Well it looks like Blogger isn't allowing me to reply to comments. I googled the issue and yes, it's real and I think I could do a work-around by changing my comment format but that's not going to happen tonight.
I went on another walk (more on that in a minute) and took yet one more picture of the fally-down house. It really is close to being flat. I remember when I used to see signs that someone may have been camping in it and those days are long gone. Not even a toddler could walk freely in it, the ceiling being almost part of the floor in some parts.
Here's another thing I saw on my walk this morning.
Anyone know what those birds are?
Here's a picture off the internet as a hint.
That, my friends, is a guinea fowl, and in this case probably a guinea hen. I am basing that supposition on the chick she has beside her.
The funny thing is that just yesterday, I think, Hank sent us all a text picture of guinea fowl in their back yard in town! I love the birds. I think they're beautiful in their own way and there are many good reasons to keep a flock, one of them being that they are an excellent alarm system when it comes to any sort of predators.
But. The very thing that makes them so good at that is the thing that drives some people crazy. They talk all the time. They're like the Rolling Stones once they get started up: they never stop, never stop, never stop...
Here's a very short Youtube that demonstrates their voice.
They cracked me up when they got to the fence between our yard and the neighbor's. They would stand there, looking at it as if they had never seen a fence in their lives until one of them would remember she could fly (a little bit at least, not unlike chickens), make it into her yard and the rest would follow suit. As the days and months went on though, the flock decreased slowly but steadily and I suppose some predator was not deterred by their chatter and finally, there were none. It was so sad.
So yes, I saw the fally-down house and the guinea hens and all of the things I usually see and the walk seemed very easy to me and I also noted that after yesterday's walk I did not have my usual soreness and joint pain. This would make sense as I am not carrying around nearly as much weight and besides that, Zepbound is actually used to treat inflammation. So yes, I am still considering this drug to be somewhat miraculous and not just because I can wear Levi's again. I'll be getting bloodwork in May and will be interested to see what that shows as to changes in things like cholesterol and so forth.
However.
Not related to Zepbound, but to kidney stones, one of the reasons I have been leery of walking and exercising in general is that whenever I do, it seems to jostle a stone into a less than optimal position which causes aching, pain, and other issues which I really do not care to go into here. Let's just say...
Well, let's just not.
Now. Yes. I did go get scans of my kidneys almost three weeks ago and no, the doctor did not call me back to tell me about the findings and no, I have not called THEM back to make a follow-up appointment because calling Dr.'s offices is almost as hard for me as it would be to stick my arm into a viper pit. But today, I did. This morning. I screwed my courage to the sticking point and made the call. I just looked it up and screwing up one's courage to the sticking place comes from Macbeth which I am sure I knew already but needed to check which reminds me that Hank once said that almost every quote we use comes either from the Bible, Shakespeare, or the Beatles.
Hank is smart and I think about that statement a lot because he's not far wrong.
Mr. Moon is home again. He was going on a duck hunting trip to Louisiana this weekend but it got canceled and rescheduled once, and then just canceled. Ice storms may be involved. So he's stuck here with me. Seeing as how it's Friday, martinis are softening the disappointment I'm sure he feels in not being able to go. He's brought me home some catfish filets he caught this week and I suppose I will be air-frying them tonight.
I am sure you can tell I'm in a better mood today and I am so very, very grateful for that. Just as I do not know where the past few days' darkness came from, I do not know where this relief comes from. Chemicals. I guess. I believe I am heartened by the number of people who are showing up and protesting in Minneapolis, despite the frigid weather, as well as the one hundred clergy there who protested ICE despite knowing they'd probably be arrested and they were.
And let us not forget the shut-down in Minneapolis today of businesses, schools, and shopping.
Of course there are so many things that are not heartening including measles outbreaks, especially in South Carolina where 700 cases have been reported. But somehow I feel able to hear about the horrors without crumbling and that is a good day for me.
I was going to cut some of the camellias in that front yard bush but then I realized that the dark spot in the center of these blooms were entire ant communities.
If I were an ant, I would love to live in a camellia blossom which has to be one of the softest places to live in the world, not to mention the probable sweet nectar to be found there.
Okay. Honestly, I have no idea why ants want to live in camellia blossoms. But they do and I have no desire to bring them inside where they might decide to move to the kitchen when the camellias turn brown and die.
I did bring in a few of the last remaining camellia sasanguas.
Sigh.
We're about to get some bitterly cold weather (FOR US!) in the next week and I'm sure that any of the blossoms opening now will be killed while that's happening but I have faith that the buds which have not yet begun to open will be okay.
One more picture.
The native azalea is budding up once again. That, to me, is hope.
I better get my ass in the kitchen and coat some catfish with cornmeal.
Love...Ms. Moon






So glad to find your post...blogger has been doing awful things to me today...not able to reply to comments nor click on links to most of the blogs I follow. However, a blogger who complained that the thing which worked when he couldn't even post pictures!!! said deleting his history helped, but of course it wiped all the other histories which was Not A Nice kettle of fish. So Barbara here found Chrome lists history groups, and I had a lot of very strange ones, which I deleted. And ta, da!! One of the functions worked on my blog. No telling yet about others. And I didn't erase all my histories, just the ones where I'd searched for Willy Nelson or things like that. Oh, I hope you got a appointment to find out the results of the test, since I've been wondering about that...for you of course.
ReplyDeleteWell, once I'd figured out that this was a blogger situation and I had nothing to do with it, I let blogger go ahead and fix it. Which they did. Are you a Willy Nelson fan? Have you read the recent New Yorker article about him? https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2025/12/29/willie-nelson-profile
DeleteI hope you get some information about the tests and results. Soon. And advice.
ReplyDeleteSeriously. I wasn't just getting my kidneys scanned for the fun of it.
DeleteHere we're prepared for the 38-below we got today, and tomorrow they say will be colder. But at least the cold isnt an ice storm or heavy snow, so our power grid isnt threatened and those of us indoors are safe and toasty. Your threatened weather might be more damaging down there in the teopics!
ReplyDeleteOur power does seem to go out at odd times so who knows? Mostly I think we'll lose a lot of our spring flowers like the azaleas.
DeleteYou stay in and stay warm!
I wonder if those ants do live there or if they just congregate coming and going and collecting nectar all day before going home for the night. The pink camellias in the bottle are beautiful.
ReplyDeleteI really don't know about the ants. What I read online was that the ants were actually farming the aphids in the camellias and eating what they produced when they sucked up nectar. It's called honeydew. However, I've never seen an aphid on a camellia so...?
DeleteLove to see the fally down house. Nature's progress. I, too and feeling lighter today, must be the sunshine! I even watched something so incredibly devastating that no one in their right mind should ever see- and it did not do me in! I think that the world being aware of the insanity this country has wrought, helps . WE are SEEN! finally! Trump is getting global push back!
ReplyDeleteGuinea hens have the most beautiful feathers- we buy them in craft shops .
After the latest shooting (murder) in Minneapolis, any cheerfulness I may have had seems to have disappeared. Yes, Trump is getting global pushback and of course that's great but it won't stop the violence here.
DeleteIt was gray here today. Rain tomorrow, then very cold.
Blogger has been doing that for Two Days now, up and down about not allowing response to comments. We're getting some Cold Weather in the Desert too, but it's not consistent, 40 degrees one day and 70 the next. It's no wonder everyone is getting Sick.
ReplyDeleteOur temperatures have been yo-yoing like that. And a lot of people are sick here too but I think it's a virus, not the temperature changes.
DeleteYou didn't tell us if you talked to the doctor and if they gave you the results of your scan:)
ReplyDeleteThe flowers are beautiful. It's good that you're walking. When the weather warms up again, I'll walk again, until then, not much.
I did NOT talk to the doctor and I realized I would never talk to the doctor if I didn't make another appointment. I STILL won't be talking to him but a PA instead. And that's pretty okay.
DeleteI'm not walking in weather near freezing. I would die.
The one thing I have just found out about the blogging world is that usually I can start out in "My Quiet Life in Suffolk" which is the very first blog I discovered back when Sue and Husband Colin lived on a smallholding with a farmer's stand out front and then I could click on some of the blogs listed on her sidebar, including "Shadows and Light" which is where I found you and "Life is Funny Like That". Now unless the sidebar contains the sites as most recent, blogger will not let me click on "see others" to scroll down further. I don't know if this is permanent, or not, so I am jotting down names of blogsites as I see them or think of them. so I can go to Google direct. I am too old for these crappy changes.
ReplyDeleteI use an app called Feedly to keep up with who has a new blog post published. It's not hard to use and it makes it easy to see posts I haven't read. And I don't pay for it. I get the free version because that's all I need.
DeleteI am happy to know that there are flowers blooming as I wait for the storm to move in. It is -7° now. Shove over, sistah. I am coming to sit amongst your flowers.
ReplyDeleteI sure am thinking of you guys up there in the cold north. Please don't become popsicles.
DeleteWe're not going to be sitting among the flowers either as we're going to get some pretty low temps for at least a week.
Guinea fowl are not only great to have as a burglar alarm, they eat ticks and thus are good to have around to help protect us humans from diseases ticks share with us. I never hear you mention getting ticks during your gardening forays?
ReplyDeleteCeci
I had heard that about guinea fowl and ticks. I know there are things about guineas that are not necessarily positive including their propensity for escaping, the difficulty in getting them to roost in a coop, and being aggressive against other birds. But, you know, there are pros and cons to everything.
DeleteI don't often get ticks. Glen gets them more frequently tromping around in the woods.
Yes, I thought the same as Pixie and want to know what the doctor's office said about the kidney stones. ;)
ReplyDeleteHow nice that you got out for a walk. It is too cold here to walk outside. I can do some workout videos in my bedroom instead - thanks for reminding me to do that.
I am quite curious to hear what the PA in the urology clinic has to say.
DeleteWorkout videos in your room are a fine substitute, I would think.
We're having our first frigid night tonight, 27˚ followed by 18˚ and 20˚ and then it's going to bounce around to just below freezing to just above freezing for a week or so. also rain and maybe ice for the next two days.
ReplyDeleteBack when we were house hunting in the hill country we looked at one abandoned house that was right out of a horror movie, the plumbing for the toilet was a pipe that ran straight out into the woods surrounding the house but when we drove up, there must have been a hundred or more chickens and guinea fowl that flew up like a cloud and the screeching! Very spooky.
Yep. We're going to start getting weather like that tomorrow.
DeleteI wonder if all those chickens and guinea fowl were just the ferals descended from the birds the last owners had before they abandoned the house. Must have been.
In Tallahassee there's a Walmart with a population of chickens living in and around the parking lot. People are always astonished to see them and often try to catch them to give them a "real" home.
Good luck with that, Buddy. I don't think anyone has yet. I believe people do feed them though.
I remember when I saw the fally-down house and I could walk into it -- I had to bend over but I could do it.
ReplyDeleteI do not envy you all these cold temperatures. I hope those ants have somewhere warm to go. They may WISH you'd brought them inside!
I always think about you when I see the old house, Steve.
DeleteThose ants will probably go burrow under the ground in their colonies. I would assume, anyway. So many things all around me I really have no clue about.
Touring your garden and seeing the camellias in bloom followed by a walk in the fresh air and sunshine sounds lovely. It is 18 degrees in MA and outside time will be limited due to cold.
ReplyDeleteThe house in ongoing decline will soon be flat to the ground. Are abutters not happy? This would not be tolerated in many communities.
For now, without predators, the guinea hens must find it safe to be in your area. We have wild turkeys that come and go depending on the coyote population and their need for a meal.
There are no abutters on that property. The nearest house is not even within eyesight. The person who owns that land somehow believes they're going to get rich selling it eventually for development and so they don't give a damn what happens to an old house.
DeleteThere are plenty of predators around here. Coyotes and foxes for two. Also hawks and sometimes eagles. That's how my neighbor's birds got picked off, one by one, and my chickens, too.
We have quail out here, cute little birds, they like to talk to one another. Last year there was a quail who would appear on the corner of our back fence every day at the same time and holler something out to the world. What he was saying and who, if anyone, was listening I have no idea, but I enjoyed it.
ReplyDeleteBaby quail are adorable. Adult quail are pretty, too. Maybe your fence quail was a soapbox preacher, teaching the quail gospel to all who would listen.
Delete