Pond Progress

About one year ago I started the development of a wildlife pond. In this recent photo you can see my progress since completing the build last year. I added a rebar tripod from which hangs a very nice wind chime. This adds vertical structure and sensory interest. I planted group 2 clematis vines to grow up each rebar. They are young but you can see one pink flower, and maybe you can imagine the future.

There are now lots of pond plants: oxygenators in the water, emergents, floaters, and marginals like the irises that are in flower above. While I hope that the plants spread themselves, it looks pretty good, very pond-like, as it is. Most of the wildlife lives beneath the surface of the water. It is a fascinating ecosystem comprising a jungle of creatures that are fun to observe.

This BC tree frog is king of the pond. He arrived in April and I still see him almost daily. I was on the watch for spawn then one night mid-May he finally got lucky.

The next day I saw little clusters of frog eggs and a week later they started to hatch. Now my wildlife pond is complete although it will continue to evolve, as will the tadpoles to become froglets in a couple of months.

The pond is a popular bird bath also. Unfortunately, earlier in the year a raccoon decided it was a good latrine and the pond water quality suffered quickly. At first I put up a temporary barrier which the raccoon defeated easily and looked terrible as well. The current solution is working for now.

That was the first test of the motion activated sprinkler. The raccoon has stealthily returned for a drink but not for a poop, yet.

Self Hosted

While in Guanajuato 2025-2026, I relied on the Chromebook Linux server that I had set up last September. All worked fine from Mexico until it didn’t, but it turned out to be relatively simple to resolve remotely, fortunately. The biggest unresolved problem with the Chromebook setup was that it could not survive an unattended restart.

So I decided to convert the Chromebook into a pure Linux server. That was a simple process but involved opening the laptop to disable write protection on the firmware and rewriting said firmware. The fear of breaking something made a simple process somewhat stressful.

I chose to install the latest version of Linux Mint. With the help of Google search, I followed the instructions provided by the large Linux community to setup a LAMP environment with my personal applications.

Today I moved my blog from wordpress.com to this self-hosted server. All is working fine as far as I can tell, except that in the two migrations I have lost photos, which I will attempt to recover over time.