What is Esperanza? Wednesday, May 21 2014 

People ask that, sometimes silently.

Picture this then, a clear May evening, the fragrance of lilacs and viburnums, watching the sun sink over the western hills and the emerald field, the pure white violets and apple blossoms, the glowing pink, purples and golds of myriad redbuds, azaleas, tulips, and a host of others. and faintly on the sweet breeze the notes of Chopin’s nocturnes.

Or perhaps it is early morning, beneath the towering spruces, oaks, and maples where the white trillium shimmers, the pure white of living marble and the vinca forms a dark green carpet studded by ferns.

Next month will be something different and the one after that.

But always, the house, quiet and cool, with its books and unknown corners.

That is Esperanza.

Off with the fairies Sunday, May 4 2014 

One of the joys of Esperanza’s lawns is the amazing number of things that grow in them: lawn grass, of course, other grasses, sedges,violets, bluets, mosses (including sphagnum moss), escaping spring bulbs such as scilla, snowdrops, trout lilies, etc, pussy-toes, daisies, and on and on.  The variety runs throughout the summer.

Now, I will admit that a pure, emerald green carpet has a definite elegance.  The west lawn is primarily such a lawn, running smoothly down the slope to the west below the apple trees.  I might point out that, being as it faces west, it also nicely shows off the low light angles of sunset.  Said low angles make green lawns even greener.

So, there is a place for such showpieces.  But, three-quarters of our lawn is not that.  It is this fascinatingly diverse array, perhaps a bit out of hand in some areas, I will confess, making mowing a bit hard.  Still one can look for hours at the plants and animals in it.  I easily do so now, and (perhaps even more importantly) I easily did so as a child.

What child is going to be interested in the perfect green carpet? Yes, it makes an ideal place to play On (as the west lawn is ideal for rolling down) but not a place to be absorbed by, to play In.  I’m not particularly good with little children, I’ll freely confess.  But, still it seems to me, that our modern astro-turf lawn must be a very boring playground with little to stimulate the imagination, in comparison to even the simple clovers, mosses, and dandelions that we exterminate with such vigor.  Where are the leprechauns, the lions, the mysterious toadstools with their caterpillars and gnomes? Where is the wild bank of thyme in its eternal breeze?

Growing trees Friday, May 2 2014 

Over the years, the hedgerows have steadily gotten taller.  It is good in some ways, for it blocks the various lights, houses, and noise.  On the other hand, the hills are rather elegant.  You can’t see either the far ridge (about 15 miles away)  or the closer hills at all these days.  This photo was taken in 1962:

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Really? Thursday, May 1 2014 

This is why I like dirt floors in the basement.

The north basement is under water.  And I do mean that.  The water has gone down, and still one encounters several inches sloshing about….Before you get to the door into it.  No I don’t know how deep it got in that section!  The door is locked from the Inside…that door and the lock for the door is only accessible through the water.  I’m not wading.  The columns are soggy.  They have been soggy before.  They will be soggy again.  The water will drain.  The world will not end.  (hyperbole aside, I doubt it is more than six inches at the most, simply because the central basement Is Not flooded and so the rise wasn’t that much…still not wading.)

The plants are happy!

Over the top Tuesday, Apr 29 2014 

From the church’s Easter lilies.  In previous years, we’ve been able to get the classic white lilies to come back in following years.  This one, which came from the narthex (the standard whites are always for the altar display), appears to be a ‘Stargazer’ on steroids.  Theoretically it should be fine; but it was so overfed that it may not have much left.  Still, it does look rather appropriate in the library!

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Mid-Atlantic Harbor Scene Saturday, Apr 26 2014 

August, 1909

From the archives, just for the fun of it.

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On Age Tuesday, Apr 22 2014 

I was perusing some photos on the internet the other day of Los Angeles at the turn of the last century.  Of course, for all intents and purposes, LA didn’t exist.  It is always a little disconcerting to consider cities of that sort.  To realize that this house existed as Esperanza before several of the major cities in the U.S. were anything more than waystops on the map.

Having lived in the UK for a few years, and for one year in a building built in the 1600’s, the discrepancy is even more apparent.  When the streets existed before this continent was known to Europeans?  It permanently warps what is or is not considered history. At the same time, the comparison can hide just how much have things have changed.  Esperanza existed 130 years ago, but it was a very different Esperanza in some respects.  In others not.  Recognizing the correct balance between the changed/unchanged and should change/should not change…That is the challenge.

Card Games Saturday, Apr 12 2014 

Circa 1920.  Do note the tea cups, with saucers, and sugar bowls! I am not entirely sure of who the people are; it is possibly Bradford Ellsworth and Juliet Inness.  But that is a guess. Note as well that the house still had the narrow wooden clapboards painted green rather than today’s larger, white asbestos. The change to the perceived size and weight of the house was unfortunate, on the other hand the paint bill is a lot smaller.  If one had unlimited cash….

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Fiddling about with doggerel Saturday, Apr 5 2014 

From something I was working on long ago…A description, perhaps, of the library, the piano, and the books.

On the day I left,

On the cold January morning,

The grand piano’s heartbreak,

I was in love

And left the library

Where the faun still knows

All the secrets

And the voice of man

Dances, unrepentant,

Beyond a classic, pillared frame.

East Lawn in 1953 Friday, Mar 28 2014 

I mentioned in a comment that weddings of people who lived at Esperanza sometimes took place on the east lawn, up through the 1930’s.  Here is a photograph of the location.  The Norway Spruce framing the picture on the left is gone, taken down about 15 years ago after one too many lightning strikes.  The one on the right still stands, at nearly 110 feet tall.  The lawn has been shrunk, it now stops at the big Norway rather than at the far spruces.  The grove of spruces has shifted a bit as well, the center and right spruces are both gone so the deliberate symmetry no longer exists.

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