Sunday, November 10, 2019

High Octane October 2019



What a month!  Henkels were busy bees, the weather varied wildly from a few golden days, to many cool, wet days and three days of snow, and the family experienced birthdays, emergency surgeries and other special events.  October was FULL!

Those early days of cold prompted the earliest ever switch to flannel sheets and some very hurried outdoor activities.  Hilde hustled to plant fall bulbs, ruthlessly prune the forsythia (again) and get those brilliantly colored blueberry bushes tucked in with pine needle mulch.  Mark went aloft to tuckpoint and repaint the chimney, picked late raspberries until about the last week (once after the first snow!), pruned SOME of the wild grape vine on the antenna tower and crafted two beautiful wooden spoons from heritage Lomira ash.

That last project was preceded by dealing with a mess in the wood shop, where an enterprising mouse had made a nest IN Mark’s drill press.  Cleaning that up took hours and disassembly of the drill press.  Mark and Hilde also made an   early Christmas delivery, taking the refurbished JD lawnmower down to Jim and Kayme just before Halloween, between those aforementioned snows.

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The usual fall harvest finales took time:  the Henkels had some helping hands for the major chicken butchering on a fine frosty morning, and did the last three roosters (which needed fattening) a couple weeks later.  They dug the poor carrot crop, brought in the three pie pumpkins and all the deck plants and enjoyed one last dinner on the deck, too.  After picking apples and clearing the garden, Hilde was quite busy making applesauce, drying apples, freezing final peppers and making a few more batches of those delicious chocolate zucchini muffins for winter desserts.  Mark got the fence down, and then the gardens disked up so things were ready for winter.
 
The autumn colors were lovely, but the season late and then shortened by the early snow and cold.  Mark and Hilde took some time to enjoy one day at Horicon, another at Lake Sherwood and a special fish fry down at the Silvercryst in Wautoma.  While they were not able to visit them, they rejoiced in Rowan’s 7th birthday and Hazel’s 2nd  birthday---both happy girls and growing nicely.

Hilde has been on a crafting binge:  she finished one really interesting afghan in rich colors, knit two children’s sweaters and sewed a table runner, just to try out a pattern she noticed on line.  Mark started getting fairly busy on the (final???) out of state lawsuit, so phones were ringing, the printer was spewing lots of paper and his usual pacing to and fro began.

On the family side, Alana and Justin visited on a nice Sunday, and Hilde’s mother scared everyone by having an emergency appendectomy at age 87.  After a couple weeks in rehab, Arlene is back at her assisted living apartment and doing well.  One of the neighbors on Tower Road dropped over dead way too young (55) and made everyone think about “numbering their days aright.”  

Annual physicals and the ensuing scans and tests took some time, but with those were all fine.  The flat tire on one car, and nearly empty gas tank on the other were only minor irritations ---and they were not even late for the taekwondo class---just not as early as usual.

Mill Creek mid month
With the wet conditions, two expeditions to the Seneca swanp were quite challenging:  high water, tangled tops from past logging disguised by tall undergrowth, and hidden stumps.  The moss and leaves were quietly beautiful, as Mark and Hilde struggled to find and reclear the serpentine path leading to the back deer stand out there!  As usual way out in rural Rudolph, no trick or treaters, but a quiet night for Mark and Hilde to snuggle down and face up to an early winter. 
 


So Wisconsin!