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Wednesday, May 29, 2024

FLASHPOINT Coming to Audiobook!


FLASHPOINT to Join THE SERPENT IN THE STONE in Audiobook

I’m excited to share the news that FLASHPOINT, Book Two in the Gifted Series, is in production as an audiobook after nearly ten years of waiting. Phew! These characters have sure paid their dues.

The hunt went fairly quickly, because once I heard the fabulous Janine Granda, I knew I had found my Faith Markham. Janine is a SAG-AFTRA actor professionally trained in film and theater, and she brings her years of experience to the table making magic for authors. I can’t wait for you to hear her bring Faith and Hakon to life in the wilds of Australia’s beautiful Blue Mountains.

About FLASHPOINT

Faith Markham knows her place in life—paranormal expert and world-traveling archaeologist. She also knows she'll never fall in love again. How can she, when the only man she's ever wanted is a long-dead Viking warrior? She has resigned herself to loneliness, but fate has other ideas.

Hakon Ivarsson has had enough of women. His ex-wife left his life in ruins, and only Australia's Blue Mountains can soothe his empty soul. When Faith shows up needing a trail guide, he regards her with instant suspicion. This enigmatic beauty pulls at him in ways he can't explain. Trusting her is out of the question, but protecting her is absolute.

When they stumble on an artifact-smuggling ring, led by a man poised to bend the world's paranormal power to his own terrible purposes, they must join forces. Will it tear them apart, or has fate finally delivered a second chance?

Look for FLASHPOINT this summer. I’ll post details here first as they become available. Stay tuned, readers (and listeners)!

Wednesday, May 22, 2024

Squirrel Wars 6: A Draw?

 

The Squirrel Wars Continue

I’ve reached a draw. I think. I bought the above feeder hoping that, with a squirrel baffle, it would make a difference. It didn’t…and by now I should not be surprised. After they figured out how to hang upside down on this feeder—squirrel baffle notwithstanding—and destroyed my ostensibly squirrel-proof next attempt (see the fifth installment), I emptied it and transferred the peanuts to this one:


This feeder is sold by Audubon, who ought to know what they’re doing since they’re in the business of birds. And to be fair, they must be on the right track. I haven’t had a single squirrel in my yard since I put this feeder up and filled it with shelled peanuts. They just can’t get at them. The only furry critters in my yard now are rabbits and chipmunks, and I don’t mind either of them because neither chews through my supply in two days.

Yay? Or Not.

Unfortunately, while squirrels couldn’t access the peanuts, neither could the birds. The outer cage is too small for squirrels to get through, yes—but it’s also not big enough for a bird to get peanuts out of the mesh inner “sleeve.” The birds small enough to get through the cage simply aren’t strong enough to pull a peanut out. Good attempt, Audubon, but it needs some tweaking if you’re going to market it as a peanut feeder.

I will keep this feeder, but it’s going to have to house suet nuggets or hulled sunflower seeds, because anything smaller will just fall right through the mesh inner “sleeve.” I transferred the peanuts back to the first feeder pictured and decided to let the squirrels who arrive to eat them, have their win. Once I run out of peanuts, however, they’ll have to find their pickings elsewhere. The feeders I currently have seem to be worth keeping for squirrel prevention. Good thing my neighborhood doesn’t get bears!

Maybe I can call this a win? 😅

Wednesday, May 15, 2024

Squirrel Wars 5: They’re Ba-a-a-ack


Why? Why-y-y-y-y?

Some of you may remember my posts about the Squirrel Wars from several years ago (and if you don’t, they’re entertaining reading). The more astute among you may note that the posts ranged over many years. This is the fight of the suburbanite: to forever participate in the battle between the furry little rodent and your birdseed.

FYI, the squirrel usually wins.

We had reached something of a draw when I bought a hopper feeder whose pan slams shut when anything heavier than a small bird sits on the perch. They took a while before figuring out they could hang from the top and acrobatically grab a bite to eat without touching the pan. Meh. At least they’re not eating it in two days.

The suet, meanwhile, is safe, between the cage and the squirrel baffle covering it so they can’t drop down on top of it like furry little commandos.


Problem solved, more or less…until the tree planted beside my hopper feeder got so big it was obscuring the feeder and providing them a handy branch to climb along to get to the hopper pan.

New plan: hang my tube-style cage feeder from Stokes (like this one) in the tree.


Didn’t take the little monsters long to learn how to shake the tree limb until lots of seed falls out—when, of course, they’re not reaching through the so-called squirrel-proof cage to pick seeds out. These marketers need to learn how to say resistant instead of proof…and I’m not sure “resistant” is even accurate. Might be smart to make the cage deeper so the seed tube is out of reach too.

To be fair, I had a tray out all winter where I was feeding peanuts to whatever showed up.  My visitors, furry and feathered, were making a mess of the deck, so I moved to a mesh tube peanut feeder and hung that in the tree. This is the result after a week:


So I wired the poor thing back together as best I could, then added a squirrel baffle on top of it. And this is the result after the following week:


I’m not sure what will stop these evil geniuses at this point. This was my next attempt, and it took him less than an hour to hang upside down on it and eat (at this point, it’s something of an experiment and academic curiosity, to see if anyone has made a feeder that ruins a squirrel’s thievery):


My brother has wire shepherd’s hooks on which he hangs his feeders, and he hangs a Slinky around the pole, the idea being the little buggers can’t climb the pole because the Slinky startles them and/or ruins their chances at getting a purchase. They just fall back off. FYI, you can get a “Squirrel Slinky”—made by Slinky—for $18 on Amazon, or you can just get three of the original aluminum toy ones for about $11 total. Same difference. Marketers. SMH.

I have one last attempt on order from Amazon. Stay tuned to see if I succeed! (P.S. I’m starting to admire squirrel ingenuity. If you are, too, give a look at Mark Rober’s Backyard Squirrel Maze.)

Tuesday, May 07, 2024

FLASHPOINT Audiobook - The Hunt for a Narrator Begins!

FLASHPOINT Will Be Coming to Audio!

I'm thrilled to announce that I have the rights back to put FLASHPOINT into audiobook! The book is currently at ACX awaiting auditions, and I'm so happy that it will finally have its chance to be heard alongside THE SERPENT IN THE STONE.

The narrator will need to be on their toes, because FLASHPOINT follows an American woman in the Australian outback, and her trail guide is, of course, Australian. I look forward to hearing the auditions for this one, because this book is close to my heart.

About FLASHPOINT

Fated to find him. Destined to defend her.

Faith Markham knows her place in life—paranormal expert and world-traveling archaeologist. She also knows she'll never fall in love again. How can she, when the only man she's ever wanted is a long-dead Viking warrior? She has resigned herself to loneliness, but fate has other ideas.

Hakon Ivarsson has had enough of women. His ex-wife left his life in ruins, and only Australia's Blue Mountains can soothe his empty soul. When Faith shows up needing a trail guide, he regards her with instant suspicion. This enigmatic beauty pulls at him in ways he can't explain. Trusting her is out of the question, but protecting her is absolute.

When they stumble on an artifact-smuggling ring, led by a man poised to bend the world's paranormal power to his own terrible purposes, they must join forces. Will it tear them apart, or has fate finally delivered a second chance?