Roses brought into the house to counteract the dead rat smell did not work. Look good, though.
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But under our house, death. There could be a dozen corpses under there, for all we know. PK has been waging a poison war against the gophers and moles that are tunneling through the garden and even under paving stones. Some tunnels lead under the house.
A gopher or mole did this, dislodging dirt and sand under paving stones, which, incidentally, had just been repaired! |
This isn't the first time a rodent or two or three has croaked just a few feet out of sight and reach. Several years ago PK inch-wormed his way to a far corner of the crawl space to retrieve the rotting rat that revolted all who entered. No more crawl-space inch-worming for PK, and certainly not for moi. We'll open more windows or hire somebody with a hazmat suit. In the meantime, we'll go outside!
NEWS FLASH! Minutes after I wrote the above, a PEST EXTERMINATOR knocked on our door. Unbelievable that he showed up. In my university English lit classes, such an event would be considered deus ex machina, whereby a seemingly unsolvable problem is suddenly and abruptly solved with the contrived and unexpected intervention of some new event, character, ability, or object. (Wikipedia).
This type of intervention can't be written without peril, but when it happens in real life, you just rejoice and marvel. We hired the same guy last year to close up the crawl spaces, and he just happened by to see if we needed anything. At exactly the most opportune moment.
Oh my God! Yes!
He donned mask and coveralls and squeezed through a crawlspace entryway. Beneath my office, right below the vent, he found a fetid seeping rat carcass, which he shoved into a plastic bag and drove off with in his big black truck.
A couple days later, life is good and air is fresh here at my computer. In addition, our deliverance guy found and blocked the pest entry. We paid him $100 and everybody was happy, except the neighborhood rodents.
A few country-living photos follow attesting to the general wholesomeness of the lifestyle.
But David Lynch knows, and I know, that death, decay, and evil can strike—or seep—at any moment. For now, I enjoy the wholesomeness and hope for the best. Thank you, exterminator guy. Thank you, universe.
Out here, a few tractor fumes hardly interfere with the fresh air.
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Volunteer poppies delight the eye and spirit.
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The faithful perennials make me glad. |
I love this rose bush. |
Our neighbors have a rose like that. I make a point of looking at it often. Such lush colors.
ReplyDeleteHilarious exterminator-as-god-in-the-machine story. It's the kind of thing you can laugh about fairly soon after but during...is there anything worse than the smell of rotting rat? I think I'd be feeling pretty heartless toward anything that started burrowing underneath paving stones. Little buggers. We had a rat die in our big shed last winter. I knew it was in there but did NOT want to find it, sissy me. It ate through a big bag of grass seed that was on, of course, the top shelf, causing the seeds to cascade leaving deposits of tiny seed and rat turds on everything on all the shelves down to floor level. I finally deduced that the putrid carcass was inside a big box where the rat had chewed its way through the $100 fabric car cover inside. I did not investigate. The entire mess went onto a brush fire, whole. Now there's chewed up paper and rat or mice droppings on my work bench and a stench when you first open the door so another one has gotten in and croaked. You wouldn't think we'd have a rodent problem in this neighborhood, what with the huge population of domestic and feral cats. Your chard looks beautiful. Mine is about 4 inches tall but we did our first batch of spinach last night.