Showing posts with label felix. Show all posts
Showing posts with label felix. Show all posts

Tuesday, 13 December 2022

The snow fell!

That's a cold one! Nothing like out west last week, but at least there is a wee bit of snow to protect us and insulate the critters. In the meantime, the lead up.

Saturday morning, we had a visitor.


Sunday morning we had the same visitor. (I think!) I thought I'd set up the tripod and get better photos. 



 The pumpkins - Nov. 2nd vs. Dec. 12. They are whittling away at them. 



Poor Frosty. He is falling apart. He needs a new hat. He is doing well, all things considered. He's been repainted many times. Compare him to Frosty and Josephine in 2010. I truthfully don't know how old he is or where my parents got him. 

Then there is Felix. He is dressed for the season. My daughter-in-law made him and gifted him to me. It's supposed to be Jesse, my middle kid! She made two of them for their wedding reception in her mom's backyard.

Before the snow fell, the fawn with the sore leg was back. There was a fawn and a buck, too.

 

hurt fawn from Jennifer Jilks on Vimeo.

The bucks are dominant, and seem to charge the fawns, who understand the hierarchy, and run off playfully.

buck action from Jennifer Jilks on Vimeo.

I took out the garbage about 7:30 Monday morning. I went back out after breakfast to use the snowblower.  It was brisk. I am sore today. Those are muscles I haven't used in awhile. JB is still sore from his fall, so we are a perfect pair of old farts! 

snowblower from Jennifer Jilks on Vimeo.

Just after I finished, I heard a familiar sound. 

canada geese from Jennifer Jilks on Vimeo.

Friday, 22 April 2016

We have an orphaned deer!

One of my faithful readers and commenters, William Kendall , asked what I thought the deer and ducks thought of one another. (They were both on the trailcam video.) They don't seem to come into contact much, except when our Bambi stands in the water and eats the cat tails. Hard to say!

They are wary of the cats, however. Buster was bad for drawing them, but they would follow us on our forest walkies. They are curious about teeny (7 lb.) Daisy!


Buster liked to pop up from behind the deer feeder, truly looking for Dratted Red Squirrel, not deer. They watched Felix and Oliver, too!


Recently, here is our little yearling, a female, I think, orphaned this winter. She is very careful of the cats, giving Daisy a hard stomp in warning. Daisy ignored the deer! She has enough instinct to be safe, and to eat. The females stick together, in sibling and family groups. The males go on their way. Most have dispersed to their wider summer yards, the males and females go different ways, and spread out to maximize the food sources.

We've been trying to think of a name for said deer. Orphan Annie would be fun, but we already have Anniebelle, as we affectionately call her! Any thoughts, faithful, creative readers?




Thursday, 16 July 2015

Catalpa tree leaves

August hailstorm!


 The blossoms are beautiful, and it is an impressive tree. The blossoms spent, they will grow long seed pods. We have two just outside our front door, as well as a ton in the rest of the forest. I love them. They draw birds, bees, and lots of insects.

The leaves, at the end of summer, are larger than my hand once they are full size.
jade-coloured beetle
All of our cats like to climb it.
This is baby Buster and the late Felix

The birds love the shelter of the leaves, as do the cats. The other day, a pair of song sparrows scared off a purple finch!
orchid spider

Ancient Catalpa tree in Westport

I started taking photos of the Catalpa tree leaves in mid-May. I am fascinated how a tree can create these huge leaves. I made the photos into a video.


catalpa leaves from Jennifer Jilks on Vimeo.
I took photos beginning mid-May, as the leaves began to grow. Ain't nature grand?!

Sunday, 29 March 2015

To climb a tree: forest bathing with happy cats

We're all mourning someone, something or something dear to us. I mourned my work life, as a teacher, when I could do that no longer. I felt important, working with all of my special needs students, particularly. I still mourn that sense of purpose. It's difficult finding something meaningful to do.

While mourning Sady, it brings up all the mourning we have had in our hearts and souls. When Buster and his late brother, Felix, and I would go walkies in the forest they would launch themselves up a tree. They were such a pair. They weren't yet a year when Felix was hit by a car. Buster mourned as much as we did. When I would take him for a walk he was so slow on along the forest trail. He wasn't his free, happy, joyful kitten self. It broke my heart, as I couldn't explain what had happened, or I wasn't sure he understood.

It was a good lesson for our granddaughters: look both ways when you cross the street. I tried collars, but that didn't work. Buster, at least survived.

Here are my fave trees and antler shed
Over time, now that he is 3, he is a bit slower and less impulsive. We've done many walks since, and he lags behind, moewing. He's a big brother to Daisy, who adores him. We call her Buster II, as she not only shadows him, but does all the things he does. Daisy hangs with her brother more than her twin Dorah, who is more of a house cat.
They go on walks with me together. It makes me feel whole again.
This is what makes Daisy and Buster happy: the warmth of the trees, embracing the spring solstice, the promise of spring in the melted snow. The smell of spring is healing. What was knee-deep snow, is slowly disappearing.
This big, old cedar tree is a favourite of theirs. It's part of a magical lane, sheltering the deer in winter. This is where I found some deer beds one day, and my largest antler.




Tree climbing from Jennifer Jilks on Vimeo.
The cats love forest bathing as much as I do. The much prefer getting up into the trees, though, where the bark keeps some of the warmth of the sun.

Saturday, 1 November 2014

Black cats: in honour of Hallowe'en

 Sadly, Felix, Mitzie, and Oliver have crossed that rainbow bridge, but we have excellent memories and a monument! Black cats have a tendency not to be adopted in Humane Society offices. They have their own personality traits, research says (read my research results here).

Felix and Buster
Oliver's Lot
The girls and Buster
Tigger and Oliver
Buster and Felix
Felix

Buster grooms Dorah, having hugged Daisy
Buster and Felix - my favourite photo!
Oliver: broke 3 aquarium lids!

Buster and Felix
Oliver and Mitzie

Oliver and Sadie
Oliver
Buster