Life in 'the tropics' of Southern Indiana, the high desert of the southwest and back to 'the tropics' with the hounds and dogs.
November 03, 2017
Deer Not 30' Away From Hounds
For the second time that I can remember these past few months, deer was so close to Sadie and Stella you would have expected their famous all out sprint after them while baying loudly. Yet, just like last time neither bloodhound noticed. Bloodhounds are bred to flush deer out of the woods and/or to find them after they are shot. It's in their DNA!!! This morning ... not a response and the deer was right there !!!!
It all started around midnight last night as a severe thunderstorms blew in. Since I took this picture in the dark without a tripod the photo is blurry but at least it shows one toad was taking cover inside the carport before the storms hit. One of the best thunderstorms I had seen and heard in a while. You would have thought it was in April or May. The sky lit up like daylight and I thought that bolt of lightning was right outside the window.
It wasn't suppose to last much longer after 1am. I'm not sure when it stopped as I fell into a coma and stayed that way all night, past our normal time to start our day. With a bright sun, winds coming out of the NE it was a little nippy on the walk this morning ... yet after a fresh rain Stella found the grass to taste better than ever.
Sadie ran out way ahead of us, nothing out of the ordinary. Both hounds were into the scent searching mode this morning and you could tell the deer traffic was heavy along the edge of the woods right behind our house.
Stella is walking along a worn path by deer traffic.
In September I started taking pictures of these three areas to track the changing colors of the fall leaves. There are still a lot of leaves still on the trees. The longer we walked, the brighter the sun shined and the brighter the leaves became.
Still ... there was no deer scent in the air nor any sign of them on the horizon. The normal walking activity continued.
You can barely tell from the photo but those areas where the wild growth have been mashed down are deer paths down into the woods or upward from the woods into the field that the deer take.
Sadie was a little deeper into the brush than normal but wasn't beyond excitement. Usually when deer are near she is frantic and has uncontrollable excitement. Not today.
While taking this photograph I noticed something white ... just left of dead center and at the edge of the taller brush. When I took the camera way from my eye that white spot got much larger. Without my glasses it wasn't clear what it was but I thought it might be a white plastic bag blowing around and had become stuck in the brush.
After looking closer at this next picture, I clicked on it to make it bigger and you can see the deer is standing between the hounds, just below the top of the picture or just past the tall brush.
About the time that thought came to mind ...
That "white plastic bag" moved ... and moved fast.
It is the first time in six years of taking blog photos that I have been able to catch a deer in their horizontal mid air flight ... mid air, yes ... but not horizontal.
You would have thought by now the sounds of loud baying bloodhounds would have been in the chase like they have done in past years. If you were walking with me you would have been shocked at their reaction.
They did not even lift their heads, move a muscle, didn't bay, didn't take off running. The deer had jumped out just on the other side of that tall brush to the right of them. In what I call the 'far right corner' of the field. I couldn't believe it!!!
As they both turned into that area I still did not see any excitement by either hound. In fact Sadie was not even close to where the deer was standing or was bent over eating grass when I first saw her.
Stella finally figured out what had happened so she took off running but she didn't bay like she normally does when deer are in the area ... nor was she sprinting.
Even then she was slow to respond even after she was right at the point where the deer jumped into the woods.
To them ... what would have been a exciting deer chase in the past ... was nothing more than a normal uneventful walk. Neither hound had any frantic reactions to what I saw.
Stella decided it was time for some scratching. You can see today is so much different than yesterday's dark and gloomy sky. I was still trying to process just how big the deer was and how close it was to the hounds when it escaped.
By this point of the walk the deer sighting was a distant memory to me and not even on the radar of the hounds. To them it was nothing more than another of many Friday morning walks.
Stella thought she had found something on the way home. In this area I would suspect she smells the invisible field cat that roams at night, fighting sometimes and keeps the mice under control.
Sadie is looking at nothing in particular. She is probably wondering if Stella is going to end this walk or are we going to stay out here all day.
One last look to see if deer were following us ... they never do nor expected to. It just shows how nice today is even if it's in the 50's. If I were to mow a nice circular golf green out there it would be a nice Par 3 hole.
For once in her life, Stella is waiting for me to head to the house instead of vise versa.
Sadie doesn't have a clue what she missed.
I have started a folder in my Apple Photos program named 'deer'. I don't know why I have not done that before. After I go back and add all the deer photos of the past 6 years into that folder I'll be able to see their trends and when they show up.
It was yesterday afternoon when I ran out of my 20Gb of data that I pay for every month. My billing cycle starts on the 11th of every month so I ran out about 8 days too soon. The main reason for running out of data was during the past month I couldn't wait until 2am to start all of the different macOS High Sierra updates. I did those large (1-3Gb) file downloads during my normal times, thus wasting my data.
I planned weeks ago of running out at the pace I was using data. $15 would get me an additional 5Gb of data. Any of that not used by the 11th would be carried over until I needed additional data again.
A funny thing happened though and so far as of 12:23pm today it is still working. I know and expect download speeds to decrease after my paid data is gone. That is a known fact, a part of the contract. Instead of getting speeds of 45-47Mbps I now get a little over 1Mbps. That 1Mbps were speeds we dreamed of in 1996. In today's world sometimes email won't download, photos won't upload to a blog, websites may or may not load ... so people buy more data to get them through the end of the month.
Last night during the severe thunderstorms, where my HughesGen 5 satellite service never lost it's signal from space ... websites were still downloading fast, my blog where most posts have 20-30 photos each was downloading normal. Another words I was seeing no decrease in internet performance. It was so good that I did a speed test and found Hughes had decreased my internet speeds to 1.46Mbps as I knew it would.
I knew today would be the real test. In the past at lower speeds my photos would not finish loading into the blog post I was writing. So I'd pull out my billfold and buy another few gigs that would put me back to normal speeds of 45-48Mbps. This post has 31 photos that loaded normally, maybe a little slower than usual but they still loaded okay.
I also did a large 3.3Gb file download for the macOS update for beta users. It completed in the same time it would have normally taken. I found that to be really strange and unexpected for two reasons. One, decreased download speeds that should have made that crawl and two, in the morning when many other users are downloading that same update at the same time.
So I have not had to buy additional data yet. It might be my lucky month for the next week.
I almost forgot to tell you that as a test I used the block on the blog to subscribe to my blog by email. I wanted to check to see if it worked and how long it would take for me to get a new blog post in my inbox. I am sad to say it took 14 hours from the time I posted this post for it to show up in my inbox.
For those of you that subscribe via email, is that normal for you ... 14 hours after I post? If so, it might be better if you would either bookmark the blog, added to your Feedly account for immediate updates or look for my blog on other blog lists ... if that 14 hour difference bothers you.
Today will be more of the same activities we do everyday with some added house cleaning in preparation for our Saturday College Football Marathon.
The hounds need to get their noses calibrated it looks like, here in 'the tropics' of Southern Indiana.
November 02, 2017
Hounds Enjoy The Heat Wave
Everything looked the same this morning. Windy, overcast skies and signs of recent rain. Yet there was a huge difference as we started our morning walk. It was a 29° difference and a coat, gloves and ski cap wasn't needed in the 62° weather. I am not sure if the hounds noticed or not, they were excited as usual that we were heading outside.
With it raining most of the afternoon yesterday once again they didn't stay out long after they had their lunch. It does mean that Heidi makes her appearance within camera range for her second trip of the day outside. She walked as close to the house as possible, under the overhang to stay dry, but once she headed to the yard she tip-toed one paw at a time to check how wet it was.
You can see just how close the Azaleas miss the rain for water, just to the front edge. It's like that on all four of them. I placed them in the middle to allow for growth and not having them hang into the yard when they are fully grown. I guess I'll find out my next move next spring if they survive the winter.
With all the rain yesterday and last night, Stella had some nice fresh wet grass to choose from this morning. She stretches each blade of grass out like she is using it to floss her teeth.
I could tell soon after we started that Stella would probably not be joining us this morning, then going off on her own. I was almost at the first turn when I started to wonder if Sadie was even going to come with me. As usual she started sprinting toward me when she saw I was too far ahead.
One last look at Stella had me thinking this might be a day she disappears into the woods by the time we get back. In the past I can only assume that is where she goes when we can't find her after a hour of searching and calling her name. She will always come home on her own not too long after we finish the walk. I'd rather have her in view instead of wandering.
With the strong winds behind me from the southwest I as amazed just how different the temperature was compared to just 24 hours ago. We are still looking at Sunday being above 70°.
This picture doesn't tell the story. To me that looks like freezing weather with wind and even possible snow. It is one that I will see this January when it is that cold. I am very happy at this part of the walk to feel the warm air.
Sadie doing her normal exploring ... her walks never change no matter if we take two or three of them in a day.
As I continued to walk home I could barely make out a moving object far in the distance. I lifted the camera to my eye with the lens at 200mm and could barely see it was Stella. She was moving at pretty good speed in the direction of the neighbor's woods.
I gave Sadie my normal command of "go get Stella" and she was off.
I thought I was going to catch them tap noses so I left the camera on them ready to capture a picture of that happening. Not today. In fact Sadie spent time checking out what Stella had found before leading her back to the path we take.
From the half mile walk, sometimes for Stella the last 100' is the slowest and longest of all. She will get distracted right up until the time she is standing at the door, nudging the round door handle with her nose hoping it will open. Here is an example of that slow 100' in today's walk.
You might think she is on her way to the house but when I turned around again to check on her she had walked back out into the field.
Once I yelled her name ... she headed toward the house.
But again .... sharp right turn to see what that is ... nothing is ever definite with her.
Finally she realizes it's time to come in and start that morning nap that will carry her to lunch ... life is tough for a bloodhound.
Not much planned again today but my food supply is telling me it's time for a grocery trip again. I usually stop and grab a 40# bag of dog food for the hounds on the way home even with a few days of meals left from the previous bag. That 40# lasts on average 17 days for two bloodhounds and a basset hound.
With the World Series finishing last night I am back to two sports to follow ... college football and in about ten days college basketball. My NFL time has decreased a lot this year, down from last year and that seems to be the trend nationwide.
Another great day here in 'the tropics' of Southern Indiana ... it's warm again.
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