Saturday, December 27, 2014

WELS Professor John Jeske Obituary.
WELS Documented Blog



Obituary for Pastor John C. Jeske

http://welsdocument.blogspot.com/2014/12/pastor-john-c-jeske-funeral-arrangements.html
Pastor John Carl Edward Jeske

http://www.heritagefuneral.com/obituaries/John-Jeske/

In February of 1924 God gave a son to John Gustave and Elizabeth Jeske of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The father taught his family the faith and love that are Christianity. The son never wanted to be anything but a Lutheran pastor like his father.

John C. Jeske would spend all but one year of his long ministry in a small Wisconsin triangle, between Milwaukee, Mequon and Watertown. God gave him a love for people, and it was people he served with his mind and his heart and his will and his hands.

In 1948 John served as a Tutor at Dr. Martin Luther College in New Ulm, MN. In 1949 he was assigned from seminary to St. Marcus Evangelical Lutheran Church in Milwaukee. In 1952 Jeske was called to serve St. John’s, on 68th & Forest Home Avenue, at that time called Root Creek. Christmas of 1969 saw his family move to Mequon where he joined the faculty of Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary.

During his Seminary years, Professor Jeske served three congregations that were without a pastor: Brown Deer, Grafton, and northwest Milwaukee. Jeske also served as a traveling professor in Siberia and in Japan.

When Birds Feed in a Storm



I was running out of corn ears, so I stopped at a hardware store and bought some perma-corn, which is a composite I used before. It lasts longer and the squirrels enjoy it. A big bag of cracked corn tempted me, and I yielded. That was a good choice.

I replaced the corn on the squirrel feeder - they eat an ear each day. I put the new compost in the pile and spread some newspapers out to soak up the rain. We are getting days of rain, which is a good time to expand the Jackson Mulch project.

I wondered how the cracked corn would do, so I scattered plenty on a relatively dry section of newspapers. The cold rain followed a hint of snow this morning, and the drizzle continued all day.

Soon I had a line up of birds on the ground, enjoying cracked corn. I saw my first male cardinal, back at the squirrel feeder. Cardinals are shy, male cardinals even more than the females.. Close up I had mourning doves, a junco, sparrows, and some others. I am hoping for blue jays, which always picked up corn from the squirrel feeder in Bella Vista.



Three front yards on our block, including ours, had flocks of starlings feeding in the grass but ignoring my suet (beef kidney fat). How about that! Doubtless the overcast, drizzly warm weather was good for insect  and worm life, and they went for their favorite food. Later, a downy woodpecker cheeped on the maple tree as it enjoyed the suet by itself.

The birds continued to feed on the cracked corn and are still there late in the afternoon. Some people put window screens on blocks, so they can elevate the seed and keep it somewhat dry on days like this. Newspapers work almost as well, since they soak rain away from the surface.

The corn brought out a new crew of birds, and a large number at once. I have been scattering black oil sunflower seeds every day, but never saw more than a few doves on the ground. Of course, birds will be quite cautious at first and not feed until they feel safe.

As various gardening sites point out, establishing feeding habits in the yard will benefit the garden later. But it is also true that a Creation garden will provide far more food for birds than an ordinary yard or one where they trust insecticide.

Mr. Gardening sprayed for mosquitoes three times, and it was less effective each time. They came right back. He learned his lesson, but he had to pay tuition.


Guardians of Peace Leak Top Secret Guide for Squirrels

Yes, I have this feeder.

Ignored by the mainstream press, this confidential memo was leaked by the Guardians of Peace -

Top Secret Guide for Squirrels. Eyes Only. Shred after Reading.



My Fellow Rodents:

Life is difficult and dangerous, but it can be a whole lot better near a garden. Take my advice and do not let this memorandum be read by any other species.

Humans have a strange, conflicted attitude about us. They hate the way we raid their bird feeders, but they love our antics. Concentrate on cuteness and you will live high on the hog.

Some of our best characteristics are switching the tail, hopping around, and jumping from tree to tree. Humans find that endlessly entertaining.

Best of all, they love to see us eating. They will set up squirrel feeders far away from the bird feeders, so use the distant feeders to encourage them. Sit up and make a big show of the meal. Chase your friend around the tree a few times. I do that with Walnut, just to keep the corn ears coming.

Every so often, do the big startle. "Oh, someone is looking!" They will laugh and point a camera, hoping for a good shot.

This is another reason to laugh at squirrel proof feeder ads.

Eat the corn from above, hanging by your feet. They cannot imagine the same thing, so they gasp and point.

Visit the empty ear, so they say, "Oh, I have to put another one in, or they will raid the bird feeder."

I have this model of squirrel-proof feeder.

They cannot guard that bird feeder all day, so collect the stuff that falls to the ground. When everything is quiet, sit on the squirrel proof feeder and feast.




Do not worry about dogs. They make more noise than a marching band at halftime. However, cats are jerks. They will quietly stalk and pounce. Warn the little ones to stay high in the tree until they reach their full growth. Few cats will risk a battle with an adult squirrel. Chatter at them from the first limb. Humans will say, "Listen to that saucy squirrel, cussing out our Siamese."

Yours, Confidentially,

Acorn

Our Bella Vista squirrels knew the windows protected them.
For fun, they played hide and seek with Sassy.

Extra Work To Ruin Roses - How To Avoid It

Knockout Roses are smaller, but prolific.
They are immune to black spot.


I mentioned the Icha-peek to one reader, and that person confessed. An Icha-peek is one more look at this blog, to see if a new post is published, late at night. One reader told me he looked three times a day and enjoyed seeing new posts each time. Therefore, I feel obliged to provide that last post more often. I add to posts later, so it does not hurt to come back later.

Today I recalled all the bad advice I received about growing roses, so I decided to list it as a warning to those who want to enjoy roses at their best (and do less work at the same time). I put the bad rose advice in bold, black letters.

Each earthworm moves its weight in soil every day.
No gardener can keep up, so why try?
Worms constantly improve the soil.


Planting Bare Root Roses
Soak them in water until sprouts appear. Bad idea. They do not need to be waterlogged, and that will do them no good. That early red growth, turning green, is the sign of properly planted roses taking root. Please pay attention to the root-soil connection, which is vital.
Put fertilizer or sugar water in the hole when planting, so they have food. That is like putting a baby in a crib, on top of jars of Gerber's Mashed Potatoes. The fertilizer will kill or drive away the soil creatures needed by the plant for supplying food to the roots.
Use systemic insecticides. Why not just nuke the garden so nothing lives in the smoking crater? Insecticides, herbicides, and fungicides have one thing in common - they kill indiscriminately. They are stupid and expensive, like some lawyers. Protect the soil-food web and the good insects will take care of the bad ones. Healthy plants will shake off various kinds of attacks.

Instead - dig a hole, use good soil or perhaps mix mushroom compost in. Avoid manufactured, bagged soil, although that might be good if planting roses in very sandy soil. In that case I would let the mushroom compost dominate.



Scared to Death of Black Spot
Be prepared to spray them all the time with various expensive potions. Tons of perfume smell good too, right? I could tell one lady was at the university library before the elevator door opened on her floor. Black spot is a fungus that lives in the soil, so mulching and avoiding yellow roses will help that problem.

When black spot appears, pick off the leaves and cut away affected branches. Throw the diseased parts away (John 15:1-10) Pruning wakes up and benefits the rose. Roses involve some work - but not much. A woman at the chiro's office became angry and vocal about how I had to spray to have roses. Really? I do not spray at all.

Alternative - grow Knockout Roses. The red ones bloom continuously and the category is immune to black spot. The pink ones were less productive (first year) and the white ones seemed weak until the end of the summer. Rose production will grow with mature roots, so that was expected. Still, the reds were unbelievably productive.

Insecticides will kill ladybugs, parisitoid wasps, bees, spiders -
everything the rose garden needs.


Pruning Roses
Look over the 8 drawings and prune the roses where the dotted line indicates.

"Go to your garden, hold the book in the left hand and hold the clippers with your right hand - cutting in the same place on the rose as indicated by Drawing #1."

No wonder people avoid pruning!
A. Cut roses for indoors, for yourself and neighbors, all the time. Call it pruning. That works.
B. Cut off spent flowers, the ones that started to go to seed, dead wood, and anything in the wrong place. No need to look for five-leaf clusters. Snip snip - the roses love it.

Jackson Mulch has a lifetime guarantee:
it will feed, protect, and keep the garden watered.


Feeding Roses
Fertilize your roses after every blooming cycle, using the rose food with the right NPK balance. My uncle did that for his wife once, and burnt out the entire rose garden. Grampa Jackson was a rose gardener, so that made  it difficult for my aunt to bear. Giving Uncle Max NPK was like handing a garden hose to a toddler - bad things are going to happen soon after.

Instead, cover the entire rose bed with newspapers, making sure there are no gaps. I am not sure the ideal depth of the newspapers. I open them up and lay them down, one section at a time, often covering the gaps with the ad inserts.

Once the newspapers are down, cover that layer with wood mulch (or possibly finished compost). This combination is ideal for suppressing most weeds and for feeding the roses, and Jackson Mulch costs almost nothing in money or labor.



Why does Jackson Mulch work so well?
1. Rose bushes need protection from the soil drying out and blowing away, not to mention rain washing topsoil away.
2. Soil creatures slowly shred and decompose the mulch layer, and all the ingredients (creatures plus mulch) combine to feed the roots and keep the nutrition in the first foot of soil, where plants feed.
3. An attractive wood mulch deters people from walking on the rose bed, so the fragile network beneath the surface is spared and continues to thrive.

Notice how church consults charge enormous fees to ruin congregations. They must be good, or they would not charge so much. All their solutions are wrong, and yet they have created an industry of coaches, consultants, and traveling yahoos. All the congregations need is fidelity to the Word of God, faith in the Gospel. Lacking that, they imagine frantic, expensive activity is a substitution.

Mr. Lincoln has many wonderful characteristics -
fragrance, heavy petals, and hardiness.