Stout’s Bullfrog Snack?

Back in February, I was cleaning out the pond from all of the leaves and sticks that had accumulated through the winter. I heard a strange, deep chirping sound and saw a rustle in the vines that hang over the back edge of the pond.

Investigating, I found a bullfrog who was in a semi-hibernetic state because of the cold temperature. I had disturbed him with the net as I was cleaning out leaves. He moved very slowly. I noticed that he was missing a front leg. I left him alone in the vines. “Let sleeping frogs lie,” is the old expression.

I told Kathy about the three-legged bullfrog. She laughed as we both imagined Stout (who is always hunting around the pond for frogs and fish) had gotten himself a frog-leg snack.

Yesterday was a gorgeous spring day. Kathy spent most of the time cleaning up the front pine beds. I spent most of the day burning the old picnic table, some scrap wood from the basement repair, and a bunch of sticks, logs, and branches that had accumulated over the winter.

As I went by the pond, I saw a bullfrog sitting on the side. I went and grabbed the net and using my rush-and-swipe technique (frogs have to think a second before acting), I got the net in front of him and he jumped right in. Stout was very excited. Sure enough, the three-legged bullfrog. While I should have put him in a bag in the freezer, Kathy has banned this recommended practice, so I let him go in the storm drain. Last seen hopping down the storm pipe. That’s #6 in this continuing saga of pond bullfrogs.

Now the twist here is, I may have an answer to the question: Do the bullfrogs climb down the storm drain some 400 yards under a street and then come back? If I spot another bullfrog missing a front-right leg, we’ll know.

Stout and the Bee

Kelly told us all week how Stout was protecting her from bees. If bees came near her, she could call Stout and he would jump, bark, and snap at the bees to chase them away. Since I’ve never been able to get Stout interested in chasing away roaches, I wasn’t sure why he was deciding to chase bees, but Stout and Kelly have a special relationship.

Kelly sent me this amazing photo on Friday. I’m including two sizes. The left is screen size and the right is high resolution.

stout-and-bee-25.jpg stout-and-bee.jpg

I asked her if she has used photoshop, and she said no, that it was a real shot. I later noticed how she had made all but Stout and the bee black and white. Kelly admitted she had used Photoshop to do that. I hadn’t even noticed it at first, but it really made the bee and Stout stand out. She then said she had made the bee a little bigger.

“Well that’s using Photoshop,” I told Kelly. She thought I meant had she taken two pictures and merged them. She meant the photo was real. Enhancing photos is just something she does with almost every photo she takes. That’s normal.

I showed this photo to some of our designers at work. They were impressed. The whole idea that kids have grown up enhancing photos on the fly is something new. It used to take chemicals and dark rooms to do what Kelly did with this photo… and forget making the bee bigger.

I think it was a great shot, enhancements and all. I hope there is some money in her future with this kind of creativity.

300 Hurdle Win at County

Kathy did a good job snapping photos of Claire racing the 300 JV hurdles at the county meet at Mill Creek. Claire did an even better job winning it.

After the Saturday prelims that narrowed the field from 32 down to the top 8, Claire knew she would have some stiff competition. For the Monday finals, I was glad to see she was in lane 4, because that meant 4 girls (lanes 4 – 8) would line up staggered ahead of her and 3 would line up behind her. In a 300, there is only one bend, and the girls are staggered about 10 feet apart to allow for the advantage the inner lanes have over the outer. I think it helps Claire to have some competition to catch.

In the prelim race, Claire just shot down the first straight away and passed all of the girls ahead of her before the bend, finishing with a big lead, even though she took the last stretch slower than her start. In the finals, she started strong and finished strong. You can see by the time she came around the bend, which is about 2/3 of the race, she had a good lead.

See the whole sequence here.

Way to go Claire!