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    Nature

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion
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    • RockChalkinTexas 0R Online
      RockChalkinTexas 0
      last edited by

      The infamous she shed!!!!
      image.png

      #RCJH GO KU

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      • RockChalkinTexas 0R Online
        RockChalkinTexas 0
        last edited by

        Typical terrain of the lots:

        Lot 59 terrain.jpg

        #RCJH GO KU

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        • RockChalkinTexas 0R Online
          RockChalkinTexas 0
          last edited by

          Today's post is of a giant moth I found in my bed of loriopes one morning when I was watering. Just amazing what you can see in his defense mechanismsl
          Moth.jpg

          #RCJH GO KU

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          • C Offline
            crimsonblu22
            last edited by

            Nice sheshed!

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            • RockChalkinTexas 0R Online
              RockChalkinTexas 0
              last edited by

              Today's post is rather alarming. Late afternoon yesterday this mangy coyote showed up near the deer water bucket just outside our kitchen garden window. There's been only one other time I saw a coyote (mind you I can hear them off in the distance at times) was when I was on a walk with friends 12 years ago and one ran across the road in front of us down in a little valley and disappeared into the thicket. He came from the 2 lots I own away from all my contiguous lots. We saw another group of walkers on the other side of the little valley and they took off running. I often wondered if they saw it again.

              20260418_175744.jpg

              #RCJH GO KU

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              • RockChalkinTexas 0R Online
                RockChalkinTexas 0
                last edited by

                Did you ever ponder how one miniscule aspect of life has such a great impact on our planet? I have and still do.Thought of what Jaybate would have added to the conversation. I love, love, love Sir David Attenborough and what he has done for our planet...making us aware that all life is connected and we have to care for it. I used to watch a PBS show with Marty Stouffer called Wild America back in the early 80's as well as Marlin Perkins and Jim Fowler on Wild Kingdom. Mike situated the string lines for our house 3 different ways in order to sit the house between the trees so that we only had to take one out when we built the house. He had a wide knowledge for outdoor living and so we camped out a lot here and made our plans. We bought our first 2 lots on a contract for deed basis and paid $75 a month for each lot beginning in 1981 and saved our money while living in a dump $150 duplex in Central Austin. We started the house in Sept. of 84 and moved in 4 months and 2 days later, on our wedding anniversary. He put up the 40' x 60' metal building all by himself (with the help of a crane) in 2009. All the other outbuildings he would draw out, we'd go over it, and then one day I would come home from work and it would be done!

                ladybug.jpg

                #RCJH GO KU

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                • RockChalkinTexas 0R Online
                  RockChalkinTexas 0
                  last edited by

                  Have had over 2 inches of rain overnight. Slow, steady kinda rain. Rain all day. The best of what nature has to offer. Making Hershey's kisses peanut butter cookies to warm up the kitchen. Today's picture is of a small collection of arrow points, knives, scrapers, and flint pieces used in various ways that we unearthed when Mike and the girls and I dug trenches everywhere around the perimeter of our house to put in irrigation. We dug, dumped the dirt in buckets and hauled them to the sifter to run it through and inspect what was left for artifacts. Was gruling work for us girls but we found so many fossils, pottery pieces and rocks that I would take to work with me. There was an attorney I worked with that had a secondary degree in archeology and could look at one of my pieces and tell me what period it was from and how old and what it was used for. He always looked forward to seeing me after a weekend of work. The developer of our subdivision owned 20,000 acres back in the 50s and ran it as a ranch for cattle. We still have one of the loading banks they used and there are still insulators in the trees where they first ran electricty. He told me a lot of history and that they had pretty much excavated all the indian mounds around here and I saw some of his best arrow points. I have a perfect one that Mike and I found while digging at the University of Texas site right before they were going to lose it to sewer pipe trenching for a new subdivision. It's over 6,000 years old and Mike found a sea pod that is over 11 million years old per the attorney. I walk down by the lake when it's low and can find all kinds of fossils. I am a sucker for hauling home more rocks that you can imagine. I put them in the pots when replanting and even have an old aquariam that I filled with all my rocks. I would love to get a metal detector as there is a place where I found an old foundation of a cabin off in my property across the street from our house.

                  arrow points.jpg

                  #RCJH GO KU

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                  • rockchalkjayhawkR Offline
                    rockchalkjayhawk
                    last edited by

                    Hey, those aren't cookies! 🙂

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                    • RockChalkinTexas 0R Online
                      RockChalkinTexas 0
                      last edited by

                      20260420_123709.jpg

                      #RCJH GO KU

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                      • rockchalkjayhawkR Offline
                        rockchalkjayhawk
                        last edited by

                        Now those look like cookies! 🙂 mmm.

                        C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • C Offline
                          crimsonblu22 @rockchalkjayhawk
                          last edited by

                          @rockchalkjayhawk looks like u took a bite out of the 2nd one on the bottom rt. Hmm

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                          • rockchalkjayhawkR Offline
                            rockchalkjayhawk @crimsonblu22
                            last edited by

                            @crimsonblu22 said in Nature:

                            @rockchalkjayhawk looks like u took a bite out of the 2nd one on the bottom rt. Hmm

                            I wish!

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                            • RockChalkinTexas 0R Online
                              RockChalkinTexas 0
                              last edited by

                              They were super crumbly when the girls took them off the pan after baking. Melt in your mouth crumbly. Yummmm.

                              #RCJH GO KU

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                              • RockChalkinTexas 0R Online
                                RockChalkinTexas 0
                                last edited by RockChalkinTexas 0

                                HAPPY EARTH DAY!!!!! I was a sophomore in high school in Leavenworth in 1970 when the first Earth Day was celebrated. I remember Robert Redford being a big part of this endeavor to wake people up about the connection we all have to making sure our planet is happy, healthy and keeping the environment rather than paving everything with asphalt and concrete. Robert used to vacation in Austin as a young boy and was in awe of the Barton Springs pool, which is fed by a natural spring. He narrated a documentary on it and the activists that were demanding construction be limited at the Spring's beginning started a years long fight by the Citizens of Austin to protest the development upstream by a "less than caring individual", Jim Bob Moffat, who with all his money thought he could rape the land to gain a profit. At a City Hall hearing that went on for over 24 hours, the City of Austin denied his development permit and the Springs were saved. From time to time they have to close it due to runoff from the other developments that were allowed upstream and it is a never ending fight to keep the Springs healthy. It's a constant 68 degrees and people swim in it year round, even in winter, and it is a shock to your system when you jump in on a 100 degree day! There is a salamander that is on the threatened species list and a cave cricket that was also found and were able to declare it a federally protected habitat. One of our clients owned a 2,700 acre ranch where the headwaters for Barton Springs began and I got to help the ranch owners protect their land with conservation easements with the City of Austin and The Nature Conservancy, whereby their land will never be sold for commercial development and is monitored yearly for control burns, hunting, grazing and wildflower restoration. Each year this family had an open house and Mike and I went to several, which included hiking to the beginning of the Springs and seeing the flora and fauna. Just breathtaking. We all can do our part to keep what we have before it is too late. That's why I plant so many polinator flowers. My wild sunflowers are a haven for the migrating Monarchs and this year I didn't even pull up the dandelions because before all the spring flowers have bloomed, the dandelion is one of the few plants out there when the bees need it the most.

                                Barton-Springs-Pool34.webp

                                #RCJH GO KU

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