Sunday, April 19, 2026

spring

First things first:
the bloodroot is blooming.
For me, this marks the turning point into Spring.
We may still have freezes and snow and ice,
but there is no turning back.
It is now Spring.


In point of fact, we have had more than one day in the past week
when the temperature has suddenly rocketed into the 80s.
In the shade.
It has not been pleasant for any of us.

Today is wet, drizzly, gloomy, and cool.
Lovely April day in New England.
After chores this morning,
we all just snugged in for a cozy, lazy day.
But first, knowing that Moxie and Della would be mostly indoors,
I brought out the Good Stuff.

I well remember harvesting this with Moxie.


In other news, we've been having visits from a bear.
This is not as much fun as it may sound.
A friend gave me a heads-up on the 7th that a bear had killed two goats and destroyed three chicken coops not far north of my place. Thinking the bear was likely to be moving south through the woods and wetlands behind my property, I stayed up all night watching the barncams. My clothes and tools were lined up at the back door so I could be dressed and out in moments.

A little after 3 AM, the bear was here. Inside the perimeter fence and also inside the paddock fence just behind the barn. A little paddock with two does in it. I dashed out and opened the gates in the little barn paddocks so goats would not be trapped, then banged my mop against anything that would make a loud noise. I didn't see which way the bear went, so I walked the paddocks for two hours until nearly daybreak. When I came inside, it started to snow.

The next night, I stayed up again, watching the cameras. The bear waited til nearly 4 AM. I didn't see it, but thanks to the goatcams, I saw the goats see it. Out. More banging and walking. If the morning's snow had lasted more than a few hours, I probably could have tracked it.

Dara pointing out what the bear did to one of several stock panels.
Rude, isn't it, Dara?
A bear coming along and bending steel panels like they're made of straw.


The next night, the 9th, I was feeling a bit light-headed and wondering if I could risk getting a little early sleep and then watching the cameras from midnight to morning. I had just gotten into bed about 9PM, and was adjusting all the camera settings when one of the four camera screens, the one nearest the house, was suddenly filled with Bear.

Shoes, a walking stick, and a flashlight, and out the back door in time to send the bear, which was right there at the portico, back over the perimeter fence and into the woods behind my property. I was roaring and banging my stick and it was quite a relief in a way to be able to yell at the actual source of anxiety and sleeplessness and worry. I walked the paddocks again, and because it was so early, knew I'd be watching and probably doing more walking and banging during the wee hours. Which was the case. As it turned out, I learned the next day that the bear had gone a few houses down the road and destroyed another flock of chickens.
This is a bad situation.

Every night since I've been out at least once, walking and banging and talking to the goats. 
There have been so many sleepless nights now that we are all trying to nap a bit during the day.


Some of us are better at it than others.

Yesterday I added a new component to my goat defense:
a set of "driveway alert" sensors. This is something a friend has done at her barn, where she had a lot of trouble with a bear last year. The battery-powered motion sensors relay a signal to a plug-in receiver with speaker, which is typically kept in a house to alert the homeowner to visitors, wanted or otherwise.

(Just search for "owl driveway sensors" if interested in these.)

 In my case, the sensors are being tested in areas between my perimeter fence and the barnyard, and receiver is in the open doorway of the barn. Instead of the speaker announcing "Driveway" or "Garage" or playing a jolly tune or siren, it provides the sound of a barking dog. My hope is that the sensors will catch the movement of a bear before it gets to the paddocks and the barking from the barn will scare it off or at least slow it down long enough for me to get out there.
And maybe I could sleep between alarms instead of staring at cameras literally all night.
Here's hoping.

Unrelated: an update on the moving target jaw pain. The morning of the 10th (yes, hours after running off the bear and after the third night of no sleep at all) I hired a kind helper to drive me back to the oral surgery where the surgeon, possibly realizing I was never going to stop calling and describing more/different pain and begging for help, agreed to fit me in and extract a tooth before starting his day's scheduled appointments. I was honestly not sure how much of the overall problem was related to this tooth, but I did feel it was a contributing factor and the pain was so severe I was quite desperate to take action. Upshot: molar extracted. Several new bottles of prescriptions on the nightstand and a complex medication schedule to be followed.
Beginning the very next day, I had the closest thing to a pain-free day since early February. As far as the long-term situation goes, I'm assuming nothing, and I'll still need to see a regular dentist. But right now I'm healing up and taking each pain-free hour as the gift it truly is.
It truly, truly is.

And I'm eating.
Carefully.



And on we go.




Spring!
(and I just looked up from the screen to see that it's snowing)

~~~~~

13 comments:

  1. What an awful time, between bear intrusions, no sleep and pain. I hope the bear moves on and leaves you in peace. At least there's less pain.

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    Replies
    1. The pain relief this past week has been HUGE; I cannot overstate the improvement in my quality of life. The bear, on the other hand, has found the land of milk and honey and is unlikely to leave this neck of the woods unless it finds even easier pickings elsewhere. My only hope is to make it feel uneasy and unwelcome at my little spot along what is clearly an established route.

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  2. Yikes! Nothing scarier than a bear in the neighborhood. Our next door neighbor saw one last year, but it never approached anyone nor did any damage. Thankfully. The neighborhood coyotes are bad enough.

    I hope you get some rest soon. Pain never helps anything!

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    Replies
    1. We've got coyotes here as well, unfortunately. Very close. When I hear them singing I also go out and walk around making noise, but they tend to be very bold and not easy to run off. In another part of town two dairy goats were taken by coyotes last week, in broad daylight.

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  3. Wow - that's terrifying, for you AND the goats!! Please be safe out there! Our youngest son and his family live in BC and often have bears walking around their neighbourhood. The parents take turns being outdoors with the kids and they all know which of the closest houses leave their doors unlocked. Our son was doing some work in his garage with the door open, went in to get something, and almost stepped on a bear cub when he came back out. He wasn't long backpedaling into the house! And that was in daylight. They often send us pictures of bears walking up the driveway between the houses.
    So glad your pain level has diminished...fingers crossed it lasts!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you, my fingers are also crossed! :)
      I'm used to bears here, and I try to coexist peacefully and respectfully with them, just asking them to move along if they are inside my fenced areas because they are a threat to my animals. Unfortunately, this particular bear is a real problem.

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  4. Wow. Nasty bear. I know I don't want them hanging out around here, and we don't even have any livestock. I like that the driveway sensors can do "barking dog". I hope that helps!

    The worst I'm dealing with right now is woodchuck encroachment (it wants to dig under my back steps). Good luck with the bear! (and I'm glad the pain is better.)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, I'm hoping having a dog barking from the barn will help. The audio feature on the barn cams will wake me up if I don't hear the actual barking. The past two nights I've gotten 4 hours of sleep, and I feel like a new woman!

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  5. Quinn, your life is too adventuresome right now. SO glad the jaw pain has improved a lot - eating is rather important, especially with no sleep. Glad you had forewarning about the bear. Hope the barking driveway sensors give it a good startle (though it may habituate, alas), and that they allow you a modicum of sleep between raids. Do you still have hens?
    Chris from Boise

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I have two hens, and the fact that the bear hasn't (easily) torn the door off the Poultry Palace suggests to me that the focus on going over paddock fences was likely due to the awareness of larger prey and lots of it.
      There are 31 other sounds the speaker can make, some of them QUITE abrasive, but for now, if there is a dog barking in the night, I will be up and out, lickety-split...but first getting a little sleep instead of staring at cameras non-stop from dusk to dawn. The objective from the first night is for me to get to the bear before the bear gets to a goat.
      And Chris, please, if you have any other suggestions, I am wide open!!

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  6. My goodness, Quinn! I had no idea bears would attack chickens and goats. Would motion sensor lights help?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I've got one by my sliding door but never known them to deter a hungry predator. I think its more "the better to see you with, my dear." Don't you have bears in your neck of the woods? Or do your dogs keep them away?

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    2. In my town a bear took two sheep from a barn pen last year. And another took a miniature horse.

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