7 results for stemmed:chimney

DEaVF2 Chapter 11: Session 937, November 19, 1981 Floyd raccoon chimney genetic coon

The comical series of events involving Floyd, one of his sons, and another helper had started this noon: “Hell, Rob, it’s a coon!” a surprised Floyd called down to me from the roof of the house, after the beam from his flashlight had illuminated the black mask across the animal’s face and made its eyes shine as it crouched at the base of the fireplace chimney. The raccoon had evidently picked the site as a secure, heated refuge from the winter weather to come. The three men vainly tried several methods to coax the half-wild, half-tame creature back up the chimney. Finally Floyd opened the damper a bit and lit a sheet of newspaper in the fireplace: The smoke immediately sent our very upset tenant scrambling up the chimney, across the roof and into the hemlock tree growing at one corner of the front porch. Then while his two helpers stood guard to keep the raccoon in the tree, Floyd lugged a very heavy flat stone up the ladder and planted it across the chimney; he’s going to cement a wire mesh in place as a permanent seal against animals and birds.

I pushed Jane in her chair out on the porch, as close to the hemlock as we could get behind the floor-to-ceiling glass; we looked up at the chattering animal from only three feet away. We’d seen raccoons playing in the tree a few times, and Floyd, who lives on a farm, sees them often. This one was fully grown and bore a heavy coat of mixed black, brown, and gray hair; the colors exactly matched those of the tree trunk. In the gloomy day we couldn’t see eyes in the black face. We couldn’t tell the animal’s sex. [I read later that females and the young live in groups, the adult males usually alone—perfectly suitable accommodations of consciousness for raccoons!] “Coons can’t run fast,” Floyd told us, “and big dogs will attack ‘em if they catch them out in the open in the daytime. But that coon could kill even a big dog, if it got cornered.” He added that if we heard a loud thudding noise on the roof tonight, it meant that an animal had managed to dislodge the stone cap on the chimney. And Floyd had been right: The raccoon stayed in the tree until dusk, then descended and ambled into the woods in back of the house.3

TES4 Session 185 September 6, 1965 chimney shadow photograph meats test

[...] The chimney was not in the picture. I saw the chimney of the other house in the test photograph, but this does not show there.

[...] I have the impression of chimney shapes.

[...] This is dealt with after break, along with the matter of chimney shapes.

[...] No chimneys show in the photo. [...]

TPS6 Deleted Session April 21, 1981 false fireplace Sinful true category

[...] We’ve also been under the impression since we moved in here that the fireplace had a screen sealing off the chimney from such possibilities.)

(The animal/bird noises continued in the fireplace chimney behind me. [...]

TPS6 Deleted Session April 27, 1981 sensations damper fireplace raccoon leg

(Frank, incidentally, had brought a ladder so he could get upon the roof to look down our chimney in an effort to see what creatures were causing the rumpus in the fireplace above the damper. [...] He returned at 5 PM to drop a heavy rope down the chimney in the hope the raccoon might climb out. [...]

TPS6 Deleted Session April 28, 1981 Sinful raccoons rope fireplace slackened

[...] He came to get his rope out of the fireplace chimney—our family of raccoons is still there, evidently immune to the temptations offered by the rope. [...]

TES7 Session 292 October 10, 1966 cap beer Friday tipping trio

(“A chimney shape also.” [...] However Jane says that last Friday evening when we experimented with the candle flame, she thought that we should have the flame enclosed in a glass chimney, to obviate any chance of the flame being influenced by a draft.

[...] A chimney shape also.

TPS6 Deleted Session June 18, 1981 Sinful Prentice Hall document dissertation

[...] A note: It appears that the family of raccoons inhabiting our fireplace chimney may have left—or so it seems. [...]