Thursday, 19 April 2018

A walk around the gardens at the Quinta


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     We finally, after repeatedly repeating our repetitious repetitions to try to enter the above picture on to our blog entry, managed to post it through.   This squirrel who makes a fool of himself most of the morning, and then again in the early evening, going out to the end of a limb, or hanging upside down to snatch an especially inviting berry.   He is a nut for our mulberries.   All of our squirrels can fly (glide) a little with good accuracy, perhaps 10 or 12 feet, and at a 30 degree decline or more. 
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   Our first image is one of our powder-puff bushes that announced that it is ready to confront Springtime, after our trying Winter experiences.  

     We have several of these bushes, and they seem to have the ability to plant and sprout wherever the wind might blow.  Therefore, one can imagine how many we have after these several years.  

     The entirety of the daylight hours, various and numerous (by the hundreds) of hummingbirds visit these blossoms looking for the very rich...and sparse...nectar that fuels the incessant "Flight of the Hummers".


This, to the left,  is the image of the jaguarundi (hah - gwar - UHN - dee) a large cat found in large stretches of eastern Mexico.  It prowls in semi-arid thickets in the far northeast and throughout the tropical, wet, and "green-mountain" precincts of the Sierra Madre Oriental.

     This cat is normally about 5 / 6ths of the size of its first cousin, the puma (mountain lion), which also rarely, but certainly, has begun to return even to our little patch of ground next to the Rio Corona and the high slopes of the adjacent above-mentioned mountains to immediate west.

     One of the main differences with this cat, as compared to the puma, is that the head of the jaguarundi is relatively smaller and the tail is thicker and longer in relation to overall body  silhouettes as compared to the puma.   All of this preamble prepares the OROG (Order of the Readers of the Olde Gringo) Community that we have a beast, pictured above, as a "boarder" on our property in Mexico.
     She seems to prefer our neighbour's hens and eggs to legitimate work (baby and juvenile crocodiles and carp and perch).  Oddly, our neighbour's hens have generally been able to avoid the normal intentions of a lazy girl jaguarundi.   They are in very agile physical shape, much faster afoot than many might think, and their chicks scatter in such a way as to confuse the vision of the large "cats of the jungle".
     In spite of the moanings and groanings of the Tree Hugger Class, it is certainly true that bobcats, jaguarundies, pumas, and such are actually increasing in number.   This is in the USA as well as Mexico.
     Bears in the nearby mountains are no longer comment-worthy as a saloon or supper topic due to the commonality of sightings.   The photo to the left is a true picture of a "snack- attack" by two obviously well-fed Mexican Brown Bears from the nearby Los Mitras and Huajuco Mountain complexes that are adjacent to the westernmost metropolitan complex of the Metroplex of Monterrey, Nuevo Leon, Mexico, which doubles as Mexico's "industrial giant and hub of "first-world status" for that nation.
     None of these presumptuous (but accurate) statements take away from the fact that the South Texas (last remaining area) ocelot is dealing with precarious future investment options.

  Also, the wholesale emplacement of those horrid wind generators...the area around our neighbouring Reynosa across the Rio Grande from McAllen, and entrenched into the western rural (out of sight) area of western Hidalgo County (my county)...is truly killing hundreds of forever "down-scanning-view" hawks and eagles (including Bald Eagles) every month, just in southernmost Texas and northeasternmost Mexico.   Where are the Greenies in this issue?
    
So now we have the Mexican Black Squirrel, pictured to the left, obviously a male, who has become ravenously addicted to the mulberries on the tree next to our corridor.   The birds are tolerant of him, but I am not, because I know that when the mulberries run out, he will begin to search out electrical wiring insulation.   We have also caught him, not only eating our mulberries, but also smoking mulberry leaves down below in our more hard-to-reach parts of our property.  He has been reported to the proper authorities.   Meanwhile we are looking for other beasties to entertain us during the day.  There is an abundance, even including insects.



  We were perplexed by the arrival of a bird about the which of whom nobody knew nuttin'.  We called upon 0lder local Mexicans who were well versed in the bird lexicon, and our Sergeant Major of Affairs Alvaro who is more than a AAA minor-league bird analyst, having lived adjacent to the famous El Cielo Environmental Reserve in south-central Tamaulipas State's southern hub of the Sierra de El Cautivo.  It is a place of true wonder, and has been preserved by law, and the efforts of the common Indians and local ruralists, along with the efforts of our neighbour, the owner of the Hacienda de La Vega...during his service as co-ordinator of fire-repression efforts in the terms of Fox Quezada and Calderon Hinojosa.
    El Cielo is a natural and cultural resource regarded as one of Mexico's true nature treasures.   Our Charge d'affaires and his people were and are involved in the protection of that area to this day.

     Now, to the left, one sees the true fact that Texas Asparagus truly is bigger than anything the Jolly Green Giant can produce.   Reasonable measurement of the asparagus shown in the photograph places the shorter at 9 feet and the larger at 12 feet.
     Truth be known, these are actually the design of nature, and the signal of the end of the spiked-leafed plants from which the "asparagus" springs.   Known as "maguey" (mah GAYE), foreigners frequently refer to them as  "cactus".  But, it is not a cactus...and is more closely related to the lilly.   The production of the stalk indicates that the maguey is ready to "retire", and the new baby magueys will appear at the top of the stalks.  They will be planted as the first petal of their flowers begin to fall.
     Usually, a maguey plant will publish its stalk after seven to twelve years.  It is not a plant to be hurried or even fertilised or overly attended or irrigated.  The plant has been used for detergent (from the tuberous attachments to the roots), for a needle and thread by breaking off the very dangerous point of the leaf and forcefully, quickly ripping the central fibres of the leaf out.
   With that, the Indian lady could have a needle and about three to seven strands of sturdy fibre to either mend or construct clothing.   The image of Mexican peasants and Indians dressed in white attire is related to the clothes made and repaired by that useful fibre.

     There are various types of maguey, all closely related.  All produce fibre.  Another type produces the liquid that will finally distill into mescal...a high-octane liquor that used to be controlled at 120 proof.   Another, in the west, and to a much lesser degree around the area to the south of Ciudad Victoria here in central Tamaulipas State is used in the production of the famous tequila that is less volatile  but sometimes equated with the firewater-like  (at least in the "olden days") mescal, which is more associated with the southern regions of Mexico, around Oaxaca (O ah HAH cah) State.

    In the Yucatan, and in the area of central Tamaulipas, the English and Spanish loaded tonnes and tonnes of maguey fibre-bales onto ships to be taken to clothing and rope mills.  Much of the maguey fibre was also produced in the Philippines.   These areas still produce a little, but nylon has pretty much destroyed the old, tradition way.  Cowboy lariats and the like are still made from the fibre, and perhaps always will be.  It is still used in the production of denim, as in bluejeans.

More later.  Please stand by to-morrow.
El Gringo Viejo
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