helping the strays and abandoned
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Posts from — February 2010

Bee Man

On Friday night we struck up a conversation with a bee keeper in Trader Joes.  Here is what we learned from him:

  • bee health is pretty complicated these days.  The parasites and bacteria that attack bees is now global.  He said that back in the early days of bee keeping there was only one bacteria you had to worry about, and it was easy to eradicate it.
  • he has to follow the bees to figure out what kind of flowers they are pollinating, then he can dub his honey as clover or orange, etc.  Sometimes it is as easy as using a pair of binoculars.
  • almond flowers tend to make bitter honey and there is no market for almond honey.  If any gets in with his regular honey, he has to dump it.
  • bears.  They aren’t really after the honey.  They want the larvae. He has eaten the larvae and he says it tastes like honey sweetened pine nuts – good in other words.
honey-bee

on the way to work

February 14, 2010   No Comments

Igloo

last night, Saturday, we visited the owner of the empty house and he gave us an igloo.  We will set it up on our property to provide shelter for a cat or raccoon.   We stood out side talking to him for about an hour.  He told us some of the same stories.  He has this odd recurring theme, how someone with his exact name has done something evil and he is to blame.

For instance Comcast in N.J. threatened him with physical violence and sent their lawyers after him for pirating their cable.  It turned out be someone with his exact name.  He was also wrongly accused of running a pedestrian over in a cross walk.  Again it was someone with his exact name.

The raccoon visited us last night, so we hastily set the trap.  No luck on trapping him though.

February 14, 2010   No Comments

Raccoon

Friday night we set a trap for a gimpy raccoon that has been coming to our cat feeder.  He has a bum back leg.  We talked to a raccoon rescue lady in Simi Valley and she told us that if we could trap him and bring him to her, she would have his leg fixed.

She told us to use a hard boiled egg, cut in half for bait.  The first night we should put the trap out, but keep it from closing.  On the second night we should set it to trap him.

I checked the trap around midnight and the egg was still there.

raccoons feeding

a family visits

February 13, 2010   No Comments

the Owner

on Tuesday, February 9th, we met the owner of the empty house.  He had just gotten out of his car and was standing at the foot of his drive way.  My wife, Kat, said “lets meet him”, so we ran over and introduced ourselves.   We spent the next 3 hours standing in his cold house and talking.

He told us his deceased wife had 35-40 cats.  The neighbors complained about the cat poop in their yards.  He spent $100K cleaning the smell out of his house.

He said it was okay to feed the cats on his property.

He was only in town for 8 days, going back to New Jersey.  He had lots of stories to tell us.

February 13, 2010   No Comments

the Gate

My wife discovered that we can slide a food and water tray under the gate to the backyard of the empty house.  We saw a third cat there, that we had seen before at our feeder.  The owner is still not home.

February 8, 2010   No Comments