Another Party

This time at the Nies estate in Oconomowoc.  Complete with ribs from the Big Green Egg and a baseball game.

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Here Ellie is writing up the day's events (including our long bike ride) in her journal

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Also on the program, a few magic tricks, and other circus acts.

Beautiful day—cloudy through noon but then clearing, and pleasantly cool.

To The Zoo

With all five grandkids, and their moms.  

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Good for us, we went early. That meant we were leaving (about one) just as the temperature was reaching discomfort levels. The Milwaukee County Zoo is a fun place, and these five kids know it well, and they all stayed out of the gorilla cage.

Sunny, humid, and much too hot. A heavy thunderstorm last night (for me, the first of the season) with about 2.5 inches of rain in about 2 hours. An alarm on cell phones about 1:00 AM with a flash flood warning. But by that time Pax was already in the basement (and Sue, too, just to keep him company). The only flashes after all, lightning.

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First Fireflies

Occasional light showers.  

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Attended Will's pre-school graduation party at the JCC. Then Japanese takeout at the Foxpoint homestead.

Ellie and Katy had their last day of 5-K today. Maddie wrapped up her pre-school career yesterday. And Becca is looking still looking forward to her academic career.

Jungle

Leave a yard for five weeks in the spring and that's what you get.  

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Mostly cloudy with a lovely, cool north wind—not what I expected, but perfect for planting the garden and for trimming the jungle—and some long dog walks.

Pax did well, apparently delighted to be back on familiar olfactory pathways. No limping over a long distance. I'm glad to have my Whitewater walking pal back in condition.

Road Weary

Back in Whitewater, with a brief stop in Fox Point for a bike ride and a bite to eat, and to pick up our plants (squash, tomatoes, peppers, etc. started by Ab).

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A parade of little thunderstorms all the way from the Soo to Milwaukee. Dramatic clouds, and pretty good rain too.

Good Rain

Moderate and steady for three or four hours. Misty and drizzling all day. No runoff, no flooding-- just a nice soaking. Beets and kale up in the garden along with beans and cucumbers. Peas starting to climb the walls.  

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All packed for early departure tomorrow. It's been a fine five weeks, gone by far too fast.  

Entre Les Ètoiles...

...Star flowers that is, lighting up the forest floor.

Also, this is the time of year for for bunchberry, the earliest anemones, and brave lady slippers.

Also, horseflies. The black-flies are gone, and the mosquitoes have been insignificant (thanks to the drought), but the deer-flies are flying. Horse/deer-flies like sun and attack from above. So, a good hat is a necessity, and shade is a friend.

For us...a day of puttering and recreation: poison ivy control, gardening, truck washing, a fine sail on the Windrider, and a walk through the woods from Murray and Elaine's to here. Sippy-cups on the deck, then a fine stir-fry, and then an episode of Suits.

All we could possibly ask for is rain.

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Photo courtesy of Sue.

Photo courtesy of Sue.

Bateau Poli

A full day of boat work.  

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Washing, waxing, wiping. Buffing and polishing. Cetol-ing. All the basic stuff, now that we are done with the masts and electronics. Whoever said, "Sailing is like standing fully clothed in a cold shower while tearing up hundred dollar bills," (Cornelius Vanderbilt, I think) obviously did not have to do his own boat work. Otherwise he would have mentioned sweating in the hot sun, straining to buff the topsides.

But, we are done (except for the transducer), and Heliotrope is launch ready!

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We did break for lunch (provided by Buoy's) in a rather idyllic setting. And we did attempt to meet the nap requirement by pushing sails and anchor lines aside to find a few minutes of horizontal space below decks (while Pax napped at keel level). And we did chat (from time to time) with other boaters.

BTW, for those not familiar with boating terminology, a deck is a complete set of playing cards.

Another Fine Day

A little rain last night, a lot of sun today. Strong west wind blowing any bugs past Ottawa.  

Mother Nature's rain gauge—just a poplar leaf lying on the Lane.

Mother Nature's rain gauge—just a poplar leaf lying on the Lane.

A little house work, a little boat work.

It turns out that the depth finder I so carefully installed is not the right device, not NMEA 2000. Bad advice from the sales rep who sold it to me. So, now I get to rip the dang thing out, pay for a new one (which looks just the same as the old one), and enjoy the installation process once again.

But not to worry. This sort of thing is just one of the joys of boating.

NMEA 2000

Getting the new electronics working on Heliotrope.  

Great blue heron over a blue Mudge Bay.

Great blue heron over a blue Mudge Bay.

New masthead wind speed and direction sensor, new depth finder, and new GPSMap chartplotter and sensor display all installed (with cables running down one mast through several bulkheads, and up another mast) and connected up to an NMEA bus. But not easy. One problem being the boat's original wiring, which turns out to be backwards from what is conventional (boat built in Japan in 1978 where/when black was positive and white was neg). It took a few blown fuses to figure that one out. And then the supposedly NMEA compliant depth finder has a plug at the end of the long cable I snaked through the bilge that doesn't fit the NMEA bus. I'm hoping there's an adapter.

Overall, nice, smart work by Norm. What I really like about Norm is that he never panics, never freaks out—even when nothing works and nothing makes any sense. His great experience and great mechanical aptitude never fail to assure him that there is always a solution.

Clouds most of the day, staving off more sunstroke, and a little light rain right now.

Sticks Back Up

While Sue worked away cottage-side, finishing up and cleaning up, I worked with Norm to get Heliotrope's masts back up.  

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Stepping masts is a nervous-making, technical challenge—dealing with heavy loads and high heights and minute adjustments. (But, really, what could be more fun?) (Note the new wind instrument at the top of the mainmast.) The next challenge will be connecting all the wiring and electronics. Will the anchor light work? The strobe? The spreader lights? The radio? Will the new masthead wind instrument display useful data on the new display?

We'll see.

Buttercups

Lovely day, with a powerful west wind and cottonball clouds in a cerulean sky.  

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The last upstairs bedroom is finished—trimmed and painted. And that means the entire interior of the house is finished. A milestone. All that's left is the porch. 

As I was mowing the patch of lawn over the weeping bed—recent moisture has actually got the grass (and other things) growing—I glimpsed Pax moving fast downslope toward the water with something big dangling from his jaws. I left the mower and hustled after, but by the time I got to the shore all I foiund was Pax swimming. No sign of any victim. Decidedly odd—Pax prefers wading to swimming, and I know I saw something.

The Water's Edge

Another day, another hydro outage.  No juice from seven to one. But we've become accustomed, and have adapted. Today's adaptation was a trip up to the Esso for coffee (their generator enables the pumping of gas the the brewing of coffee). And then down to the small boat harbor where Pax wandered while we sat on rocks and sipped our morning brew.

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There always is a water's edge, and this, above, is one of them. One one side is land, on the other side, all of Lake Michigan, Lake Huron, Green Bay and Georgian Bay.

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Dedicated a few un-rushed hours to getting the Windrider carefully re-rigged. To do so, I ran the boat up on the marina beach so I could walk around and tug on various things. That meant wading, nearly up to the knees, as I worked around the boat. But, ouch! The water so cold (wind blowing out) it felt like ice cubes clamped to my ankles. And yet, a few kids were wading around, and even going down the water slide (and ending up totally immersed).

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The lilacs are breaking into bloom.

The Chase

Pax almost caught... 

The prey. 

The prey. 

The predator.  

The predator.  

...what I think is a giant muskrat.

Pax flushed it out of the brush along the path between us and Tyson's, and was nipping at its tail (round, not flat) as it raced into the water. Once deep enough it dove, and that's when Pax lost it. Quite an energetic bit of rodent work for a dog still recovering from knee surgery. 

The Windrider

The Windrider

Otherwise, finished trimming the upstairs bedroom, and then launched the Windrider (with help from Bruce and Andrew). Stepping the mast is always a challenge (and on processes that are repeated only annually memory of how to do stuff usually fails just when you need it), but, still, fewer snafus this year than in times past. The boat floats, and the mast points up.

Growing Weather

Last night's rain... 

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...got everything revitalized. Farmers at the farmer's market in Gore Bay seemed a happy lot, although our farmer/baker (who specializes in date bars) fears she night have lost hundreds of cabbages in her back acres due to the May drought.

Morning fog, which made me wish I was out sailing. Also, morning boat work, with Sue up on deck going at the deck and cabin top, and me down in the bilge aligning and gluing in the base of the new depth transponder.

Purvis whitefish for dinner tonight (farmer's market); and a freezer pretty full from our stop at Burt Farm on the way home.

In the afternoon: while Sue was caulking the battens in the almost finished upstairs bedroom, I planted out the circle garden—10 tomatoes (a variety from two of the farmers at the market) along with peas, beans, onions, garlic, beets, kale, and cucumbers. Not enough space for potatoes, and I've given up on carrots. And then down in the driveway—the perennial herb garden, of course, but also basil and cilantro.

Also, today, post rain—mosquitoes, a dragon fly, and several tree frogs, just tuning up. The ash trees have leafed out enough to appear to have leaves; and all around Island lilacs are coming into bloom.

More Humid

Even a brief rain this morning, enough to wet the ground.  

Fellow shade lovers.

Fellow shade lovers.

UPDATE! It is pouring with rain! Raining stair rods. Earlier today I watched the radar show two huge swaths of precipitation move our way, only to split and leave us with a shower. A big patch, about the size of France, went south. And a bigger patch went north.

But then, this evening, as I wast lighting the grill, Sue showed me another big blob heading right for the Island, with a precip forecast of 100%. I did some quick calculation and came up with a probability of 8.567%. But, by golly, as I was flipping burgers, some drops began to fall, and it has been raining nicely ever since. 

I even got to wear my raincoat. It's not that I am worried about the water level, it's just that I fear the weird things climate change can do. (Think India.) And I was beginning to worry about the forest (ala Fort McMurray), and the farmers (market tomorrow in Gore Bay), and the poor little peas in my garden.

This evening's rain cancels all my worries. Planting tomatoes and beans tomorrow. Maybe even seeing of the mower will start—might have to trim the scraggly sward over the septic system.

 

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