Determination Thursday, Apr 3 2014 

I was watching a little grey and honey gold bee today. It was almost too cold for it; in fact, for the much of the time I was watching it the bee was shivering.  Bees do shiver in fact, and this one was huddled down on the lawn, the same color as the winter-killed grass.  Gradually, it warmed up.  First it cleaned its antennae, and then its hind legs, and finally its legs. It was a thin little insect, almost delicate, with short gray/gold hair.  Last seen (having finished warming up sitting on my hand)* it bravely took off in a headwind, flying towards a warmer spot near the house.  I hope, that like the other pollinator insects, it found the crocus glistening in the hundreds by the fence and foundation.

In any event, it took off, future uncertain but flying strongly in the wind. Something to be said for that.

 

*I am, actually, decidedly allergic to bees, wasps, and various other insects.  But, I had a glove on, and besides he was a)cute b)not at all aggressive.

Off with its head! Saturday, Mar 29 2014 

In a fit of something or other, I managed (with help!) to get two long overdue trimming projects done.  The first was taking off a major limb on a multi-trunked Sugar Maple.  This oddly shaped tree could be entirely removed.  But its odd shape adds a nice bit of whimsy.  However, this branch, a good four inches in diameter, was casting entirely too much shade on several shrubs and one of the chestnut trees.  So it went.  With a great deal of sawing (an alternative and appropriate name for sugar maple is rock maple, this one was definitely that), and an extra set of hands to catch it and take its weight off of the chestnut tree, since the only place to drop it was On the tree.

Then, on the theory that no one was watching, I had the desire to do so, and it wasn’t windy: I shimmied a good 15 plus feet up the hemlock beyond the big garden.*  This hemlock’s sole purpose in life is to help block the road.  We do not need nor desire a one sided, leaning, 50 foot plus evergreen in that location.  So I cut its head off.  I was smart enough to only cut it three-quarters through while up in it and smart enough to climb the north side (that has essentially no branches) so that I wouldn’t be under the falling section if I cut too far.  Then I wandered off and, I confess, used the pole saw to finish the cut and bring it down.  This worked admirably….except for bending the head of the pole saw.  I can’t claim the fixing of that. Jamie fix!

Anyway, two jobs done that needed doing.  Perhaps not done in the most approved fashion, but such is life.

 

*Nice view of the hilltop from up there, by the way.

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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Frustration in Gardening Thursday, Mar 27 2014 

Leaving aside the weather (10 F last night, really?!), I did not need to find that after several years of 100% success in keeping the large hoofed rats out of the yard, I failed majorly last night.  Went out to put Liquid Fence on things (it being the first still day promising to stay at or above freezing and not wet*) and found I was a day late for many of the broad leaved azaleas.  The deer came through this morning, hungry.

I am counting my blessing, an exercise that gets old fast, that they didn’t go after the hollies, the umbrella pine, the oak-leafed hydrangeas, the young pears and hickories, or the rhododendrons (which do Not need help in the dying department).  Still not what I wanted to see at all.  They like the flower buds best of all, of course.  Sometimes I wonder why I garden.

And no, getting my jacket, hands, and face liberally sprayed with Liquid Fence (main ingredients are garlic, rotten eggs, and red pepper) when the Brand New sprayer broke did not help.

*we learned the hard way that broad-leaved evergreens do not care to be sprayed when it is well below freezing.

Finally Wednesday, Mar 26 2014 

It is trying to snow right now, but a few crocus by the foundation did bloom yesterday.  I didn’t get a chance to take their photo, so this one from two years ago (and some twenty days earlier on the calendar) will be a stand in. ‘Snow Bunting’ is an appropriate name.

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Success in gardening Monday, Mar 24 2014 

I think a point in the ‘success’ column ought to be awarded for last night’s supper.  The parsnips overwintered out in the garden quite happily;* the parsley (a main component in the omelette)  came out of the freezer green and crisp; the frozen snow peas from last year also came out tasting, if not like fresh peas, certainly close to it.  I could have used our own onions, but we are down to the last midget sized shallots which are a bore to peel (shallots are overrated, next year it will be just straight onions).  Oh yes, and the peaches in the cobbler? Last year’s crop, canned.

Now about those eggs….  though I think the ham and the potatoes will remain store bought.   As will the milk.

*most of the row is still out there, still buried in the snow, which is ridiculous.

Iris Thursday, Mar 20 2014 

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Your random photo of the day, standard Siberian Iris and an unnamed gold German Bearded Iris, it also looks like there was a set of unopened buds of a bronze German Bearded Iris in front.

Almost Tragedy Saturday, Mar 15 2014 

We have a little garden fish pond, with a great many fish in it.  Several dozen at last count, your standard run of the mill goldfish, none of which are gold….  Some are blue, some harlequin, many are born purple/black and slowly turn red, and some slowly turn white.  Anyway, fish.  Fish utterly, totally reliant on us.*  The pond is about six feet long and three plus feet deep and has a recirculating pump and waterfall. It has neither a natural inlet nor outlet, aside from seasonally boggy ground.  In the winter, we remove the filter, put a heater in, bury the line, and let it keep running.  We don’t always check it every day in the winter.

By sheer good fortune, it was checked on yesterday.  The fish were down to a little huddled puddle in the bottom, the pond was for all intents and purposes nearly dry.  After some hasty work with the hose, attention turned to the likely culprit: the waterfall.  It would appear that one of the stones got shifted, probably in this fast freeze/thaw cycle we’ve been having.  Almost certainly, the ice built very quickly two nights ago when the temperature dropped.  The combination of a shifted stone and ice build up redirected the water out of the pond.  This has happened once before, but not quite so dramatically.  I suspect, when it warms up enough that fiddling about in water is no longer agony, we will contemplate changing the rocks a bit.

The fish appear to have survived.

 

*I have always been really bothered by the ‘what if man suddenly disappeared’ scenarios (there was a TV series on that awhile back, a badly researched one).  Not, I confess, because of the people.  But because of all the animals that would be doomed to rather nasty ends.

Sloowllly Friday, Mar 14 2014 

Spring really is coming, despite high winds and almost zero last night (albeit with a lovely moon and stars).  The horse is shedding vigorously, the birds are contemplating nest building, and beneath the hydrangea next to the west stairs where there is SW exposure, heavy foundations, and little snow cover there are one or two crocus determined to come up.  I think there may also be some snowdrops coming up through the snow over under one of the hemlocks as well.

I have yet to get the three apple trees and the overgrown yew on the west lawn pruned into shape, an annual haircut that usually happens in February.  Maybe I’ll get to work on them tomorrow.

I did have lovely scramble through the woods this morning looking for a property line for the Land Trust.  It was about 12, overcast, and dead calm.  Excellent for the work, because half the line was in a swamp which is impassable in the summer.  It was frozen solid.  On the other hand… the other half was up one of those New England hillsides that is composed of rock falls and determined trees.  We were wishing for crampons at several points….the snow, like the swamp, was frozen solid, hard enough for a man to walk across, and icy.  Traction was minimal.  We came down a different route!

Looking Back Tuesday, Mar 11 2014 

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