Captured Moments – moving at a snails pace

Good morning

I am having a hard time keeping my momentum going today.  I was sitting drinking my second cup of coffee, looking through photos and came across this snail photo.   It was taken after it had rained.  The house we lived in at the time had a very healthy snail population and it was common to see their silvery trails along the sidewalks in the morning.

I started playing around with the photo in Topaz Studio (procrastinating), and thought that the snail and I had something in common.  Moving slowly, although I think it would have beaten me today. This may be a three or four cup of coffee morning. 😉

This filter reminds me of some of the photos that came from an old Brownie camera I used in high school.  It must have had a leak in the seal or a crack and I would get a rainbow  or light leak effect on my photos. The filter is named Low fidelity in Topaz Studio.

This filter gives it a gritty feel, more texture and I like the blue hint on the head. It is called wfcSoft2  in Topaz Studio.

Captured Moments – Phidippus audax (Spider)

Good morning!

I was cutting basil in the garden the other morning and had not brought a basket  with me, so I carried the armload of fragrant herbs into the kitchen clutched to my chest so as not to drop any.  I then washed it in the sink.  Much to my surprise, when the water drained there was a small black spider sitting in the bottom of the sink, looking rather put out.   I know it as a fuzzy jumping spider. It’s official name is Phidippus audax.  They are common around here and I love their colorful,  iridescent  chelicerae (mouth parts), which are a lovely teal green on this young spider.  I read that the marking may be orange tinted in juveniles (wiki). The ones I usually see have white markings.

I brought him to the garden and he clung to the flower petal for a few seconds.  You can see the orange tinted spots.

It didn’t take long to recover.  It turned to face me, then quickly disappeared under the flowers.  I wish I had been quicker with the camera and he less traumatized.  I love the color of the chelicerae in the photo below.  

 

There are some wonderful macro photos online that are more clear than mine if you want to see more of this cute spider close up.  

 

Coffee Ganache Recipe… Give Your Desserts a Rich Coffee Flavor! 

Good evening!

I tried sharing this from my phone earlier and it was a fail.  This coffee ganache sounds delightful!

So, let’s try this again.  From America on Coffee .

Coffee Ganache

Source: Coffee Ganache Recipe… Give Your Desserts a Rich Coffee Flavor! 

Coffee Monday – When you really need that cup of coffee in the morning.

Good morning.

I am one of those people that grew up in a coffee drinking household.  A fresh pot of coffee with breakfast, another with lunch and one for after dinner (or supper as it was called in our house).  If a guest dropped by, that required a fresh pot. The aroma of coffee was one I took for granted, but when I smell freshly brewed coffee, it brings back fond memories of my grandparents.

As a child, I remember my grandmother using a percolator to brew our coffee.   It was a white pot with blue flowers sitting on the stove top.  It was made by Corning and was the Blue Cornflower series. 

We eventually moved up to an electric percolator in the same series.  Then over the years we had various other models.  As an adult I collected several percolators, but the only one I have kept is this  Vintage Proctor-Silex percolator to the rescue!

Eventually they bought a drip coffee maker, but there was always an old reliable percolator stashed in the pantry, just in case.

My grandpa had his own method.  He called it cowboy coffee.  He would take a sauce pan, add water and coffee and bring it to a boil on the stove.  He said it was the best way to make coffee.    He grew up during the great depression and spent a lot of time hunting, fishing and camping along the Llano river.   He had fond memories of those times even though the hunting and fishing were done out of necessity, not for sport.  

I looked for videos on making cowboy coffee.  The one I am sharing is not in a sauce pan on the stove but I think my grandpa would have enjoyed it. Cowboy Kent Rollins

Captured moments – Fragrant Sensitive briar

Good morning

Still one of my favorite flowers of summer, the Sensitive briar (Mimosa microphylla Dryand), has a small bright pink flower with a delightful fragrance.  The vine is prickly, but it is worth a few finger sticks to get close enough to enjoy the fragrance and appreciate the delicate beauty of the flowers.

To read more about this plant click here: Lady Bird Johnson wildflower Center

Captured moments – Cheerful zinnias

Good morning!

I bought a pack of zinnia plants from one of my favorite nurseries, Blanco Gardens in  Blanco, Texas  this summer.  They had yellow, orange, light pink and dark pink flowers in the mix.  These zinnias grow in a mounded form and are excellent bloomers, especially is you deadhead frequently.    The butterflies seem to like the cheerful orange ones the most.  Our fall weather has been mild with temperatures in the 90F during the day dropping into the low 70F at night and these flowers are not showing any signs of slowing down.

zinnias

Captured Moments – Raising Chickens part 2

We moved to ten acres just outside of the city.  We brought our remaining hens* and their mobile coop, set it up and attempted to make it secure from burrowing and digging predators.  (*We had lost one hen to a dog we were dog sitting.)
They loved having a larger area to forage and our dog was a good deterrent to any wildlife that might want to have chicken for dinner.

During our first few weeks in the new place, the neighbors rooster came to visit.  He was grand and the girls were smitten.  He spent a couple of hours , but did not manage to lure our girls away , so he went home.  We never saw him again.

The chickens continued to stake out their range over the next few months and a factor we did not consider was that they might range farther than was safe.   We lost a hen early on and took precautions to try to keep them closer to the house. We made sure our dog was out when they were free ranging.  The hens tend to put themselves to bed at night, so we just needed to make sure we are home to close the coop.   When you work, have kids with extra curricular activities, sometimes this did not happen in a timely manner.  We were lucky for a while.

These are two of the Black Copper Marans.

The chickens seemed to like our small black and white kitty.   They would follow her on her explorations.  Luckily, she stayed close to the house.   In this photo she has her paws on a rock.  She is fascinated by rocks.  She claims them as hers, plays with the smaller ones and sits on the larger ones. Not judging.  It’s her hobby and it doesn’t involve killing anything.  I take that as a win.

A year went by without incident. We still had five hens, a Brabanter, a Barred Rock and three Black Copper Marans.   A  lady we know asked if we would take some White Leghorn  hens and a rooster that she had rescued.  They had never been outside the small enclosure she had for them.  We agreed to take them and she brought them coop and all.  There were four hens and the rooster.  Day two, one of the hens died.  No visible reason, maybe the stress of the move.  We kept the chickens isolated from our flock until we were reasonably certain that they were healthy.  It took a while to get them to not run away into a corner of their pen when we approached.    We began leaving their coop door open, trying to entice them to forage with our hens.  Once free, they decided no more coops. This was unexpected.  They preferred to roost in the cedar tree in the back yard.  If we tried to get them out of the tree, they ran for the woods.  So they became tree chickens.  The rooster was very wary but not aggressive.  We named him Dude, Dood from a line in the movie The Island.

Outside of the aversion to a coop, the two flocks got along nicely.  Dood was very protective of the hens.  We were beginning to think we did not have predators in the area.  That maybe our dog and us being outside a lot, caused it to be an undesirable place to hunt.  We were proven wrong.  We lost chickens over the next year and a half.  We started seeing opossums, raccoons and hawks. We knew there were fox, coyote and large wild cats in the area, but had never seen any.  When we started losing chickens at an alarming rate during the day, we were perplexed.  They were still free ranging during the day and in the coop at night (even the Leghorns had started coming in the coop at night)  Then my daughters friend called for us to come look out the window,  there was a young fox on the rock pile behind the house.  It then became clear what we were up against.  A sly and opportunistic mother fox with three pups, was feeding her little ones chicken.  Our dog was older when we moved but had become more frail and arthritic and was no longer able to be a guard for the chickens.  I did not want him trying to chase any animals.  When the fox realized we had discovered her den, she moved her pups and we did not see them again until two years later.

Well fed fox pup.

We ended up losing all of the hens and then Dood to the fox and other predators.   I spoke with our veterinarian, who also has chickens that free range, and they said pretty much everything likes chicken.  They even have problems with hawks upon occasion.  Part of having  space to raise chickens was to give them freedom to forage.   It was time to build a new  larger coop with an enclosed run.

Up next, the new coop.

Dragon Thursday – The alphabet, dragon style

Good morning,

My friend Linda shared a link to this very cool dragon alphabet.
The artist name is Sue Ellen Brown and her website is Zoolnart.com.  In addition to the dragon alphabet, she also does illustrations and makes jewelry.  I will include links below to her shops.

You can also get this cool t-shirt ” Everyone needs their own dragon”

You can find the artist here:

ZooLNArt

Cafepress

Etsy

Society6

Captured Moments – Eyes

Could a greater miracle take place than for us to
look through each other’s eyes for an instant?

Henry David Thoreau

Good morning.

A few years ago I decided to see if I could take a photo of my eye.  Weird?  Maybe a little, but fun.  I held the camera up to my face and snapped away. I discovered how reflective our eyes are, and how many wrinkles and freckles I have.  Thank goodness for cropping. 😉

This one shows the camera reflection and was one of my favorites of the set.

I decided to play around with the photo in Topaz studio using some of the pre-made adjustment sets. The first is called Bluebell Impressions

The next filter is  called Melting Colors

and the last one, my favorite, is called evening shadow.  I did not realize that the writing on the lens was visible until I noticed it after using these various filters.