Definitely Fall Monday, Sep 23 2013 

They are doing the second cutting of hay.  My horse is annoyed though, his routine has been disrupted! First his afternoon nap is disturbed two days in a row because the shed floor was getting regarded (which meant he couldn’t be in that paddock) and now he is locked into the shed paddock while the field is being cut! Horrible. I tried to placate him with an apple, but somehow it didn’t work.  If I could just tell him that in a few days he will have nearly ten acres instead of a bit over one…

The difficulties of an older, retired horse who has an exact daily pattern.

Photo of the day Sunday, Sep 22 2013 

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Taken much earlier this year, clematis ‘Mayleen’ of the Montana group.  A very happy plant, only in its first full year, it has sprawled over about 20 feet. This photo is taken from underneath it.

Grand Concert Friday, Sep 20 2013 

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From the Guestbook, summer of 1880.

 

Considering Tools Thursday, Sep 19 2013 

The right tool for the right job and all that…

Probably one of the most useful tools, in fact an indispensable tool, for how we are maintaining much of the house lot: i.e. moderately open mature woods with certain types of underbrush/ground cover, is our trimmer. 

Our landscape is actually not in equilibrium, it is always trying to fill in with brush and saplings.  Because we do not have a particularly severe deer problem here (thank you, George!) and I don’t think the fire department would approve of an annual burn (the other way to have an open understory) it has to be cut.  But because we don’t want an entirely open understory, but rather one filled with certain plants only, it is a matter of selective editing.  I cut the area once a year, at the most, and have to go around volunteers we want to encourage, cut the innumerable Norway maple seedlings, excess goldenrod, briar, wood aster (in the right place I want them, but not every where), etc. I need a tool, in other words, that can go through something an inch plus in diameter without slowingg, but has the accuracy to come within centimeters of a baby holly, dogwood, or viburnum. It is over five acres, so doing it by hand…not happening! I do it in the fall because the spring plants/ferns can tolerated being walked all over at this point.  If I squish some aster or goldernrod it isn’t a problem.  If I do it too late though, all the leaves are off the babies and I can’t tell a Norway maple from a Sugar maple from an oak.

The answer is a Stihl FS130 professional trimmer, with the brush knife essentially permanently attached.  The brush knife is the rather nasty thing that resembles an oversize three pointed star.  (The whippy little string head is a useless gadget as far as I am concerned).

(yes, I am pretty good at the memory game, I know where almost all the babies are!)

More Wood aster Tuesday, Sep 17 2013 

Seeing as I natter on about it so….

Here is one patch of it: this is the most recently created one, we simply stopped mowing the stretch between the Douglas Spruce and the Copper Beech because it was all moss.  One year later, this is the result.*  Wood aster is a takeover specialist.

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*For scale, it is an easy 15 meters between the two trees.

Genealogical Vignettes Monday, Sep 16 2013 

Dug from the files…

A description of Normand Smith, a Smith cousin by Carlotta Smith (circa 1870): “He introduced me to Darwin’s study of natural selection and Schumann’s piano compositions on the same evening. He married a German girl of a good family, and wrote home, “I am bringing my wife, you will like her as she can play the most difficult music at sight.” Their family was brought up on this basis.”

That is one way to pick a bride!

Your garden may be Saturday, Sep 14 2013 

An ecosystem, when in the course of getting a few carrots you disturb: one toad, one leopard frog, multiple little tree frogs (the really tiny guys who had previously been hanging out in the peach tree) and several tiger swallowtail caterpillars.

Who is the garden for?

Botanical Art Thursday, Sep 12 2013 

Again from the guestbook, this time by a cousin.  I use the term loosely, I have yet to understand how all the Smiths relate to the Palmers relate to the Websters relate to the Ellsworths relate to the…  Is Julia a closer cousin to Morris Smith than to William Webster Ellsworth? Possibly, possibly not.  In any event the genealogy is not my forte; I do know that there were any number of cousins living in NYC.  It is somewhat interesting to note; until recent times* Esperanza has been solidly Hartford/NYC/Hudson River/Adirondacks in orientation.  The 1870’s-1930’s group has not the slightest interest in points further south on the coast nor on points further north.  They are quite happy to jump to New Orleans, California, Europe, North Africa….but Boston and Washington D.C.? Different planets.

Anyway, botanical art:

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*recent = last three generations.

September Flowers Tuesday, Sep 10 2013 

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September probably has the highest flower count here: if you were to count each individual aster, lobelia, etc.? Hundreds of thousands easily.  Spring and fall are the two growing seasons for New England, summer is survival against the heat and winter is survival against the cold.

The white wood aster, by the way, (which is in this photo) actually is fragrant: a very subtle floral scent on a good dry day…at least when one is standing in a patch several hundred feet square!

Bush Bluff Lightship Monday, Sep 9 2013 

Your random photo of the day.  The Bush Bluff Lightship in the summer of 1909.  Anchored at the Elizabeth River in the Chesapeake Bay. http://cheslights.org/bush-bluff-lightship-2/  Taken on a trip south by the yacht Mavourneen

Bush Bluff lightship

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