In the Night, the Rain Came

cows under trees

Early in the night, the coyotes howled as they disappeared into the cover. We have seen a lot of fruit in their scat as we walk, my dogs and I. This means they are getting hungry and have resorted to raiding the trees down the back. They are loving the wild plums by the look of it.

dogs smelling coyote scat on the driveway
dog on drive

view of the rain clouds across the fields.
open barn door through trees.

24 responses to “In the Night, the Rain Came”

  1. I wish it would rain here. The temperature has droped slghtly, but not the humidity.
    Perhaps you could train up Wai and Tima to be secondary coyote guards – ha ha!

  2. Oh Celi you got all the rain – not us. Enough to barely dampen the side-
    Walk. Hugs to Ton ~ probably has lots of arthritis n bursitis like I do. Boo ~ get those coyotes outa there ~ I’m worried about the chooks. Maybe Wai n Tima should go out n stand guard!!!
    Make some good stew Celi ~ we’ll be over!!!!

  3. I love the night rains that come through, and like you hold onto the window being open for as long as possible as the evenings get cooler. The flannel sheets will come out in the next few months giving more time to listen for night sounds.

  4. Yes this is such a lovely, tender post. We love the rain, its sounds. Grateful to see TonTon up and about. Both great dogs. Boo and Ton.

  5. Donkeys are great guard animals too. They can be ridden as well. I don’t think I’d want to risk Wai or Tima. Maybe time for a new dog so Boo can help teach it.

      • We had coyotes in the neighborhood in Chicago, they would come in the yards and kill dogs. I had to go out with my boys (had 3 dogs at the time (an 85 lb, a 75 lb and a 50 lb) and the next door neighbor had a dog of about that size range who just let it out (fences yard like mine) and it got killed. The coyotes were along the canal where my shop was too and they were there when we’d leave at night. Maybe they had to be ore aggressive in the city. I expected them to be here in this small town but haven’t heard or seen any except along U. S. 24, dead after being hit by vehicles. I noticed too that the raccoons are less aggressive here, which was a surprise. Hope you can find a donkey.

        • I believe that the aggression of the pack comes down to their leader. If she is rogue then there might be trouble. Particularly at calving. I have never heard of anyone losing a dog – though I have heard plenty of people around here blaming every disappearance on coyotes. Our cats are old and roam far hunting.

          Like wolves people down here love to hate on the coyote.

  6. Another memory triggered! A few years before my John died he was on a walkabout with his hunting dog, a Wirehair Pointing Griffon named Eli. Eli disappeared down a ravine and didn’t return when John called which was unusual. Just as John was about to look for him Eli came busting through the brush with a coyote on his heels. We assume it was a female protecting her den. When she saw John she went back down the hill and man and dog continued on their way. When they got quite far from the incident Eli stopped, glared back at the ravine and barked fiercely. Just tells you he wasn’t as big and brave a dog as he thought.

  7. Love the one with Mulberry over-hanging straw… Is it a ‘bird donation’ like mine is Celi? Their leaves are so glossy and interesting, aren’t they (and not to mention fruit stained fingers… ;/)

  8. Rain in the night is the *best* sound, unless it’s cyclone season, in which case I’m lying there worrying about whether my garden is washing away and the chickens will have somewhere to scratch that’s not under water! We need rain right now for the new growth, but we also need it not to rain so the farmers can get the cane crop in. Our 4,000 litre rainwater tank is coming in very useful, especially with the battery pump attached so it stretches all the way down the yard.

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