Sunday, June 21, 2026

Wiley Coyote

Near the dawn of time, the story goes; Coyote saved the creatures of Earth. According to the mythology of Idaho's Nez Perce people, the monster Kamiah had stalked into the region and was gobbling up the animals one by one. The crafty Coyote evaded Kamiah but didn't want to lose his friends, so he let himself be swallowed. From inside the beast, Coyote severed Kamiah's heart and freed his fellow animals. Then he chopped up Kamiah and threw the pieces to the winds, where they gave birth to the peoples of the planet. 

– Nature


Yote - short for coyote, Wile E. Coyote, Canis latrans.   If you were to inquire of a wildlife biologist they would tell you that there are nineteen subspecies of coyote that are exceedingly well-adapted to living in urban, rural and wild America.   

Male coyotes top out at about 44 pounds while females weigh-in slightly less.  For scale my Labs are bulkier than the average coyote.  Coyotes are known for how well they adapt to different habitats.  They are found living in and around large cities, the central plains, farmland, and northern forest, in the desert scrub of the Sonoran Desert, foothills and mountains as well as in populated ring suburbs. 

Coyotes dine on large prey and also eat snakes, insects, rodents, fruit and other mast.  As an opportunistic hunter coyotes have been known to prey-upon small pets and livestock.  In an urban setting they will eat garbage and pet food left on a deck or patio.  

The coyote is a gregarious animal - socially-inclined - like the wolf.  This is likely a consequence of the need for a family unit or pack of animals combining to bring down large game. 

Recent genetic studies suggest that coyotes are not native to the eastern United States - having largely evolved on the Great Plains.  As the eastern old growth forests were cleared for settlement and agriculture coyotes adapted to the new environs.   It is thought that coyotes dispersed to our neck of the woods early in the twentieth century.  These canids are presumed to have come from the northern Great Plains and are unique in their genetic origins.   

Additional coyotes dispersed from here to New England via the northern Great Lakes region and southern Canada meeting in the 1940s in New York and Pennsylvania. These coyotes have inter-bred  with gray wolf and Eastern wolf populations adding to their own unique genetic diversity and further contributing to their hybrid vigor and ability to adapt to an ever changing environment.  Coyotes here are known as the Northeastern coyote. 

More frequently Jill and I hear coyote vocalizations than we see them live and in person.  In rural America coyotes share the same natural aversion to people that other wildlife do.  They are scared-to-death of people.  However, from time to time I do capture a handful of digital photos on a trail camera.
 
Like these recent captures....
   

 
Do you see two coyotes?

 
 

Smokin' For Paws

Yesterday afternoon we went over to the Brussels Town Park  to check out the 2026  Smokin' For Paws Rib Cook Off.  This is a sanctioned event and it's outgrown the vacant lot adjacent to Rouer's Grand Slam as the field of competitors is growing.


There were 27 teams from Wisconsin and neighboring states; most being professional competitors along with a few really talented backyard enthusiasts.

 

Funds raised from this competition are to support the acquisition of a service dog for placement with a worthy veteran or first responder along with supporting our local BUG Fire Department.

Feeling a BBQ pork-induced coma coming-on we returned home for nap.

While I can't guarantee it I'd be willing to bet this competition will return next year even bigger and better.

Stay-tuned and check out Face Book if you subscribe for interviews and coverage via Let's Go Door County!

Saturday, June 20, 2026

The Garden Chronicles

My new raised beds are working out as intended; basically saving my back and saving me from gardening on my hands and knees (note the chair).

Everything is crowded, but my vegetables and herbs seem to be happy over-all.  The intention is to grow a seasonal supply of household produce on a rotational basis.  If I need something in particular or a large quantity of something there are plenty of local farm markets.

Today I harvested spinach and radishes and replanted radishes.

For some odd reason the lettuces I planted several weeks ago did not germinate so I replanted them a week ago.  They're a cool season crop so I cannot blame it on the unseasonable cool weather we've been experiencing.

We've even gotten a couple of opportunities to nibble on a handful of cherry tomatoes already.

Vive le Jardin Magnifique!

Summer Solstice

Solstice Stone - Stonehenge, UK

Tomorrow is the Summer Solstice here in the northern hemisphere which means that on Sunday we receive more sunlight than any other day of the year.  Naturally, you would conclude that this date would have the earliest sunrise and latest sunset, no?  

Don't jump to conclusions.  Even though the solstice has the greatest amount of daylight - the earliest sunrise occurs before the solstice and the latest sunset falls afterward.  The occurrence of those events is dependent upon how far you are from the equator – a function of the tilt of the Earth on its axis.  

Here is an interesting factoid – I went to the US Naval Observatory Astronomical Applications Department and looked-up the Sunrise and Sunset times for my location here at The Platz before, during and after the solstice. 

June 17 Sunrise 5:03 Am Sunset 8:38 PM
June 18 Sunrise 5:03 AM Sunset 8:38 PM
June 19 Sunrise 5:03 AM Sunset 8:38 PM
June 20 Sunrise 5:03 AM Sunset 8:39 PM
June 21 Sunrise 5:03 AM Sunset 8:39 PM
June 22 Sunrise 5:04 AM Sunset 8:39 PM
June 23 Sunrise 5:04 AM Sunset 8:40 PM
June 24 Sunrise 5:04 AM Sunset 8:40 PM
                                       June 25 Sunrise 5:04 AM Sunset 8:40 PM

Notice that the three dates preceding the solstice have almost the same amount of daylight.  The implication is that the solstice lasts more than half a week. 
 
What's the explanation?  Does it have something to do with our location being almost equidistant from the North Pole and Equator?  Or is it a consequence of rounding the precise times?
 
The notion that the solstice lasts for a few days or a week is a very common perception that even ancient astronomers noted.  But mechanically-speaking, it's a beautifully precise illusion caused by trigonometry and orbital mechanics.  
 
The earth orbits the sun in a smooth, continuous curve.  Because the earth is tilted on its axis by 23.5 degrees the angle of the sun relative to earth's equator (called solar declination) changes throughout the year.  If you plot this change on a graph over 365 days it forms a sine wave.
 
At the Equinoxes the curve is at its steepest.  The sun's position changing rapidly every day meaning you notice significant differences in daylight length from one week to the next.
 
At the solstices the curve reaches its absolute peak (or trough).  In calculus and trigonometry the top of the smooth curve has a slope of zero.  As the earth approaches this peak the daily rate of change slows to a crawl. 
 
During the days immediately preceding and following the solstice the difference in length of daylight is measured in seconds (not minutes); consequently, to our everyday clocks and senses it appears static.
 
While the "effect" of the solstice lingers for about a week, the astronomical event itself happens in a precise fraction of a second.  That exact moment is when the earth's axial tilt is inclined closest (or farthest) from the sun.  It is a single point in time occurring simultaneously for everyone on earth regardless of time zone.  For me that is June 21, 3.25 AM CDT.

Apologies for making your head hurt.

Friday, June 19, 2026

Buyer's Remorse?

If anyone had any doubts about the incompetence of President Trump and his administration the Memorandum Of Understanding (MOU) with Iran proves it.  Russia and the United States misunderstood the inability of military might alone to crush small nations like Ukraine and Iran.  Britain's King George learned that lesson 250 years ago; yet that historic parallel is apparently lost on Donald Trump.

There is no regime change, no obliteration of the Iranians' nuclear ambitions, no end to their support of terrorist proxies and no unconditional surrender.  Sure, the Strait of Hormuz may eventually reopen; which is a return to the status quo that existed on February 27 before Donald Trump made a unilateral decision to go to war.  While Iran suffered substantial losses they have emerged from a conflict with the world's most powerful military having learned they can close the Strait any time they choose; and force the world to bend to their will by means of economic extortion.

We gained nothing. 

Iran holds all of its enriched uranium and one solitary man set in motion a cascade of gravely destabilizing events that have had all manner of adverse consequences for global stability, security and the world economy.  All of this at a cost of thousands of lives, billions upon billions of dollars and diminished American prestige.  With global petroleum reserves nearly exhausted; Trump capitulated.

No matter how you spin it, Mr. Trump lost his own war.  

The final deal, if it comes, must hold every red line; no enrichment, full removal of the existing stockpile, verification with teeth, the Strait open and free, permanently.  

Redemption demands nothing less.

Friday Music

I used to have the vinyl double album More Hot Rocks (Big Hits & Fazed Cookies), that included this song; the 3.48 length version.

The original was recorded in West End of London at Regent Sound in January and February of 1964 with two demo versions with, and without, piano.  In a 1971 interview with Rolling Stone, Keith Richards disclosed that most all of the songs on their first album were dubs.   Whoever happened to be at the studio at a given moment would add something.  The group truthfully didn't have much control over the process.

Released in the UK the earliest version did not include the piano; which was corrected with the later release of the LP.  In June of 1964 the shorter edit, 2:47 in duration, was released as a single in the US and peaked at number 24 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Tell Me.... 

Thursday, June 18, 2026

Porch Birds

From the porch a couple of bird photos.

This one taken with a iPhone 14 Pro of a male house finch (left) and brown-headed cowbird (right) copping some seed at a tube feeder in the front yard.

And a trail camera photo of a female house finch indulging her sweet tooth with some grape jelly at the "oriole" feeder.  Which is also universally visited by all manner of other birds.

Be sure to come back periodically for more bird photos that are posted from time-to-time. 

I really need to spring for a good digital camera.  It would amp-up my distance shots of wildlife and nighttime photography.  If anyone has a suggestion leave a message.  You probably know how to find me.  

Stinker

Not unheard-of; but unusual daylight photos. 

No matter how you carve it up; we got skunks coming and going

Round trip… 


 

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

More Spring Color

We've been checking almost daily; finally, from our morning walk yesterday there was this.
 

Huzzah! 

Meet Iris Versicolor -commonly known as Blue Flag Iris or Northern Iris, Harlequin Blue Flag, Larger Blue Flag, Poison Flag, plus other variations of these names.  

Habitats include wet prairies, along rivers, wet woodlands, swamps, edges of ponds and streams and other low-lying areas along rail lines and roadsides.  It likes wet feet - and it grows naturally along the banks of Silver Creek and in low woodland habitat.  A beautiful and delicate wildflower it propagates by means of an underground rhizome.  Native cultures used the root for medicinal purposes.

In Greek mythology Iris is a personification of the rainbow and messenger of the gods - thus explaining the wide range of colors of this member of the iris family.


 

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Sandwich Simplicity

Since we began our day with a different sandwich there is this.  When we returned from our walk in the woods the other day I was hungry for a snack.  Fresh from the garden I’ve been looking forward to this for a year already. 

There is nothing more elegant in its simplicity than the radish sandwich.  Hearkening back to my childhood this was a favorite of my father and remains a summertime indulgence of mine.  It is sublime.   

Ingredients:   

Garden radishes – sliced thin  
Two slices of bread - rye, sourdough, whole wheat - you pick. 
Unsalted sweet cream butter – room temperature  
Sea salt  

Instructions:  

Slather each slice of bread generously with butter.   
Top with radish slices.  
Cracked sea salt over all to taste.  
Yields one sandwich.

You can learn more about the humble radish here.

And Now For Something Completely Different

I'd try this, once... 

Monday, June 15, 2026

Let's Make a Deal

Ships of the world, start your engines.  Let the oil flow!

- Donald Trump 

Trump sought to break Iran's regime and for the present has to settle for reopening the Strait.   

As of the publication of this post at 2:30 PM, Monday nobody has seen the text of "The Deal" opening the Strait of Hormuz.  Perhaps this emerging agreement ends a costly war but it leaves Iran's leadership intact and its nuclear future unclear.  Nevertheless, this is good news.  I'll join the president in celebrating a resumption of the way the world was on February 27, the day before the United States and Israel attacked Iran.  Ending one of the biggest global supply disruptions in decades  is hardly a victory; but it is good news.  

Some immediate thoughts.

The market for oil and other critical products (fertilizer components come to mind) will remain tight for weeks and months while ships are repositioned, damaged infrastructure is assessed and repaired, depleted inventories are rebuilt, mines are removed, crew changes are made and navies, insurers and shipowners are convinced the channel is safe.  Even after traffic picks-up, another 50+ days are needed for oil to arrive in Asia and begin to be refined.  Supply chain relief  won't materialize  until late August and any meaningful normalization would only happen in September at the earliest.

Before this deal crude oil flows have recovered only slightly this month with roughly 10 ships transiting the strait  per day according the commodities and shipping data provider Kpler; a far cry from the normal prewar ship transits of 100+ daily.

Remember this; under Obama's JCPOA no soldiers or civilians were killed, no US bases attacked, no aircraft or ships were lost, no treasure was expended on a war and Iran's enriched uranium was turned over to the custody of the Russians.

Donald Trump unilaterally walked-away from that agreement and in the absence of a replacement Iran embarked on a frenzy of nuclear enrichment.  In 2025 Donald Trump claimed to have obliterated Iran's nuclear program.  And earlier this year unilaterally decided to go to war with Iran.  Consequently, American service members and Iranians were killed and wounded, US bases in the Middle East were targeted and attacked and $34 billion of our treasure expended.  Iran still possesses its enriched uranium, the regime is intact and their nuclear ambitions unresolved. 

Happy Birthday Mr. Trump.  Stay-tuned...

New Recruits

Trail camera pix of the incoming class of 2026
 
A very pregnant doe. 
 
 
And we got babies!
 


 
Click on images for a closer look
 

Sunday, June 14, 2026

Update From The Oriole Ranch

When the orioles first arrived activity on the feeders was brisk with the migrators gorging on fruit and grape jelly. 
 
Business recently has been quiet. The orioles haven’t entirely disappeared - but their feeding habits have switched to abundant high protein insects and insect larvae as they rear their young high in the tree canopy. 
 
Predictably, by July the adults will return with their fledglings to introduce them to the decadence of grape jelly and oranges. 
 
This is always a hoot because the fledglings will find a perch and beg mom or dad to feed them. By the time they’ve figured out how to feed themselves the orioles beat it out of dodge to wing their way to their wintering grounds.
 
Last to arrive and first to depart. 
 
In the interim, The indigo buntings continue to come around to indulge their sweet tooth and partake of the thistle seed in the two finch feeders and ordinary wild bird seed along with most everyone else.
 
As a four year-old visitor recently put it:  What is the blue canary bird called? 
 

 





The Folly of Impulsive Indifferrence

 
The reckless nonchalance with which leaders like Trump and Putin launch wars speaks volumes about their judgement. 

Meanwhile, playing the long game, China bides its time as Russia and the US burn thru lives, resources and treasure.
 
Not only are the Chinese backing their Iranian allies, China's leadership appears to be better-read than Putin and certainly Trump.  
 
True victory comes not from defeating others, but from arranging circumstances so that victory becomes inevitable before conflict arises.

- Sun Tzu 
 
 
 
PSAn MOU is a start; nevertheless, the deal, if it comes, must hold every red line; no enrichment, full removal of the existing stockpile, verification with teeth, the Strait open and free, permanently.  Nothing less.

Saturday, June 13, 2026

Rinse and Repeat

Our dogs have always taken to water.  Our big black Lab famously liked to swim in the big pond before the ice was completely out.  The blonde Lab wouldn't stay out of the creek; and if she got close to a lake it was all over.  Our field red golden retriever has continued the tradition embracing mud season with such gusto that she's earned the nickname: Swamp Collie.

The best part of it is now that it's warmed-up last month we hauled-out her pool and set it up on the patio.  If she returns from a walk all muddy and gross in the pool she goes!

Rinse and repeat.  


 

 

 

Friday, June 12, 2026

Spring Blooms

From our walk to check the trail camera trapline yesterday there was Canada Anemone (Anemone canadensis).  A native perennial.

Friday Music

Produced and directed by Peter Jackson and making reuse of unused footage and audio recordings covering the making of the Beatles' 1970 album Let It Be in a colossal three episode documentary distillation of 21 hours of studio time.

Co-produced by Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Yoko Ono and Olivia Harrison this series was delivered by Disney in association with Apple Corps and WingNut Films.  It premiered in three installments on Disney+ in November of 2021.  I remember watching the Rooftop Concert series back then.  It was subsequently released international in February 2022 and DVD and Blu-Ray the summer of 2022.  You can still find it on various streaming services and for any of you collectors, there is always Amazon Prime.

They don't make musicians like this anymore. 

Here's a teaser; The Beatles: Get Back.....  

Thursday, June 11, 2026

Melt Down

The face of an abuser when confronted by a confident female news correspondent....


 

Wash, Rinse and Repeat

 

When I had a day job I used a Bluetooth device similar to this to talk on the phone. Hands free I could access a file, use my desktop computer or walk about the entirety of the office suite and speak with anyone on the phone. 

Naturally, when I retired I purchased one so hands free I could putter-about my workshop, the machine shed, the garden and make or answer a call. It’s slicker than snot when you're sitting in a deer stand. Best of all with satellite radio and YouTube apps on my device I can listen to music, talk radio or a podcast without bothering anybody.

Last weekend it went missing. And it was maddening to not have a clue as to where it went. So we ordered a replacement from Amazon which arrived the day after the missing device turned-up.

In the dryer.

Apparently I put it in the cargo pocket of my shorts and it went thru a complete wash and dry cycle.

And following a stint on its charger it still works!

Tough device the Plantronics Voyager Legend is.  It earns the absentminded old guy seal of approval.

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Messenger of the Gods Brings More Spring Blooms

Iris is the name of the Greek goddess of the rainbow – who also happens to be the messenger of the gods. This name can also be given in reference to the word (which derives from the same Greek/modern Latin source) for the colored part of the eye and the flower.

The wild-growing blue flag iris - found in the low areas and on the banks of Silver Creek - should begin their seasonal blooms later this month and into the next.  More on that to follow.

Meanwhile, Jill's domestic cultivars bloomed just the last week and are adding some spectacular color around the house and serving the pollinators. 


Jill's father raised iris and at least one of these trace many years of lineage to one of his.

These iris are doing pretty well; actually thriving at a latitude half-way between the equator and the north pole. Tough plant the iris is.  

 

Monday, June 8, 2026

Death To The Invader

Monday brought another bad day for phragmites, reed canary grass and woody invasives out back in the prairie planting.    

Following a prescribed burn in May of 2020 we invited a field team from Robert E. Lee and Associates to return in late summer to perform follow-up chemical treatment.

Since then we've been on a twice a year cycle - spring and fall.    

If you're wondering why I don't just do this myself the short answer is that I probably could - but I'd be breaking the law.  Because the work is performed in a delineated wetland habitat only licensed applicators can pull a permit from Wisconsin DNR and perform the work.  You know me - I'm all about doing things on the up and up. Pulling, cutting and treating other invasives located in less sensitive locations remain my responsibility.

While crew members periodically returned to their truck to refill backpack sprayers with herbicide I chatted it-up with some of them and took the opportunity to look around the pollinator habitat in the immediate yard to see if we had any early bloomers.

Sure enough; there was Ohio spiderwort (Tradescantia ohiensis)

And Golden Alexanders (Zizia aurea)

Both of these are native perennial wildflowers.  And I missed a shot of a monarch butterfly on the plant in the photo above.  Oh well.  

You can learn more about NES Ecological Services here

Meanwhile, Death To The Invaders!