Monday, 7 January 2008

Boring, boring, boring

The digger / excavator / post-lifter-outer. Drilling here to check the depth to bedrock under where the slab will be for the house (one day ....). The post behind me is the corner of the house, and the other corner is in the vege garden in front of me.

The pumpkins are taking over the world - they not only grew all around the outside of the garden but are now climbing up the trellis which is supposed to be for beans and tomatoes. BUT when they grow on the trellis they produce far more pumpkins. Can't figure that out, but it is good news. We now have about ten small pumpkins and one that is bigger than a soccer ball - by about 50%.

Hanneke figured the other day that we are producing about 80 percent of our vegetable requirements. We are talking about where to put the chicken yard, but that may be a few weeks yet.

Praying Mantis Egg Case

Was up by the top tank the other morning very early - after a night of rain - to check whether our repairs to the pad the tank is sitting on had been affected by the rain. Thought I saw a new kind of pale blue flower in the grass, and when I went to have a look it took me a while to realise that I was looking at a praying mantis making its egg case (called an ootheca). I was actually holding the praying mantis in my fingers at one stage, thinking it was the stem of the "flower". Duh!

Sunday, 6 January 2008

Flying Ant Migration


We had a flying ant migration the other night after a very warm and humid evening. Lots of them coming into the shed.

The next morning the water barrel at the tank overflow has masses of them floating on top - an amazing sight against the dark deep water in the barrel.

Sad Green Frog Story

The other day when it was raining (it has rained pretty much every day since Liz left - so the rain frog she gave us for Christmas is proving its worth!), two of our Green Tree Frogs were out and about near the water tank. One, which was sitting in the leaf-excluder, was fat and healthy. The other, which was down near the tank was looking a bit thin, though it had a good colour - unlike when they were really starving during the drought, just skin and bones, and their skin colour was dark and unhealthy looking.

When Hanneke had a close look at it she realised that its face was a mass of raw flesh - looked like it had poked its nose into a cheese grater - with large red and white raw patches, one of which looked like a growth on the bottom jaw bone. Looked like the sort of thing one sees in reports about the cancers on the faces of Tasmanian Devils. It was really heart-wrenching to see. She caught it and brought it inside while we thought about what to do with it.

We have had at least one of our green frogs with a growth on its face - since a few years ago, but we can’t be sure it was this one. And that growth wasn’t open and raw like these, just a raised, warty-looking ridge above one side of the top jaw.

A search on the internet led to items from the Cairns Frog Hospital that seven green tree frogs have been recorded with cancerous growths on their faces. This is being studied by a team from James Cook University, along with other frog diseases such as a fungus that seems to be very widespread and that really weakens its victims.

Hanneke contacted the manager of the Cairns Frog Hospital, who asked for some photos of our frog. When she received these she thought that it might be a combination of cancer and flesh-eating bacteria, but she wanted the frog taken to someone who could take some samples to confirm what it was. She and Hanneke discussed sending the frog via Qantas air cargo to Cairns or Townsville (or to a NSW university, but NSW has a regulation banning the sending of diseased frogs into that State). Eventually they decided on a PhD researcher at Queensland Uni, who is working on frog diseases.

We made a special trip to Brisbane (actually Manly West, the other side of Brisbane, two hours away) to deliver the frog to her, and she will take samples of the wounds to try to identify the problem, as well as trying to nurse the frog back to health. She is obviously very much a frog lover, so we felt great about leaving the poor thing with her.

Will let you know when we have more news.