April 2022
  • Easter granddaughters & Jill
    Easter granddaughters & Jill

April 24

Friday night’s symphony performance included the performance of Prokofiev’s Piano Concerto No. 3 in C major, Op. 26 by 16-year-old Asian chick Harmony Zhu. Seems ol’ Harmony has been performing since she was 8 and, not only is she a world-class pianist, but she is also the world chess champion in her age group. She was lively, to say the least, and I was afraid she was going to fall backwards off the piano bench the way she was bouncing around. Thankfully, she managed not to and delivered an entertaining performance. After Harmony had done her thing and the intermission, conductor George Jackson, contender for the full-time gig of Amarillo Symphony music director, led the orchestra through Elgar’s Enigma Variations. A number of those are easily recognizable since they are often used in movies and stuff. To my tin ear, it was well done, one of the more entertaining after intermission performances. I didn’t even get drowsy.

It blew all to be damned Thursday and Friday and Friday evening there was enough rain to mix with the dust and warm the hearts of carwash owners all over town. There was .04 inches in the gauge Saturday morning. Didn’t inhibit symphony night but let Kari out close to the entrance just to be safe.

April 21

Yesterday I attended an Ogallala Commons playa field day. This one was in Tulia. Ogallala Commons , along with Playa Lake Joint Venture and Texas Parks and Wildlife through their land management program are dedicated to preserving working playas and restoring those that have been altered, where possible. The goal here is to educate the public about the importance of playas in aquifer recharge. About 90% of the water used on the High Plains comes from aquifers, predominantly the Ogallala Aquifer. According to the information the speakers gave us the recharge rate for the Ogallala Aquifer is enough for people but not enough for agriculture. The emphasis by the Ogallala Commons, et al, is to preserve healthy playas to delay running out of water. A landowner with one or more playas on his property can contact the organizations and get help restoring his playas if they need it.

The Ogallala Aquifer extends from the Dakotas down to the south High Plains and Texas has the most playas, although many have been modified, which reduces or eliminates their ability to recharge the acquifer. Many of the playas have been modfied, either by digging a pit to catch water for livestock, or by simply farming through the playa. Often, the pit can be filled in with the dirt that came out of it and TPW pays the landowner so much per acre to restore a playa as well covering the cost of the restoration in return for a 10-year easement on the property. That is, the landowner agrees not to modify or disturb the playa for ten years.

Besides filling in pits and removing berms that inhibit rainwater runoff from reaching the playa, the TPW program also encourages a native grass margin around the playa. This helps to remove sediment and pollutants from the runoff. The use of native grass permits more runoff to the playa as opposed to foreign species, which grow much thicker than the natives. One of the speakers is a biologist and he talked about the problems native upland birds have in dealing with the exotic grasses. Seems chicks can’t get through the grass and predators can hide in it more easily, the better to prey on the chicks.

April 18

Spring advances apace here on SA. Some fruit trees are still in bloom while others have bloomed and leafed out. So far, we have managed to dodge any hard freezes. There is still time, but it gets less likely the fruit trees will get whacked with each passing day. It would be ironic that, in the middle of drought, we get a good fruit crop. Maybe we will even get some for ourselves before the critters get it all.

Last year the daffodils and tulips really showed out, but not this year. There are a few around but nothing like last year. The liriopes on the other hand are showing out, more so than they have any time in the past that I remember. There are weeds that need my attention but nothing like the last few years. If I get them sprayed, maybe they will be less of a problem in wetter years. Looks like the Siberian elms are going to have a crop of seeds. They weren’t too bad last year, but they seem to alternate between lots of seeds one year and not so many the next, then back to lots and so forth. After last year I guess we are due a heavy seeding year.

Much of my time is spent watering. Even though it hasn’t gotten hot yet, it has been windy, and some trees are reaching their limit. I’m having to come up with new ideas to get water to them. The nice snow in March was helpful but that moisture has just about faded away.

March 2022

March 29

Today is quite a contrast from Tuesday last week. It is warm and windy. I spent Monday and Tuesday morning whittling on the tree in the back yard felled by last week’s snow and wind. So far, all I’ve done is trim off the part that extends across the fence to the east. Luckily, the tree was propped up by the tree across the fence and a couple of stout limbs on the fallen tree so that it didn’t take out portion of the fence, which it very easily could have. In trimming the part on the other side of the fence, I’m trying to reduce the weight, the better to control the trunk so that neither the fence nor I get mashed in the process of getting the trunk on the ground. Next, I’ll trim what I can off the trunk on the backyard side of the fence before I try to trim the limbs that are holding the trunk up. I’m not sure how all that is going to play out. I may just have to keep cutting small pieces of the trunk, small enough that they aren’t likely to damage the fence if they fall on it, until I’m confident the trunk is short enough to miss the fence when I lay it on the ground.

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February 2022
  • Late aftenoon

February 26

Kari thinks this is the longest stretch of cold weather we have had to endure, at least this winter and I think she is right. When it comes to overnight lows, I can’t think of any other stretch where the temperature dropped into the teens or single digits for going on five days. The temperatures are supposed to be in the 70’s some days next week so maybe relief is on the way.

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January 2022

January 30

Darn! I didn’t get to go work at the Bluff Wednesday. I was forced to stay inside and watch it snow from the sky room while I drank coffee. Many times, during my working years I was forced to work on days like this and I always thought how nice it would be if I could take a day off, or part of day, whenever I wanted. We got maybe as much as three inches which melted down to .16 inches in the rain gauge. If this pattern of weekly snow keeps up, we may actually get some decent moisture. By Saturday the weather was pleasant, and I helped K&C run their cardboard accumulation through the shredder so Kari can use it in her compost.

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December 21
  • Sophia's birthday

It was a pleasant week in Sachse. I was treated to an excellent dinner shortly after arriving on Christmas Day, and everyone was in good spirits. We exchanged presents after dinner and I made a nice haul. Next day we celebrated Sophia’s birthday with dinner at a Chinese restaurant followed by more presents. I had a nice visit with Mr. and Mrs. Thornton, Jill and I went on walks (the weather was nice), watched movies and football and generally enjoyed some downtime. New Year’s Day MM&T and the Hunts, Devon and Dennis, joined us for our traditional New Year’s Day dinner. The next day a pointed the Pathfinder into a brisk north wind and made my way home.

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