Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

Out Your Back Door

Thanks Ed! No, they wouldn't let me play with the excavator. Ronnie (the operator) was a whiz with the thing though. A joy to watch (unless I thought about how much it was costing). We're putting in a building similar to this (a bit smaller and with a different window layout).

Barn_Inspiration.JPG
 

Desert dog

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,291
Location
California
Thanks Ed! No, they wouldn't let me play with the excavator. Ronnie (the operator) was a whiz with the thing though. A joy to watch (unless I thought about how much it was costing). We're putting in a building similar to this (a bit smaller and with a different window layout).

View attachment 169605
That looks nice! Pretty fancy daddy doghouse!

Sent from my SM-G920V using Tapatalk
 
Messages
12,017
Location
East of Los Angeles
This isn't exactly an "out your back door" photo shoot, but the story started in our back yard and I didn't know where else to put this, so... :D

In early 2018 I noticed the beginnings of this in our back yard:

SQJbVAR.jpg


Yeah, that's a palm tree growing out from under the fiberglass platform upon which rests the air conditioning unit for our house. Where it came from and how it got there, I have no idea; my family has owned this house since 1952, and there have never been palm trees in the back yard. Regardless, it would eventually become a problem and needed to be removed, so last year on Father's Day I decided to get some exercise. :cool:

Palm trees of all varieties are fairly common in this part of southern California, but I saw no need to waste a perfectly good one and we had a spot in our front yard that would accommodate it nicely, so...

f31Brlw.jpg


...instead of removing it, I transplanted it. Cute little thing, ain't it? And here we are a year later:

AYrnHlO.jpg


It seems to have survived the relocation. Happy Father's Day folks!
 

GHT

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,793
Location
New Forest
Where I live now, is about a million miles from the city life that is London, this picture just conjurs up the image and pace of life that my missus and I now enjoy.
rainbow 1.png
A mile or so from where we live there's a small brook that feeds a large pond/small lake where the New Forest wild life come to drink. It was at such a watering hole that we got caught in a downpour. But after the rain comes the sun, and with it, the rainbow. How vivid it looks in the forest setting.
Rainbow-at-Ogdens.jpg rainbow.jpg
 
Messages
11,375
Location
Alabama
Ground squirrel action shot. We've been overrun with these things this year. This is the third I've captured and relocated. Don't know what good it does. I've read most don't survive relocation. Had one get into the garage and found the bird seed before I got the seed into the hard storage container. It once came into the garage while I was there and refused to leave. Bodie took care of that one and three others in the yard that I know of this spring and summer.
CIMG6918.JPG
 

3fingers

One Too Many
Messages
1,797
Location
Illinois
My wife has been baking for the crew building our shop/barn. Yesterday it was poppy seed muffins. After they called it a day we went to pick up the Tupperware (Lock&Lock actually) and found "Rocky" enjoying a muffin or two (the lid was not latched). I was wondering why I kept seeing him out in the daytime. He was waiting for the whistle to blow...

View attachment 175064
They are pretty smart and quick learners.
We have one that has been hanging around at work off and on. He will go in a building and find a spot to catch a nap. If you walk in he doesn't try to get away, he hides his face even though he is in plain sight. I guess since he can't see you, you can't see him.
 

Woodtroll

One Too Many
Messages
1,263
Location
Mtns. of SW Virginia
They are pretty smart and quick learners.
We have one that has been hanging around at work off and on. He will go in a building and find a spot to catch a nap. If you walk in he doesn't try to get away, he hides his face even though he is in plain sight. I guess since he can't see you, you can't see him.

And they are destructive as all get out. I don't know who tears up more stuff around my place - raccoons or bears (or me!).
 

p51

One Too Many
Messages
1,119
Location
Well behind the front lines!
I was going to load my 1944 MB onto a trailer to take it to a local airshow a couple of weeks ago, and I decided to drive it into the unmowed (I mowed it a few nights later) back 40 and take this shot with my cell. I like how it turned out:

48083736872_fe7df97ff8.jpg

We have 1.5 acres, thin on one end but long on the other, in a former prairie alongside other houses whose owners haven't done anything with their back 40s, either. From the right angles, it could pass for a lot of places.
 

Bugguy

Practically Family
Messages
570
Location
Nashville, TN
I had a bluebird run to maintain when I was working with the DNR in Wisconsin during my younger days. About 15 boxes that were great to watch, assuming of course that the tree swallows didn't get there first.

It only took me a year to find a picture I wanted to add to my post... Every weekend I took my daughter out to check her bluebird nesting run. She counted eggs, chicks, and when they fledged. It was no surprise that momma bluebird didn't appreciate the peek into the nest.

First picture, my daughter naively thought she could get away with opening the nest. Note the speck coming down from the top left.

Al Bong2 1.jpeg


In a second, she figured out she was in trouble:

Al Bong3.jpeg


I can't tell you how much I treasure the time spent with her in the field.
 

Woodtroll

One Too Many
Messages
1,263
Location
Mtns. of SW Virginia
It only took me a year to find a picture I wanted to add to my post... Every weekend I took my daughter out to check her bluebird nesting run. She counted eggs, chicks, and when they fledged. It was no surprise that momma bluebird didn't appreciate the peek into the nest.

First picture, my daughter naively thought she could get away with opening the nest. Note the speck coming down from the top left.

View attachment 176691

In a second, she figured out she was in trouble:

View attachment 176692

I can't tell you how much I treasure the time spent with her in the field.

Great post, thank you!
 

Forum statistics

Threads
109,255
Messages
3,077,386
Members
54,183
Latest member
UrbanGraveDave
Top