A leisure pleasure of mine on a Sunday morning is to read the Joggles Newsletter, wherein I find the latest info on books and products and classes and SALES. This week Barbara was lamenting the Punxutawney prediction of an extended winter and offered subscribers a special to get even with Phil. This evoked a chuckle and a reminder of my own war waged on rodents last summer.
To the right you see my 94 year young father with the cabin he and my mother built themselves in 1938. Along with scalloped moldings, red gingham curtains and folksy homilies rendered in cross stitch, my mother, an artist, designed a loft railing that features cut out squirrels. Over the years we've extended this theme.
We used Mother's original pattern to make a railing for the loft in the cabin addition. Throughout is a collection of antique and vintage nutcrackers, and the abundance of squirrel and acorn decor items should attest to our family's fondness for critter cuteness. The first quilt top I ever made was nuts and squirrels!
When we opened the cabin in late June we were pleased to find the place neat and tidy, no sign of the mice we usually anticipate; in fact the mouse bait was untouched. But wait! Oh, some broken glass; a mouse must have knocked a tumbler down from the built-in hutch. Uh oh -- big shards of pottery; a large pitcher found it's way from a top display shelf to the floor. No mere mouse could have helped it along. I should mention that windows are still shuttered during this investigation. I step on something. Pinecone remains. More, and sizeable, too! Then a whole pinecone, just lying there waiting to become a snack.
I clean up the mess and ponder the mystery. The cabin is pretty secure, so it would be difficult for a squirrel to get in unless it were in when we closed up. But the pinecones, 6-7 inch pinecones? So the glass was just a drinking glass and the pitcher wasn't vintage Bauer and I had a little extra sweeping chore. I remove the dust covers from the furniture. Everything looks fine even when I remove all the throw pillows and cushions that have been stacked and covered with plastic. You know my sigh of relief is short lived, don't you?
I want everything so perfect for my dad's arrival. This marked the first time DH and I had completed a cycle of opening and closing by ourselves. In the living room (the cabin's original room) We have a single bed with bolsters and cushions that doubles as a sofa. It was in making up this bed that I became aware of nesting. A neat nest, to be sure, but nasty nevertheless. What you're looking at to the right is the window seat cushion from the dining area. On the bed the critter (may it crisp in rodent hell) gnawed into the base of one of bolsters, but found the foam filling not to taste. It made it's way down toward the mattress but only got through the cotton twill spread and a thermal blanket. I threw those away and everything else got washed or heavily Lysolled. Then I got to work repairing damaged upholstery which was new and customized and couldn't just go to waste. These are the patches I made.