Friday, April 10, 2009

Bee Melodramas

Ah, me. With spring invigorating my bees, I saw that Isolde, the home-grown queen, wasn't such a dud after all. I thought that perhaps I should cancel my order of a replacement queen. But I figured that an extra queen could be handy, especially if I had to make a divide.

At the end of March, I went away for a week (the Chiricahua Mountains blog may or may not be posted when you read this), thinking that all my girls were doing pretty well. Upon my return, however, I found that two had suffered large losses from the mites. In particular, in Boudicca's hive I found virtually no brood - no eggs, no larvae and just a smattering of pupae that looked dead. I couldn't find the queen, either. I was pushed for time, so couldn't stage a queen-hunt. Oh well, there's a new queen coming, I thought.

Then I went back last Wednesday to bring her hive home and prepare it for a new queen. Who do you think I saw but Queen B herself. The hive still looks devastated, but I did see a few larvae that were eggs before - they had been hiding. So her poor performance could have been due to a lack of nurse bees. I combined her with a box of brood and bees from the strong *knock wood* Ekaterina, and hope to find a happier hive soon.

Yesterday the new queen arrived - another Russian-Carniolan. The weather was awful, so Sofia and her ladies-in-waiting stayed in the house overnight. Today was lovely, thank the gods, so I set her up in a hive with more bees and brood from Ekaterina. Cross fingers, toes and eyes.

And then back to Isolde...

I found a bit of wild comb hanging from the lid when I opened it (sorry, no piccie of that). There were eggs, so I thought I'd try a salvage method I had read about. This would be handy if I ever collect a wild hive. Anyway, this hive is booming - brood nest extends through 3 1/2 medium boxes, six frames at its widest. Happy, happy, my spirits were lifting.

Then I got to the bottom box, and took out a frame.

There on the bottom screen was a ball of bees. The big beeks have told kids like me that there is usually a queen in the middle of a ball, being protected by workers if she should find herself out in the wide world. I thought it was rather strange that they were balled up inside the hive, and I wondered if they were attacking an intruder. I eased the ball out and onto another screen and gently nudged bees away. I saw a queenly abdomen. I also saw what looked like bees trying to sting her. Then I saw that she was dead, and they were trying to sting her even deader. A bee coup? WTF???

You'd think her name was Julia Caesar. But just in case the workers were only roughhousing, and she was only pretending to be dead, I left her inside the hive and finished my work. Next week I'll see what I can see - Eggs? An emergency queen cell?

It seems that Sofia came in the nick of time.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Hanami Chado 2009

While away in the Chiricahuas, I worried that the neighbor's cherry tree would be past its prime by the time we returned. I needn't have fretted. It was in its full glory the weekend following. The day was sunny and warm - very warm for Eureka.

This year, we had Tea before the drunken revelries began. Pia and I performed tandem Ryokobodate (Tea on a tray) to facilitate serving so many guests. This was an abbreviated Tea ceremony, with no haiken. Pardon our hats, but the sun was very bright.

Hanami Sushi and Sake Picnic 2009

Shortly after Tea was over, Tony and Brian conveniently arrived, both vying for the role of Toshiro Mifune. Neither are "Tea", but they are amusing at a party. Dan brought his "Scattered Sushi" dish, which is a great favorite. As usual, Kristin had only a cameo role. Fie, you pooper of parties!

Karin, Kalen, Dan and D'har spent most of their time in the kitchen preparing many a sumptuous plate of food. In addition to regular rolls, they made a simplified version of Samurai restaurant's Hana Roll, pickled daikon, seaweed salad (OK, it was from the store, but delicious), gyoza and I-don't-know-what-else. For dessert, we devoured Holly's special California-style Sakura Mochi. There were a couple of bottles of sake to slake our thirst.

After the feeding frenzy, we played a game of koob - a traditional Viking game that goes well with sake. Then it was back to the picnic grounds for more sake. Koob is thirsty work!

Monday, March 30, 2009

Chiricahua Mountains Birding Trip


The bird nerds: Kristin, Holly, Pia and Laura with Snowshed and Chiricahua Peaks behind.

At Tea a year or two ago, Pia told us about an amazing birding Mecca in Arizona. Along with Pia, Holly, Kristin and I are bird nerds. We daydreamed about going to the Chiricahua Mountains and seeing elegant trogons and other almost-only-in-Mexico birds. When we decided to delay our Japan trip until 2010, we made plans for a 2009 Chiricahua trip.

We left on Saturday, March 21. We traversed the north part of California from Eureka to Redding to Susanville, and then dropped down the backside of the Sierra Nevadas. Sprinklings of snow north of Lassen. Trader Joes stop somewhere near Reno. Gorgonzola crackers, beer and chocolate. What more could a road trip require?

Did I mention that the car and roof-rack coffin were stuffed?


On the first night out, I started reading out loud a hilarious birding book called "A Supremely Bad Idea" by Luke Dempsey. Come to find out, southeast AZ was the first birding trip mentioned, which spiced our appreciation of the book and the trip. Much of the book was read while driving on our return (Central Valley - *yawn*). Sadly, we didn't finish the book before the end of the trip, and reading to myself just isn't the same. Must start having story time after Tea.

"AK-47, meat, not entirely human". "Tomatoes. What's your stand on them?"

We were delayed for a few hours of our first morning in Bridgeport by snow. Even Kristin was awake by 6:00, and we were rarin' to go. Breakfast at the old stage stop, nice waitress, Mark Twain Room, fun in town with Cheddar Bunny. After we resumed the drive, we stopped at every scenic overlord (no sic) along the way, and tried to get blown away in the White Mountains looking for the bristlecone pine forest. Two and a half hours of dust storm north of Vegas. Our original plan of driving two days was extended to three.


A snow-covered Mono Lake landscape.

We did some drive-by birding, but it isn't easy to focus with binoculars while driving at 65 mph. We did get to enjoy a lot of great desert scenery. Pia kept us perky during the dust storm with some mystery games. "Romeo and Juliet are dead. The door and a window are open. A puddle of water is on the floor. What happened?"


Saguaro grove in northwest AZ. A stately saguaro across the road led to a gila woodpecker sighting.

Monday: Hoover Dam (Homeland Security on the alert for terrorists; nice Art Deco), drive, saguaros, drive, vermillion flycatchers, "a man is found dead, holding a stick, on a mountaintop", drive, Kristin misses seeing the roadrunner (*beep-beep!*), Tucson Audubon Society store, drive, more mysteries, arrival in Portal after dark, with spaghetti dinner cooked on the deck outside our room.


I have no idea why the AAA map calls the Chiricahuas the "Pendregosa" Mountains. Two names (Apache vs. Spanish) for one range, perhaps?


On Tuesday morning we arose early in the town of Portal, and were birding by 7:15. There were all kinds of birds in town, and we took our sweet time to track them down and enjoy watching them. Cactus wren, cardinal, curve-billed thrasher, pyrrholoxia ("pyros"), Gambel's quail, hooded and Scott's oriole. The Portal Store, Cafe & Lodge has a mass of birdfeeders, as do a few homes in town. Broad-tailed hummingbird, pine siskin, black-throated hummingbird, lesser goldfinch, magnificent hummingbird ("El Magnifico"), more siskins. One could beef up a life list without leaving town.

We hadn't gotten far down Rock House Road before a local came by and chatted us up. He turned out to be Dave Jasper, a bird guide we had read about in our Southeast Arizona birding books. Just outside town he has a piece of property that is bird and birder friendly. Anyway, Dave was waiting for a client who wound up not showing. He asked us if he could do some birding with us.

Graciously we assented, and we strolled on to a huge sycamore that was riotous with birds. Dave was pointing and firing off bird names faster than we could focus our binocs. "Bridled titmice. 'Cutest little birds', everyone says." Lucy's warbler *zoom*. Never saw it. Lincoln's sparrow, house wren, Screech owl in a tree-hole nest. We even pointed out a few that he thought couldn't possibly be there, but sure enough were: Yellow warbler, orange-crowned warbler, common yellowthroat. "I've got to make some calls!" Dave said, "Too bad everyone is out of town right now". That made us feel better, and seemed to raise us in his estimation.


Left: Dave tries to find a northern pygmy owl on the South fork of Cave Creek. Honest, he saw one there just a few minutes ago. Right: Cactus wren nest in a beavertail (aka prickly pear) cactus.

We wound up coming across Dave several times during our stay, and we jested among ourselves that we had our own personal stalker. But we didn't mind having a stalker who could help us find birds.


Views into Cave Creek Canyon from the turnoff to Paradise (top) and the Big Thicket (bottom).

Dave's property, the Big Thicket, is outside of Portal about a mile in the dry direction. Scrubby something-or-others dominated the landscape. Good cover for the birdies. I certainly hope the scrubbies leaf out eventually.

Left: Bird feeders with javelinas/peccaries cleaning up at Dave Jasper's Big Thicket. Right: A honeybee, mellow though probably Africanized, at Dave's place.

Green-tailed towhee, black-throated sparrow, scrub jay, more cardinals, pyros, quail etc. Is that a javelina?! Damn those Crissal's thrashers.

The Chiricahuas are called a "sky island": a "forested ... mountain range with moist habitats, surrounded by a 'sea' of arid lands" (Tucson Audubon Society's Finding Birds in Southeast Arizona, Seventh edition). The variety of habitats and wildlife there is wonderful.


The Sunny Flat Campground was the only one of three in the lower part of the canyon that was open when we were there. The others are sure to be open in April, when the canyon teems with more birders than birds. Sunny Flat was full, which was no grief to us, considering everyone there was in an RV of some sort. Dread of nighttime generator noise. Each site had a built-in bird feeder, and a couple of campers had hummingbird feeders out. Folks were friendly, and the view was great.



We camped higher up Cave Creek, at Herb Martyr Campground. A small dam was built here in 1935, and the unfortunately named Mr. Martyr was a worker who was killed during construction.


Left: We're not in Humboldt anymore: a pine-oak woodland with the occasional yucca. Right: A parasitic flower, Conopholis mexicana, growing on the roots of a Mexican oak


Left: (Greater?) Short-horned lizard. Right: Striped plateau lizard.

Did I mention that Portal exists solely for the sake of birders? Everyone living there is a birder or in a business that caters to birders. Any visitor without binoculars is suspected of being a drug smuggler or illegal immigrant.

Each day we did a lot of driving up and down the canyon, going to different birding spots and grabbing a sixer of beer for the evening at the Portal Store. Bendire's thrasher and Chihuahuan raven near Highway 80.

Most of our second day was spent strolling along South Fork Cave Creek Road. "Some birders actually walk the entire 1.3 miles!" we paraphrased from one of our bird guides. Kristin saw an Arizona woodpecker, but the rest of us missed out. A canyon wren called and bobbed. Northern pygmy owls taunted us with their calls. Dave stroked trees : / White-breasted nuthatch, Mexican brown creeper, hermit thrush, yellow-eyed junco, red-naped sapsucker, lots of acorn woodpeckers, Apache fox squirrel.

Below: Several views in Cave Creek Canyon.



We never did find an elegant trogon, the prize bird of the Chiricahuas. It is reported to keep quiet and still for long periods of time, and can thus be difficult to spot. Dave told us that there were only three juvenile males in the area at that time, so we knew that our chances were slim.


Left: Trogon territory: Sasquatch is easier to find. Right: Mexican jays, were also much easier to spot. This is one who was cooperatively nesting in a family unit, and pretty mellow about us watching.

We drove up to Paradise that afternoon, and visited the George Walker House, which is birder-friendly. We talked for quite a while with Jackie, the owner, and her dog Tundra, and watched the birds at the feeders. Sadly, the juniper titmice were in hiding. Jackie told us about a blue mockingbird sighting in Douglas, just on this side of the US-Mexico border. Only the sixth reported sighting in the US. Oh, for an extra day of birding!


On our last day we drove on Pinery Canyon Road, over the summit to the west side of the mountains. A road which Flatlanders think is bowel-loosening. They should drive Hwy 36 during timber harvest. The wind was howling so much that most birds, like the Mexican chickadees, were hunkered down. We did get good looks at a zone-tailed hawk, a prairie falcon and the biggest American kestrel we'd ever seen. The Chiricahua National Monument (last stronghold of Cochese) wanted $5/person to get in, so we turned around and came home. Someday we'll return when we have time to get our money's worth.

Sadly, we had to return home after only three days of birding. Before leaving Portal, we made sure to check the hummingbird feeders at the cafe one more time, and visit the post office. We hope to return before too many trogons have bred, and have plans to buy a cabin and hide out there.

Another visit to the Audubon society for shwag. Tucson: Why close 5 consecutive exits in the middle of town at the same time??? Kristin sees a roadrunner! Pia racked her brains for more mysteries. ...Oh, it's just another turkey vulture. Hold your noses, it's Kettleman City! Lots of story time. "A man eats albatross at a restaurant, then kills himself". Finally home before the bars close. *sigh*


If you have trouble viewing the slideshow, or want to look at larger versions, go to my Picasa album. There you can follow more adventures of Cheddar Bunny and the Bird Nerds.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Bloom Day March 15, 2009

Another Bloom Day, with more happening in the garden. A different type of daffodil has been blooming while the older ones are fading. We acquired some of these bulbs from an old orchard a few years ago, and they are beginning to spread. I like the green streaks in the perianths. It seems apt for St Paddy's. The Dutch iris are also beginning to bloom.


Blueberry, my favorite berry. Columbines are just budding out. They're one of my favorite garden flowers.


A special variety of primula, and the snaps that got beaten up in the January frosts.


"Stellata" Magnolia and crimson flag. Usually I see the crimson flag in October to December, but this one blossom is here now.


Currant, and white wood hyacinths that snuck in amid the blue ones.


"Ward's Ruby" azalea and coral bells just beginning to bloom.


Calla and a pink camellia. This camellia seems more resistant to blossom rot than the reddish one that's been blooming since January. I don't think it's just because it blooms after most of the frosts and rain.


Mock orange and Lenten roses are still blooming, as is the honeybush that started just a month ago. This week I've noticed that the bees really like the grape hyacinths.



The pear and apple trees are also budding out.


Another collage of continuing blooms. In semi order, top left to bottom right: hellebore, camellia, heather, wood hyacinth, rosemary, alyssum, "Christmas" rhody, leucojum, anemones and ipheon. Also, the last of the paperwhites.


Not a flower, but still pretty: a bracken (?) fern fiddleneck.


Yes, the dandelions and oxeyes are still blooming, but who needs to document them when so many other things are happening?

In the area, the plum blossoms are fading and the cherries are starting to bloom. Wild mustard, wild radish, acacia and heather are also keeping the bees happy.

It's been interesting to keep a photographic record of my garden flowers. Usually I write things down on the calendar, but photos are much easier to scan.

Friday, March 13, 2009

My Absolute Favorite 2009 Birthday Card


It's been nearly a month, but this card is well worth sharing. Thanks, Walt!