![]() I have been planting food plots for pheasants and other wildlife. Locating these plots near areas of good wildlife habitat will put food close to protective cover. Meanwhile the pollinator plants are thriving in these areas as well; bees and butterflies are evident. Although the Canadian thistle is not a welcome addition to most farms, the gold finches seem to like them as they begin to nest. They eat the thistle seeds and use the down in their nests. Sometimes farming is truly for the birds! And bees. A good summer read is “God in a God-Forsaken Land.” Find out a bit more of what this land was like in the 1870s.
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![]() Summer gives us a time to re-boot. Recent summer rains necessitated a re-boot to launch a boat at a local lake. Living bouquets abound as native flowers co-mingle in beautiful, natural arrangements in their chosen habitats. We change our thinking that all flower displays need to be picked and arranged. The full moon brings abundant spawning sunfish to the table; a delicacy I once thought was only available in springtime. We writers find the long evenings much too nice to confine ourselves to a computer careen. A good old fashioned notebook and pencil, out on the deck or even on the water seems a better choice now. |
Gene R. StarkA teacher, farmer, trapper, and greenhouse grower. He writes about the outdoors and the people and culture of rural America.. Archives
February 2022
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