Monday, May 25, 2026
Garden Hunters
This is our "Bowl of Beauty" peony, which is giving us lots of flowers this year. We got just one or two last year, and nothing the year before, so we're happy with this haul. I guess it needed a rest. The ants seem to like the peonies, partly because there are always aphids on the buds.
I stayed busy yesterday but not really on anything blog-worthy. I washed a rug and the sofa throw, because we're in a period of ideal drying weather and I need to take advantage of it! There's also been a lot of plant-watering going on. I was just out there this morning before sitting down to blog, in fact. It was 87º F when I looked about 4 p.m. yesterday, and it's supposed to be even warmer today and tomorrow -- into the 90s F. (That's 32º C.)
The good news is, my flower seedlings are growing at last. They appreciate the warmth.
I finally started a book, having worked my way through all but four of my back issues of The New Yorker. It's a mystery called "The Hunting Party" by Lucy Foley, and it's good so far -- about a bunch of privileged city dwellers who descend on a remote lodge in Scotland, get snowed in, and then encounter a murder. I picked it up a couple of months ago from the Little Free Library at work.
Here's a curious find in my slide collection. This slide is unlike any of the others because it's glass, completely square and black-and-white in its original form. It looks like it was probably made for the military or some aerospace corporation. I'm not sure what this guy is doing -- measuring something coming out of those jet engines, apparently. Is that a Geiger counter? I love how he has no protection at all, not even earplugs or goggles, but he has a white coat so we know he's a professional.
Google AI is ridiculously, and perhaps erroneously, specific in its analysis: "This photograph captures a technician from the Atomic Energy Research Establishment checking for strontium during the 1960s. The scene likely documents research into nuclear safety or the effects of radioactive fallout on aircraft. The equipment pictured is a specialized portable radiation detector used for monitoring. Images similar to this highlight early nuclear research and experimentation in the mid-20th century."
OK, then.
I downloaded the week's footage from the Garden Cam. We see the foxes carrying around their mysterious dog treats -- I still have no idea who's giving them those. We also see the return of the rat, a fox that has captured a mouse, and something mysterious involving a bird.
-- We start with a fox trotting up and dropping a dog treat. These treats are blocky marrow-bone shaped things that I occasionally find buried in the garden. I think Crooked Tail brings the treat, but then Q-Tip comes sniffing around afterwards.
-- At 1:10, we have a very bouncy little bird.
-- At 1:16, Pale Cat makes an appearance.
-- At 1:29, a fox comes by and stops for a scratch.
-- At 1:47, I drop a piece of pork chop for the foxes. I know I said I'd stop doing this, but we hadn't seen any evidence of the rat for more than a week so I thought it might be safe.
-- And indeed, at 1:56 (a few hours later) Sharpie comes and eats it, thank goodness.
-- At 3:05, a fox checks out the camera. You can hear it sniffing.
-- At 3:29, a fox is back with another dog treat. Where are they coming from?!
-- At 3:58, two pigeons battle it out.
-- At 4:16, check out the squirrel in the background. What is up with that tail? At first I thought it was a monkey!
-- At 4:46, the rat is back! Ugh!
-- At 5:38, Pale Cat jumps out of the bushes and runs off. I saw this happen in real time, when I came out the back door and startled him or her.
-- At 5:42, a fox runs past with something in its mouth. I give us a slo-mo instant replay and freeze frame, but it's still hard to see. I think it's a mouse. Good!
-- At 5:52, we get a glimpse of Tabby.
-- At 5:59, one of the foxes is looking intently at the ground, evidently hunting. Good!
-- At 6:16, another vigorous scratch and some inelegant grooming.
-- At 6:31, we see a little robin next to another bird quivering on the ground. I can't tell what that bird is doing. Is it injured or ill, or has it captured some prey? It doesn't look big enough to be a raptor, and if it were a predator I doubt the robin would be so close to it. I give us a close-up, and a few minutes later it's gone.
-- At 6:54, a magpie.
-- At 7:12, a few final fox encounters.


I wondered if the bird was anting, though it's panting. Maybe someone else has an idea.
ReplyDeleteThere's a poem in there somewhere!
DeleteOnce again it sounds as though "The New Yorker" casts a permanent shadow over your life. You never reach the end and when you are close another "New Yorker" appears - then another and another. It's nightmarish bit it is an addiction you might be able to break with the aid of professional counselling.
ReplyDeletebit = but
DeleteThat describes it perfectly. It is a treadmill. All New Yorker readers know this feeling.
DeleteI think the pigeons are going to be close friends in a very special way.
ReplyDelete32 is hot, and it just gets worse with anything higher.
I just read YP's comment and meant to say something myself. I would get so stressed with a backlog of magazines to read.
DeleteI don't know anything about pigeons, but to me it looks more like a rivalry than a mating dance. Yes! Magazine stress! It's a thing!
DeleteYour Bowl of Beauty certainly lives up to its name.
ReplyDeleteI hope your multiple rat sightings don't indicate a bigger colony too close!
They say you never have just one, but I've only ever seen one at a time, and even then only rarely. Hopefully they live somewhere else and make infrequent visits to our garden.
DeleteThe sight of that quivering bird worries me; I can‘t tell whether it‘s fine or not. It does not look like a fledgling but like an adult bird. You didn‘t find any feathers later at that spot?
ReplyDeleteNope, it vanished entirely within minutes, and not a feather left behind. To me it looks like the pose that bird predators assume when they catch something -- holding their wings spread to shield their prey. I think that bird, whatever it is, caught something.
DeleteI waited three years for a bloom, which was not bowl of beauty, was very disappointed. Yours is stunning.
ReplyDeleteYeah, our yellow peony took several years before it bloomed.
DeleteI find magpies to be so beautiful. Rats? Like you said, Ugh!
ReplyDeleteI like magpies too. They're quite fierce to other birds, though.
DeleteEnjoy your summer, you never know how long it will last, or when it might be back. The image looks like an early jet engine, he may be testing for unburned fuels at the exhaust. Perfecting complete combustion was a major goal in turbine engine development.
ReplyDeleteBut surely the engine couldn't be running. He'd be on fire!
DeleteYou have a very busy garden and the peony is beautiful.
ReplyDeleteIt's always interesting to see what the critters get up to!
DeleteThat is a very fancy peony. There was something familiar about the book and author so I did a search of the title to see if I had read it and nothing came up so I searched for the author and yep, I have read another of her books, The Midnight Feast. I'll see if the library has The Hunting Party.
ReplyDeleteYeah, it's a pretty good read so far! I'm about halfway through.
DeleteOne of your foxes has worms. Or at least he's doing what all the dogs I've ever owned did when they had worms.
ReplyDeleteI read The Hunting Party. I vaguely remember it so it can't have been too bad.
That peony is truly a bowl of beauty. I'm jealous.
Yeah, I wondered the same thing -- if that butt-dragging was a sign of worms. I wouldn't be surprised. My cats used to do it now and then, though, and they didn't have worms. Who knows?!
DeleteI don't think I've seen peonies for a very, very long time. My mother used to grow them when we lived in Illinois. That description you got from Google on that photo was quite specific. It does seem rather crazy to be testing for radiation without any protective gear at all.
ReplyDeletePeonies are probably not good Arizona flowers!
DeleteWhat will you do when you have a new dog? Won't you worry about the foxes and rats in the yard? I would be afraid of a fox in my yard.
ReplyDeleteOh, the foxes have been around as long as we've lived here, and were here even when we had Olga. They run away if they see a dog. There was never any conflict between them. And then when we'd go to bed at night and the dog was indoors, the foxes would come right back as usual.
DeleteI've read one Lucy Foley novel, The Paris Apartment. It was good, but not great. Actually I listened to it and it was my first experience with multiple narrators. Some of the accents amused me greatly.
ReplyDeleteYeah, she's doing the multiple narrator thing in this book too, and also shifting the time period, which I don't love. Sometimes authors make things too complicated.
DeleteYour peony is beautiful and unique to me. Maybe it is a hybrid. My peonies are in bud but no flowers as yet.
ReplyDeleteWe've had a weekend of cold rain showers. Everything is moist and the pollen is washed away making the air much nicer. It is to reach 75 degrees F today.
The foxes are managing the mouse population for you and that is beneficial. I wonder what hunts a rat. It would be nice to see nature take care of the wondering rat.
I'm sure that peony is genetically far, far removed from any natural peony in the wild! Your weather sounds fantastic. I wish we were having weather like that. (Apparently we will be later this week.)
DeleteI think the scientist is measuring pressure on the backside of the jet engine. By doing that they can determine thrust potential.
ReplyDeleteBut surely that engine can't be on?!
DeleteAt idle, there isn't much coming out of them, even on a modern airplane. You see crews all the time behind modern jets at airports while moving into and out of the gate areas. But I'm sure he wouldn't be there as they were being powered up. I'm sure you've seen the videos of how much thrust those can kick out.
DeleteI think the actor waving the geiger counter about is meant to convey the safety of the radiation levels. If he were a real scientist he'd be wearing a film badge on his lab coat. That measured the daily dosage of the wearer, legal limits, and reporting to the atomic agency required daily. I was married for many years to a radiation researcher is how I know.
ReplyDeleteGood point -- I didn't even think about the absence of the film badge. I'm sure it is a staged photo.
DeleteThere is no way that technician is measuring anything coming out of that engine, even at ground idle the exhaust blast would blow him at least 50 feet down the ramp, not to mention burning him, ruining his hearing, and a host of other unpleasant things. Those flower-petal like structures around the outside of the exhaust nozzles are attenuators, which were an early attempt a noise reduction of turbojet engines. Sometimes referred to as "hush kits."
ReplyDeleteI thought the same thing -- there's no way that engine could be on. Maybe it's turned off and he's measuring some residual fumes or something? Interesting about the "hush kits" -- I guess they didn't work that well?
DeleteI absolutely adore that peony! So pretty!
ReplyDeleteIsn't it nice? Wonder if you could grow it there? I don't know how far south peonies grow.
DeleteWe have some peonies, but they haven't been very happy in their current location. We only got two blooms last year & ONE this year. But other folks have had some gorgeous ones.
DeleteGorgeous flower; vibrant color.
ReplyDeleteIt is a very nice color.
DeleteThat peony looks amazing.
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
The ants like it!
DeleteAI certainly sounds sure of itself--and for some reason, that makes me distrust it all the more. Many of your blog commenters seem to know much more than AI about jet engines! John would too, I'm sure. I'm an avid mystery reader and would probably enjoy that book. I love peonies!
ReplyDeleteYou should show the picture to John -- I'm curious to know what he would think!
DeleteLooking over this many slides can throw curve at you. The plants must like the weather you have now.
ReplyDeleteBut they always give me something interesting to blog about!
DeleteSteve, I haven't been here and commented in ages, and I have missed you so! This video was so wonderful -- it's like a grown-up version of "The Secret Garden"!
ReplyDeleteHey, Elizabeth! I've missed you too though I've read your blog here and there. I think I'm pretty much caught up with it but will double-check! Good to hear from you!
DeleteThe peonies are beautiful.
ReplyDeleteI'll pass on the rats. That peony, however -- wow. I've never read Lucy Foley. I'll eagerly anticipate your final verdict!
ReplyDelete