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Sunset, February Thursday, Feb 5 2015
Uncategorized 22:53
Landscaping for winter Wednesday, Feb 4 2015
Uncategorized 20:56
Or why snowstorms in New England can be a challenge.
Also known as where do you put the snow?
For a variety of reasons this year, we have been clearing our driveway with a snowplow and front-end loader, rather than a snow-blower. This works quite well actually. However, I am also rather glad that we haven’t planted anything of the shrub variety too close to the drive.* The problem with plowing snow is that you have to put it somewhere. You need at least a few feet on either side of a driveway. You need quite a bit more around a parking lot. This is simple math. Our barnyard has six foot high ramparts of snow right now.
A ten foot wide, 100 foot long driveway filled with snow a foot deep is 1,000 cubic feet of snow that you have to put somewhere! Older bits of New England tend towards narrow roads lined with trees or walls or houses, roads that are only a nominal twenty feet wide are common. Until nearly World War II, snow removal didn’t happen in many small towns.* Instead the snow was simply packed down by rollers. Consequently, narrow streets weren’t too much of a problem. I have a friend whose road, every winter, goes from a two lane road to a narrow one lane road. Good thing it is a short street. Now consider an entire city, as it might be Boston or Manhattan trying to remove all that snow. In Montreal, where large snow storms are a regular and almost weekly occurrence, a whole fleet of specially adapted trucks with mega snow blowers exist (and a whole culture of parking bans). The snow is loaded into trucks and dumped. But where does one dump it? Parking lots, convenient rivers (not terribly good for the environment), playing fields, hither and yon.
Or, you simply get smaller and smaller parking lots with more and more people hunting that elusive parking spot. This would the routine at my workplace, where they are not actually removing the snow. And yes, the employee parking spots have been filled first!
But, does one landscape for a storm that only occurs once every few years? Probably not. I would say that in this area, landscaping for three back to back storms of a foot each is probably adequate, just. So we still have another foot plus to spare…maybe?
*There are several that are too close if our very helpful neighbour with his very large backhoe was doing the clearing. A compact tractor however is small enough so that it works.
*The debate over whether a town ought to be responsible for road clearing or whether it was the landowner’s responsibility raged in some towns well into the 1930’s. There was also a sizable segment that felt that if you were sufficiently idiotic that you had to go out in the snow, it was your problem not the town’s.
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Projects Sunday, Feb 1 2015
Uncategorized 23:10
Too many and not enough time….
Reworking a bathroom…a pipe 🙂 dream requiring a great deal of planning before actual work.
Cleaning a barn loft (shades of a modern Augean Stables, only with bats and cats added), which would really be best done when it is below freezing so as to reduce the Odor.
Building some Tree Swallow boxes, a bit of lighthearted frivolity and a lesson in basic carpentry.
And in a month or two, gardens!
In the meantime, snow perhaps. At least the drive is clear. Thanks to the tractor driver!
Hidden Drive Friday, Jan 30 2015
gardening and Landscapes 09:13
Driveway? What driveway?
It is actually there, just beyond the young spruce. You are looking north across it. The odd, low evergreen is the Sargent’s Weeping Hemlock, looking flatter than usual due to ice. The curvy snag dead center is on the other side of the driveway. It actually is alive, it is a badly broken black cherry, I really need to prune its top if I am going to keep it.
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What does Sherlock Holmes have to do with Esperanza? Tuesday, Jan 27 2015
Esperanza 10:42
Not much actually.
Except, William Gillette was a close friend of Helen Yale (Smith) Ellsworth, daughter of Julie Smith. And Helen, as much as Julie, helped to create Esperanza.*
William and Helen went to school together in Hartford and she very nearly went into theater along with him. His first job outside of school was in New Orleans, what if any connection there was to Morris’ company branch I don’t know. Likely no direct connection, but certainly a useful network to have.
A fun article on him and Sherlock Holmes:
http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-30932322
*It is a family thing, which member is most important? All or none?
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The furnace is on Monday, Jan 26 2015
Modern Photos photography 15:46
Pond in winter Sunday, Jan 25 2015
Julie's Pond and Landscapes and Modern Photos photography 22:34
Woodpeckers Saturday, Jan 24 2015
Uncategorized birds 13:09
I am routinely baffled by a certain set of people who come into the shop: those who despise woodpeckers. The usual claim is that the woodpeckers are destroying their house.
I always have to hold my tongue. It is unwise to tell a customer that if a woodpecker is going to town on the house it is because the house has bugs. This does not a sale make. Furthermore, I often suspect that they have seen a woodpecker precisely once and have chosen it for the day’s daily dose of crazy.
But what really baffles me is the houses these people must be living in. If any place had a set of buildings that Should be woodpecker territory it is this place. God knows how many thousands of feet of old wood clapboards we have. I am certainly not measuring them. And not a woodpecker hole in sight. And it isn’t like we don’t have woodpeckers: Pileated, Red-Bellied, Downy, Hairy, Sapsuckers, they all live here. All of them actively working away in the woods.
So is it that modern lumber is no good and is readily colonized by bugs? Or is it that we have, deliberately, left plenty of natural snags in our woods? Or both?
Winter views Friday, Jan 23 2015
Landscapes and Modern Photos gardening 22:01
Are always fascinating. Foreground trees are mostly Norway Spruce. The odd triple trunk in the center is a River Birch (why Do people insist on planting them in small spaces? That one is not small…), beyond is the Ginkgo, the big oak and the Cucumber Magnolia. In the summer the River Birch largely obscures the magnolia and to a lesser extent the other two trees, which shortens the view considerably.
And others!
And the more I look at it, the more I think I will go back and look at pictures from previous years, that leaning Norway doesn’t seem right. Sigh…
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