Greetings and salutations, everyone; yes, once again it is I, Mani the purebred border collie, filling in for the guy I live with, and here today to bring you up to date on all sorts of things. You may remember me from such posts as “Fencing Lessons”, among so many, many others.
Here I am in a characteristic pose.
Most of the green you see in this picture is “undesirable green”: the “horribly weedy” Melica ciliata and Allium caeruleum. The guy I live with has a lot of digging up to do.
It was a pretty nice day today, though far too dry for spring. Yesterday a really chilly wind blew through the garden and it was yet another “fire weather” day, despite the fact that we got a tenth of an inch of rain a few days before that.
This does not help the guy I live with’s anxiety one little bit. It all seems so wrong.
He went to the doctor to talk about the anxiety last week, but the title of today’s post isn’t all about him. (The guy I live with said nothing is all about him.)
Not even mentioning the news, it’s been extremely dry here since the beginning of the water year, which starts on the first of October, with very high temperatures, endless wind, and endless “fire weather” warnings.
The guy I live with said that the state of “the snowpack” is something to think about. There’s this thing called SNOTEL. The Snowpack Telemetry Network. These are stations all throughout the western United States which monitor snow level and water equivalents.
Abnormally high temperatures caused a lot of the snowpack, already at low levels, to melt in the last few weeks.
To give some examples, the Glen Cove monitor at 11.410 feet, west of Colorado Springs, measured zero percent of the median snowpack yesterday.
The Echo Lake monitor, near Mount Blue Sky, at 10,660 feet, measured 1 percent of the median.
The Buckskin Joe monitor, at 11, 160 feet, south of Breckenridge, measured 22 percent.
The Lone Cone monitor, at 9,730 Feet, south of Norwood, measured 9 percent.
There are some monitors which measure a higher percent.
(This information comes from interactive maps on the US Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service website.)
The guy I live with said it isn’t easy to say what this may mean for the summer, but he said he’s wary of buying too many plants this year, because we’re already on watering restrictions.
Okay, so that’s that. Now let’s talk about some other things.
I went for my annual physical and my doctor said I was fine. The guy I live with was of course pleased with that.
There are plants in flower here.
Here is Mertensia lanceolata, a harbinger of spring all along the foothills of the Rockies and elsewhere. They’re not having the greatest year, what with the lack of snow and rain.
The redbud is in flower. This came as a “passenger” in the rootball of a pine the guy I live with was given. He dug up the pine, which was unhappily lying flat on the ground, and left the redbud. He said the pine had some chance of surviving.
This is Iris magnifica Agalik. The Agalik part must refer to a place where it was originally found.
Here are a couple of fritillarias. The guy I live with, who has a perfect memory, is unsure of the names of these, which he says is a sign that his mind is going.

This is Fritillaria olivieri.
It often pays to look inside the flowers.

In other news, we had a visitor last night. The guy I live with said he was sure someone was walking on the garage roof the night before, and last night I was absolutely certain there was someone, because there was.
We haven’t seen raccoons here in several years. The guy I live with posted this picture on Facebook and people said a lot of negative things about raccoons, but they don’t bother us much. Well, they don’t bother the guy I live with, but they certainly bother me. Imagine having a masked intruder on top of your house. I didn’t even have to imagine it.
That almost winds things up for today, but I also wanted to mention that the ducks have returned to the canal.
That rope had a piece of wood attached to the bottom of it, and is used as a swing. Not by the guy I live with, who would probably break the whole tree, and himself, if he tried to swing on it, but used by kids.
There’s also a crawdad (or crayfish or crawfish) trap in the creek below it. The guy I live with says some people eat them, and the water in the canal is pretty clean, since it comes from the mountains.
There may or may not be less water in the canal this summer. I went in the canal a wek or so ago. The water was cold.
Well, that’s all I have for today. I’ll leave with you a picture of me posing by the wild plums (Prunus americana) flowering along the canal road. The guy I live with says the plums make excellent jam. The flowers are fragrant.
Coyotes like to eat them plums and I find that very interesting indeed. I can tell when they’ve been by the plums.

Until next time, then.


















