G'day, folks.
SFR, enjoy your pleasant weather. I hope your pet is OK.
Sharon/LDM, my fingers are crossed for a pleasant afternoon storm for you.
Sharon/WO, boot camp and ten a long walk for the dog? No wonder you need a nap!
It's late here, we're tired. We got back from Canberra this evening. difficult child 3 has been very difficult, very reactive especially to husband. Mind you, it's been a bit the other way too - husband falling back into old habits at times and stepping in to criticise difficult child 3 in ways that just don't work well. I think husband is trying to be protective of me so I don't have to handle so much, but it ends up making more work for me as I have to try and sort things out, after they're a bigger mess. OK, most of the time husband gets it and he really puts up with a lot of crud from difficult child 3. I also do my darndest to defend husband to difficult child 3. But the more I have to do it, the less it will be effective, long-term.
We bought a lot of farm-grown tomatoes yesterday at the farmers market, tonight I've cooked up about half of them. They're still bubbling on the stove, we've got a timer set.
Tonight as he walked down to mother in law's (where husband & I already were) difficult child 3 saw something fall from the power lines and lie there twitching. We went back to look and sure enough, as we expected, it was a young bat, the size of a half-grown kitten. Last year's litter. husband got a nylon bag from me and carefully wrapped it up until just it's foxy head was showing. The bat (a flying fox) was very unhappy about tis and was making the most blood-curdling screams. But on the ground it was struggling, not able to get around well. We figured it had been electrocuted; it was the same place where we had a dead bat hanging from the wires a couple of months ago.
We took the bat to mother in law's and hung it from the low branches of a peach tree. It still struggled, seemed to have trouble with one wing, we also saw its knuckle bleeding (perhaps form a burn). I rang WIRES (Wildlife and Information Rescue Service) who finally called back and a rep dropped in to check things out. By that time husband had moved the bat to a better tree - and got bitten for his troubles, bitten right through his leather gauntlets. So it's likely that tomorrow husband will need a rabies shot. We don't have rabies in Australia, but the nasty virus bats carry here, called Lyssa virus, will respond to rabies shots.
By the time the WIRES rep had arrived, the bat (a young male) had climbed a couple of metres higher in the tree and seemed to have recovered most of its agility. The lucky one that survived, it seems.
Tomorrow it's back to radiation treatment then on to difficult child 3's therapist appointment. We'll drop husband off at his work (he has some paperwork to do plus a delivery to collect, even though he's on leave) then he'll drop in on his doctor to talk about the bat bite. After that we're taking difficult child 3 in to his school for a couple of one-on-one lessons. Then he has a drama class. I'm caffeine free tomorrow - no coffee (not even decaf) and no chocolate! So sad...
Enjoy your Monday, everyone.
Marg