! The music educator in me must mention that originally, these fast pieces, written in 6/8 time were thought to either be ther result of a tarantula bite or perhaps CURE the bite of one. Now I will think of you and add a 3rd possibllity to the definition: the dance one performs to obliterate an unwanted pest from the earth. Thanks for the musical reference! (Also for admitting that even you consider some pesky pests worthy of that sort of spirited demise)
Lori
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