>Feed me!

>The baby blue jays are growing up fast, and their parents are becoming super protective. Speedracer is going to go out in full armor (bike helmet, lab safety goggles, etc.) to get some better footage. If you come even within 5 feet mama or papa will buzz you! We read that blue jay babies fledge at about 21 days but that time period can be longer if the brood is large (we have 5) and if weather/feeding conditions are not good. The babies on our deck hatched on May 30th, so they are about 12 days old now. We have been putting some whole peanuts with shells out on the deck that the mama and papa seem to like. Cho Cho really does keep watch. Click on the arrows in the right hand corner to get a full screen view (it is a little blurry – sorry!).

>The Three S’s

>Spit
Suck
Strut

This is what Genna & Bee taught us yesterday on our nature walk, here in Winchester. We found a honey suckle vine, and decided to taste the drops of honey. Bee & Genna really liked this, and must have picked about a hundred of them, and perfected the technique. First you bite off and spit out the little green part. Then you suck the drop of honey. Then you strut your goodness. The technique was enjoyed by all!

>We’ve got birdies

>


All five eggs hatched over the weekend, and we’ve got the evidence here. First is a movie shot when four of the five eggs had hatched.

data=”http://releases.flowplayer.org/swf/flowplayer-3.2.5.swf”>
The next day we tried again and the last egg had hatched.
data=”http://releases.flowplayer.org/swf/flowplayer-3.2.5.swf”>

Papa bird didn’t get too far away from me while I was shooting movies…


>Jamestown, ND

>We made it to Jamestown, North Dakota, or actually a few miles west of it. So glad to be done with Minnesota! May saw 155 miles of running through lots of rain and warmer temps. For Speedracer it meant running in Canada while for me i got a few miles down in the desert. That gives us 987 miles on the year. Just 18.5 away to the halfway mark! Of course the highlight of those 155 miles were the 26.2 we ran in Traverse City this past weekend. We highly recommend the Bayshore marathon to anyone interested. It is incredibly scenic, small, and very well organized. Water and gatorade station about every 1.5 miles, kind volunteers, and all around goodness. Today (June 1) is also National Running Day! So get those shoes on and get out there, even if just for a short bit. It’s kind of exciting to have the first post marathon run be on national running day. It will be a short 4 miler for sure as we’e both still a bit sore, but nice nonetheless.

>It’s May! 30 miles to go…

>

30 more miles to Fargo, ND, that is! Geesh this state of Minnesota is wide! We should hit Fargo by Friday or Saturday. We had a banner month in the thick of marathon training. A couple of 10-20 mile pairs made up over 25% of that mileage. That makes a new monthly high of 229 miles, and a total of 832.5 miles on the year. It was a crazy running month, with snow, ice and rain runs, as well as running in shorts (make that a 20 mile run in 85 degrees for speedracer), running in many states, and slowly but surely running after sunrise (today the sun was up before 6!).

>can someone build us an ark?

>
Nice soggy run this morning… but hey we are getting closer and closer to Spokane. Ok seriously, this is the rainiest/snowiest spring on record. We should not complain though because as Frankie and Bee keep saying, April showers bring May flowers! and, we haven’t had the severe storms seen elsewhere. But weather is fun to talk about.

It is April 27th. Guess how many days during the month of april it has precipitated (rain or snow)?

a. <10
b. 11-15
c. 16-20
d. 21-25
e. 26-27

>April 18th…

>

From the National Weather Service:

… Winter Weather Advisory remains in effect until noon EDT
today…

* Visibility below one quarter mile at times.

* Rapidly changing conditions.

Hazardous weather…

* at 750 am snow covered much of the advisory area. Heavier snow
was moving through Lansing Kalamazoo and South Haven. Reduced
speeds have been noted on many of the highways. The snow will
taper off from west to east by 10 am.

* Snowfall rates around an inch per hour are possible between
8 am and 10 am.

* Total accumulations 3 to 5 inches by noon.