Bedlam Farm Blog Journal by Jon Katz

22 April

Flower Art Special. Start The Week With Color And Light

by Jon Katz

I took some of my new flowers out into the sun today. It’s still too cold for them to go outside by a month.

But the sunlight was beautiful, and after the rat battles, they brought me back into the land of beauty and love. Flowers are much more beautiful than I realized when I wasn’t paying so much attention to them.

They bring the light into my life and, hopefully, into yours.

Now, they are a wonderful part of my life, and like Maria, I am fortunate to have them both. The flowers are among the blessings I count every day.

Please remember the children who depend on the Cambridge Pantry for their food. They are looking for Spaghetti O’s and, tomorrow, Granola Bars. Both are on the Cambridge Pantry Amazon Wish List. Thank you.

Last call today, see you in the morning; I have a busy, busy week ahead.

Happy Daisies…

I forget their names.

Dahlia

Primrose, popping up today in Maria’s garden.

22 April

The Bedlam Cat Salon. Communing With Zip, Brushing Him For Spring. Poor Zip.

by Jon Katz

Zip hasn’t been abused for several days, and I miss the sheriff coming to see if he should find a nicer home.

So, I decided to get to work today and catch up. I’m sure there is an animal rights warrior somewhere—maybe everywhere—who thinks brushing cats is cruel. The sheriff has my address.

Perhaps I should take Zip to a cat hair studio.

I need to catch up. He is shedding his winter coat, and we need to go a few more rounds.

Photos by Maria Wulf.

Zip LOVES being brushed for about 10-15 minutes; then, like me, he gets easily distracted. We have that in common. But I love brushing my dogs and now my cat. There’s a nurturing gene in there somewhere.

First, a scratching session. Then, a thorough brushing. Then he starts flirting with me, hoping for more brushing today. But I had to get back to work.

Poor Zip. Somehow, he has survived us and his rough life on the farm.

Caring for Zip has been good for me; it’s healing and makes me feel great. “You look gorgeous, darling,” I gushed. As usual, he looked pretty pleased with himself. He will be rolling in something gross shortly. Zinnia is teaching him. His coat looks great. He’s starting to flirt with the sheep.

The Katz Salon.

22 April

In This Town, Kids Help Kids Eat Well….Today, The Food Is Spaghetti O’s, Help If You Can

by Jon Katz

One of the most beautiful things to see on Thursdays is one of the Central School Aides bringing fourth and fifth-graders to the Cambridge Food Pantry just down the road.

Sarah says the children need more of this kind of food we are sending. They are the children who inspire me to meet other children’s needs as best we can for as long as we can.

Nothing I do feels better than getting food to children who need it. In this case, $11.44 gets a warm meal for up to 24 children, even more in some cases.  I’m in.

Sarah says they are out of this food, a children’s favorite:

Spaghetti O’s, Canned Pasta With Meatballs 15.0z. Cans, $11.44, Pack of 12. And thank you.

The Army of Good was generous, miraculously so, last week,

The kids are volunteers; they come every Sunday at the end of the school day  Thursday – driven by school aides – to pick up the backpacks that the pantry makes to give to the 173 “backpack” kids who showed up at the pantry this week and need help getting the food they need.

The privacy of the backpack kids is always protected. Even these helping students do not know where the backpacks are going; they are collected separately and in privacy.

Seeing children do this for other children lifts my heart. This is a wonderful program. The packs are filled with food to last through the weekend and maybe even beyond. The children get breakfast, lunch, and dinner foods. It means a great deal to their families.

Thanks for helping, we are doing a great deal of good.

The food of the week right now is Spaghetti O’s. Take a look here.

22 April

The Long Night With A Brilliant Rat And Brave Little Working Dog Battling All Night. Frightening At Times, Amazing Looking Back.

by Jon Katz

I’ve been writing about Zip lately and gushing over Zinnia’s therapy work, giving Bud less attention except for some cute photos of him lying in the sun. Last night, he showed us what a working dog can do and how much heart he has. I rarely think of small dogs as powerful and brave, but they often are way out of proportion to their size.

Boston Terriers were bred in Boston to hunt rats, and he had all the working drive of a champion border collie last night.

The struggle with a very smart and tough rat went on all night.

Maria and I were latecomers; I joined the fray at 4 p.m. Maria came in at 5 when all hell broke loose, and we realized that Bud had trapped the rat inside the refrigerator, where it had been hiding, storing stolen food for at least 24 hours completely out of sight.

He obviously tried to escape, but Bud kept heading him off and challenging him. As a result, there were all kinds of papers, calendars, and unique papers with smells rats don’t like all around the kitchen.

Yesterday, Maria looked under the refrigerator – Bud kept going there and pointing her there – and she removed boxes full of crackers.  What was frightening was that we had no idea where the rat was, if he had been there all night, or if there was another entry hole somewhere we had missed.

I did a Sherlock Holmes and thought about what was most likely, and it added up to certainty that he was still in the refrigerator. Bud was guiding us to his location when we pulled the fridge and saw that all the protective cardboard had been ripped to bits; this could only mean that Bud had been tearing the cardboard apart to get at the rat, and his stare told us he was still there.

Bud worked closely with Maria, as in the night before, he guided her to the rat’s location, got her to look at the back of the refrigerator, and told us where he was. He was working with her, and she was getting the messages.

Bud never left his post all night, sitting by the refrigerator waiting for the rat to show himself. We led him out to eliminate, and the rat, ever alert, sensed his absence, zoomed out of his hiding place, and headed to the bathroom, where the rats used to get in with a hole they had opened through the basement.

We had sealed the hole, and he was trapped. Maria could put a box over him and take him out to the woods. As I wrote, I was going to shoot him, but she couldn’t bear to see that, so she let him go. I suspect we haven’t seen his last; rats should return to their homes from as far as 50 miles away.

Bud is ready, and so are we.

The most astonishing part of this was seeing how brilliant the rat was.

He avoided all our traps, climbed cabinets, opened seal boxes, took scores of cares into the refrigerator’s inner workings, and hid them with great skill.

Without Bud, we never would have thought to look there, which was the key to getting him out. By the time we were there, Bud had panicked him into making a mistake and getting cornered. Even then, we had to take a baseboard heater apart to flush him out. He could slip into the tiniest spaces and squeeze through in an instant.

It was amazing to see what he avoided, what he grabbed, and where he hid both it and himself. He was so skillful that it was scary. We weren’t sure how to find him and get him out.

It worked out, at least for now. I respect Maria’s decision not to drown him, but this means he very well might return. I understand why she did that.

Bud tearing apart the refrigerator covering was amazing for a small dog with a small row of teeth.  At that rate, he could have pulled all the wires and plugs out of the machine and ruined it. I can’t quite imagine how either of these animals did what they did. We’re not sure, but the refrigerator is probably salvageable.

Bud is still sleeping; he’s worn out, and I suspect the rat is resting somewhere as well.  My guess is this battle isn’t over. Bud will stay out of his crate at night from now on, and we’ll keep our eyes on those holes.

It was a long and harrowing night, but the most interesting part was seeing how two very different animals used all of their instincts and special skills to battle one another for hours. It was astounding how much work the rat had to do to get those boxes onto the floor, open them, move all their contents into hiding across the room, and zoom through the tiniest spaces. Bud was in his crate the first night but was on guard last night. If the rat is as intelligent as he is, he might not come back.

There was no clear winner until the humans showed up with their brushes and dustpans. It was a remarkable evening, and I won’t soon forget it.

And all of us, people and animals, are worn out.

22 April

Happy Daisies, Goodbye Magnolias. The New Dyslexia Spelling Scramble Of The Week

by Jon Katz

I nominate Daisies and pansies as the happiest flowers in the Spring. There is just something about them that suggests energy and optimism. This morning, I had a choice: watch the many updates of the Trump trial in New York or go out in the sun and see the last of the Gladiolas, who never last long but make their beauty felt. Happiness is a choice; it comes from inside, not outside.

I’m sure I will hear about the trial soon enough and in nauseating detail. Have a lovely day, and I suggest making some happy choices. The news does not give us happy things to consider. I like to see the news, but there is too much news, too much overkill, too many things I don’t need to hear or want to hear. Let the boys play their games; I’ll find out what I want to know.

(Dyslexia Spelling Scramble of the week. FYI: When I wrote about our rat wars last night, I did a classic Dyslexia thing if you are interested: I started to spell “rat” as “cat” in the title at first and then throughout the piece. As with Bud and Zip, words of two or three letters and of things I often see around me are the ones most likely to get mixed up. I see them differently in my mind.  If I go back once or twice, I catch it most of the time. I proofread the blog closely; almost all misspellings have been corrected quickly. This is one reason photography has become important to me; it never tells a lie. It does matter, but not all that much. But I can’t change the writing on Facebook in the same way, and I don’t wish to spend time proofreading instead of writing. If the misspellings bother you, read the blog; very few are there. And if they bother you, please go away; I don’t want you to here. My writing is clear; that matters most to me and my readers. I know that similar numbers of letters are a problem, but I don’t know why. Life is full of crisis and mystery.)

 

Magolias are beautiful when they come and when they go. I hope I die as well.

 

Zinnia is such a quiet and easygoing dog.

I always say the same thing about her. She is a beautiful dog and companion. As a puppy, I asked her to come with me when I went outside to get the mail. Since then, she has done just that and has waited patiently while I collected the mail and walked back. I often bring a small treat as a reward. She never jumps on me, runs off, goes near the road, or disobeys, although she sometimes takes her time. But when I say stay, she says; when I say come, she sniffs the ground and comes. As I write this, she lies by my feet, snoring lightly. Now and then, I lean over and scratch her belly.

 

Clothesline Art In The Wind

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