P2 is a private farm and sanctuary for non-threatening, Florida woodland animals. We're surrounded by the sound of construction and loss of natural habitat for birds, reptiles and creatures of all sort. Our goal is to provide a natural habitat for them to find respite amid the changing landscape and share the journey with you.
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Thursday, April 23, 2020
Thursday, February 27, 2020
200 Black Bellied Whistling Ducks
...or "peep a peeps" as I call them.
This was an EPIC bird day. We had:
200 black bellied whistling ducks
100 sneetches
but very few peafowl.
The sound of the peep a peeps was insane... the whistling at this level was loud. I love their calls, I hope the neighbors do LOL.
This was an EPIC bird day. We had:
200 black bellied whistling ducks
100 sneetches
but very few peafowl.
The sound of the peep a peeps was insane... the whistling at this level was loud. I love their calls, I hope the neighbors do LOL.
Tuesday, January 21, 2020
Whistling Ducks and Mottled Ducks sharing breakfast with the squirrels
The "peep-a-peeps" and brown ducks invaded the squirrel seed breakfast.
The squirrels seemed happy to share, and I love seeing the ducks up
close :D
Tuesday, January 14, 2020
Peacocks Displaying
It's January 14th, and we are in full male displaying time of the year. By about January 10th, the males had their massive feather trains in place. In late December, they were long but not 100%. Now, OMG, they fill the whole area when they display. The males are still getting along together - later, territorial behavior will have them arguing and chasing each other.
So for the record, January 10th begins official male peacock display time.
So for the record, January 10th begins official male peacock display time.
Thursday, January 9, 2020
Wednesday, January 1, 2020
Friday, December 27, 2019
P2 Update - Lots of Amazing Stuff Happened Today - Friday 12-27 2019
Today, Friday, December 27, 2019, we had some critical memorable milestones!
- Mark made a new seat for the weight bench
- Swamp baby baby (in the 2019 garage banana patch) put out a flower
- Pip pup air layering success
- New scanner for art
I'm particularly thrilled about the air layering success, as today's identification of the first roots is the critical initial step to creating air layered papaya plants with fruit and leaves at human levels.
Here's the story behind each of the four milestones...
Here's the story behind each of the four milestones...
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| New weight bench.... lovely and not rotten :D |
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| This is the old rotten seat with the underside peeled back to release the rotten wood and show the foam. |
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| Swamp King is one of the original 2016 tissue culture cavendish bananas I bought to get this madness going. I harvested the pups from Swamp King in December 2017 - this is one of them, named Swamp Baby Baby. I put Swamp Baby Baby in the ground by the garage within the last nine months. And today - flower! |
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| I think the garage looks beautiful with the bananas in front. |
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| Tada! The flower. |
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| The label from the harvesting of the pup. |
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| A lower view of Pips multiple arms/branches. |
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| The air layering section on Pip, which is essentially just the branches I can reach from the ground. The others are 10' plus up in the trunk. |
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| And here they are: FIRST ROOTS. They're big, healthy, and meaty. |
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| Another view of the thick roots. |
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| I love that the papaya trees are a habitat. Here's a little tree frog living up high, eating bugs. |
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| Close up of the froggy. |
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| Another happy guest... anole enjoying the papaya habitat. |
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| And finally - my new scanner! I love it - my art will look perfect. |
Friday, November 29, 2019
Tuesday, November 26, 2019
Monday, November 18, 2019
Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Sunday, November 10, 2019
Today at P2
Here's a quick video update.
Angel (our little wood duck) was here visiting, enjoying corn, swimming around with her friends. We hadn't seen her for a few days so I'm glad to see she's happy, healthy, and hungry!
We stock SUPER LARGE marshmallows as a racon treat... here's why!
Angel (our little wood duck) was here visiting, enjoying corn, swimming around with her friends. We hadn't seen her for a few days so I'm glad to see she's happy, healthy, and hungry!
We stock SUPER LARGE marshmallows as a racon treat... here's why!
Tuesday, November 5, 2019
Peep A Peep!
Peep A Peep at 0:18. Naturally since I was recording them JUST to hear their sounds, they were quiet. Usually it's non-stop peep-a-peep!
Male Peacocks Getting Long Feathers Now - Nov 1 2019
Early November is when the male peacocks start growing in their incredibly beautiful long feathers. They're only half length, so not as impressive as a full set, but since they're brand new and compact, the depth of the color and the number of eyes is amazing.
Four Banana Bunches on One Plant... New Record! 11/5/2019
Ho 2 has four banana bunches on one plant/mat. Amazing! These three Home Depot generic banana plants (probably dwarf cavendish) are incredibly prolific, but four on one is amazing. And they're 35 pound bunches... not 50-100 lbs, but I'm glad because that would be WAY too big for me to harvest!
Smile for the Camera, Blacky!
I passed by a black racer snake this morning, and I swear he smiled real big for me... or was he being aggressive... He's cute either way!
Monday, November 4, 2019
Beach!
11/1/2019 - Beach temperature was 73 degrees, with wind out of the NE. The cloud cover was just about 100%, and without the sun it just felt COLD. We walked the beautiful beach for 20 minutes and called it. It was a beautiful day, just too cold and windy to hang out for hours.
11/5/2019 -
11/5/2019 -
Thursday, October 17, 2019
ANGEL FLEW TODAY
Our little wood duck, born and grown up on the P2 pond, flew for the first time today!
BANANA HANGERS
HANGING BANANAS UP TO RIPEN
We've struggled with ripening bananas. If they sit on a table then ants get on them. Opossums have climbed up the supports in our pole-barn to eat our delicious yummy fruit.
It takes a while for the bananas to ripen, sometimes a month or more. So what to do with them while we wait, we don't have space in the kitchen for several 30-35 pound bunches of bananas.
The solution, while simple, involves a little bit of backbreaking labor.
The short answer is, we embedded "Shepherds Hook" plant hangers in concrete which was poured in Home Depot 5-gallon pails. Each bucket has roughly 80 pounds of concrete in it to make it stable with bunches of bananas hanging on the hook.
A design trick I borrowed from the Butterfly Sanctuary in St Martin, I placed the hooks out away from the bucket side so that we can put two-inches of water in the bucket after the concrete set up. The water creates a barrier that ants hate. Mary and I have a $100 bet as to whether the ants will swim the short distance to get to our yummy bananas. Only time will tell.
Mary cuts the "hands" of bananas and then puts a long wire-tie through the hand so it can easily be added to a "Ripening Hook".
When we first started growing banana plants we never thought we'd ever be eating our own bananas. We're growing the best tasting bananas available anywhere. They are so flavorful and sweet, much more yummy than even the organic bananas from the grocery stores.
We're currently in the testing phase to evaluate how this system works.
Advantages: Portable, low cost, easy to use
Disadvantages: Heavy, not easy to move
We've struggled with ripening bananas. If they sit on a table then ants get on them. Opossums have climbed up the supports in our pole-barn to eat our delicious yummy fruit.
It takes a while for the bananas to ripen, sometimes a month or more. So what to do with them while we wait, we don't have space in the kitchen for several 30-35 pound bunches of bananas.
The solution, while simple, involves a little bit of backbreaking labor.
The short answer is, we embedded "Shepherds Hook" plant hangers in concrete which was poured in Home Depot 5-gallon pails. Each bucket has roughly 80 pounds of concrete in it to make it stable with bunches of bananas hanging on the hook.
A design trick I borrowed from the Butterfly Sanctuary in St Martin, I placed the hooks out away from the bucket side so that we can put two-inches of water in the bucket after the concrete set up. The water creates a barrier that ants hate. Mary and I have a $100 bet as to whether the ants will swim the short distance to get to our yummy bananas. Only time will tell.
Mary cuts the "hands" of bananas and then puts a long wire-tie through the hand so it can easily be added to a "Ripening Hook".
When we first started growing banana plants we never thought we'd ever be eating our own bananas. We're growing the best tasting bananas available anywhere. They are so flavorful and sweet, much more yummy than even the organic bananas from the grocery stores.
We're currently in the testing phase to evaluate how this system works.
Advantages: Portable, low cost, easy to use
Disadvantages: Heavy, not easy to move
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| Two Inches of water in top of bucket keeps ants away, they hate swimming :-) |
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| Hanger post is 3/4" away from bucket, there is clear water on top of the concrete to create an Ant Free barrier Without the water ants will find there way up the hook to the bananas above |
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| The hooks are only rated for 10 pounds of weight but in this setup we've hung 30-35 pound bunches |
Sunday, October 13, 2019
China Labor Cost
A very important chart:
Source: https://www.ceicdata.com/en/china/standard-of-monthly-minimum-wage/standard-of-monthly-minimum-wage-beijing
Source: https://www.ceicdata.com/en/china/standard-of-monthly-minimum-wage/standard-of-monthly-minimum-wage-beijing
Saturday, October 12, 2019
Monday, September 16, 2019
Spicebush Swallowtail Butterfly
I've been watching these amazing spicebush swallowtail butterflies flit around the male papaya flowers and the tropical milkweed, and finally I grabbed my phone quick enough to capture them in action!
Sunday, September 15, 2019
September 15 - Magic Day - Change to Happy Outdoors!
Mark and I just agreed - today, September 15th, was the first day this summer that we could go outside and not get eaten by bugs, not be cooked mercilessly in the heat and humidity, and enjoy being outside! It was still hot and humid, but NOTHING like July and August and early September.
We are SO excited to be able to spend more time outside now! Weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!
We are SO excited to be able to spend more time outside now! Weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!
Sunday, September 8, 2019
Wednesday, September 4, 2019
REMEMBERING HURRICANE ANDREW
What do we do when we're waiting out a hurricane? We study previous hurricanes to judge their effects and how they played out.
The BIG ONE came in 1992, his name was Andrew and he slammed into the Florida coast line at a reported 187mph, well over the speed required to be a Category 5. The destruction at the point of landfall was devestating, it went straight inland and flattened Homestead Florida. FLATTENED! Cat 5 is not to be played with, seek emergency shelter away from where the landfall is going to occur.
The good news from studying these storm disasters comes in the knowledge that the moment a hurricane makes landfall in Florida the intensity immediately goes down a lot. The size and speed of Andrew meant he went inland a bit before losing intensity but 20 miles away damage was minimal because the storm lost so much energy as it thrashed Homestead Florida.
There is complete information about Hurricane Andrew on Wiki.
The BIG ONE came in 1992, his name was Andrew and he slammed into the Florida coast line at a reported 187mph, well over the speed required to be a Category 5. The destruction at the point of landfall was devestating, it went straight inland and flattened Homestead Florida. FLATTENED! Cat 5 is not to be played with, seek emergency shelter away from where the landfall is going to occur.
The good news from studying these storm disasters comes in the knowledge that the moment a hurricane makes landfall in Florida the intensity immediately goes down a lot. The size and speed of Andrew meant he went inland a bit before losing intensity but 20 miles away damage was minimal because the storm lost so much energy as it thrashed Homestead Florida.
There is complete information about Hurricane Andrew on Wiki.
Tuesday, September 3, 2019
Monday, September 2, 2019
Sunday, September 1, 2019
Friday, August 30, 2019
Thursday, August 29, 2019
Bird Tree
Yesterday we had a very odd lightning/thunder strike that didn't make visible contact but did strange damage. Our internet modem was rendered "dead", and the staghorn fern (AKA flying spaghetti monster) was released from his 30 year place in the oak trees to a new location on the ground. The southern oak branch just broke right off, and not even at the steel cord but at another place.
So, now we have a massive 12' long oak limb laying on the grass.... but why fret? The peafowl and sneetches are in HEAVEN. They spent the day roosting in the new "low tree", letting us know how they love what we've done with the place! Hmmmm, this new bird tree will be in this location for a while so that our feathered friends can enjoy it immensely.
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