Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Couldn't Resist !


Every Dandelion in the County got the word to open up today, it seems ! Thousands of the gorgeous little things are everywhere...in lawns, on roadside edges, in fields. In light of the awful shootings at Virginia Tech down in Blacksburg, and my brother's and father's cancer...these obstinate, persistent YELLOW flowers are a strong cheery sight. Grazing animals eat their leaves ( our chickens love a basketful of their leaves, stems flowers and roots) and flowers...people even cultivate Dandelion greens for themselves. Insects collect pollen and nectar, and the seeds feed various finches...including Goldfinches. Last year, out at the Blue Ridge Center, Jamie and I saw hundreds of Goldfinches lift off of a field of Dandelions gone to seed in a single undulating wave. I'll never forget it.
Who knows what sort of microscopic agreements, arrangements and connections are happening underground between the Dandelion and the incredibly abundant world on the other side of the grass ? Despite being labelled a Weed by some people, it carries on its multifaceted life, laughing all the way, I hope !

Off To Arizona


Jamie and I leave for Sunlakes, Arizona , to visit with my Mom and my 4 brothers. The main reason for the gathering is that one of my brothers has pancreatic cancer and we all want to have some time together. Dad can't make it..he's staying behind to deal with one of his own cancers, and then he's off to Hawaii to spend some time with his son and his wife, who I got to know some when Mom and I went out in November '06...I'm so glad that they have each other. I really like her down-to-Earth attitude, and her compassion :>
We'll be gone from Virginia for a week....a lot can happen in a garden in a week ! This picture is of a big Dicentra (I took today ) that puts on quite a show for weeks in the Spring, and wears out later in the Summer. I'll take another picture when I get back and see how much it's grown. No sign of the Garden Toads yet, although we've heard some frogs/toads or peepers in the area. We are honored to host an area for some toads to live. Each Summer evening they patrol the Stone Patio for bugs and slugs. We leave out little Toad Pools ( shallow dishes of water ) for them to soak in when it's dry, hoping to create a nice toad habitat.
We've had close to 3" of rain over the last few weeks...maybe more...our electronic rain gauge fell over, and I didnt keep perfect records of the manual gauge...and it looks as thought it is finally going to warm up. The Stitch Club is on Junco Departing Watch...we're trying to figure when they leave the area. Their numbers have definitley fallen in the last few weeks...they are off to the Boreal Forests to nest and raise their young on the forest floor...I can't get over that...why not up in a tree ??!!! We'll be looking for the first Catbird before long...last year I saw the first ones in our yard on April 25th. It was a great year for Catbirds...they were everywhere it seemed ! Love their tiny little black caps.

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Bluebirds and Cold Rain


Jamie and I arrived at the Blue Ridge Center on Saturday morning, the 14th, ahead of the coming Nor'Easter , in time to check on the Bluebird nest boxes on the Farm Loop trail. We saw Bluebirds perching on wire fences, in the trees and even a pair on a box, but we didnt see any finished nests in the boxes. One box held a single 6" long white chicken's feather...probably brought there by a Tree Swallow. I've wondered...do they collect feathers for their nests off the ground, or do they pluck them out of the air as the discarded feathers of other birds are lifted by wind gusts ? Last year, there were lots of Tree Swallows in the boxes...out of the 12 boxes available, I think 7 were occupied by them. Amazing creatures of the air, and brave defenders of their nests...they'll swoop repeatedly at your head, until you are sure that it is going to take a piece of you ! Kaufman's bird book describes their call as "liquid twittering"......can't think of a better way to describe it. I also read that although most of their diet is flying insects, they will also eat berries.

Friday, April 13, 2007

Into the Allium Patch

Today I got about 16,17 marble-sized Purple Onions into the ground, next to the garlic and the little purple onion plants I rescued from the compost heap. I don't know that the soil is as loose as they might like...this coming fall I MUST layer up horse maure and leaves and compost to deepen the beds. Our next door neighbor gave us the onions...he's already planted 2 pounds of onion sets and didnt want any back from me. I ended up turning all the extras into the heap. Also in the heap are some "compostable" plates made by Earth Shell. I peeked at them today, two weeks after they settled in, and they seem to be about halfway "composted". The heap was warm, with hundreds of worms...think I'll have to heat things up a bit.

Saw the first warbler in our yard today...not sure which kind...deeply yellow throat, white wing bars, dark streaking on flanks and head...argh ! wish I had gotten a better look ! Jamie and I are going out to the Blue Ridge Center tomorrow morning to monitor Bluebird boxes before the big Nor'Easter due to arrive sometime after Sat evening. We probably won't see anything but nests in the boxes, in fact, bluebird babies at this time are pretty risky...no reliable bugs about yet. I'ave heard that the parents have had to stuff their babies full of dried seeds and berries in the absence of insects during cold, wet Springs...and the babies die :<

Monday, April 9, 2007

Arizona Cactus Bloom


Well, since things seem to moving pretty slowly here ( another freezing morning ! ), and not many things in flower ( other than the hundreds of daffodils ! ), I got to thinking about Arizona's desert blooms. Cacti that stand mute for most of the year are suddenly shouting " Magenta !" "Yellow ! " " Red ! " Insects, birds and even bats answer the call and join the plants in mutual relationships of give and take. This is a picture my Mom is AZ took several years ago of a neighboring cactus in bloom...incredible color. Nice shot, Ma !

There is a tiny poppy of the purest orange that unfurls its petals as the sun comes up...if you are hiking amongst some of Arizona's many mountains, hills or outcroppings you might catch one in the act of presenting itself to its world.
Ocotillos are fascinating...looking like nothing more than a shabby bundle of thorny sticks for months at a time, they can grow several sets of glossy boxwood-like leaves several times a year. In times of drought they drop all their leaves to conserve energy . Yet they bloom every April without fail, providing hummingbirds with crucial nectar at a time when food may be scarce.

Tuesday, April 3, 2007

Red Onions' New Home


Here are the little guys snuggled in with last Fall's garlic. Hope they form some bulbs !
We are testing the "compostablity" of some compostable tableware...Earth Shell. We used a few plates the other day and this morning I'll bury them into smallish compost heap we've got going. I think it's got some heat going on in the middle, but it does need to be built back up. I think I'l just slide them into the middle of the heap and check on the progress in a week or so.

Monday, April 2, 2007

Red Onions


March 31st I found this clump of red onions growing on the edge of the compost heap. Seemed such a shame to just turn them under when they looked so healthy and happy to be growing. It looks as though maybe a seed head of onions started there...where would that have come from ? maybe they're just red "spring onions" that will never form a bulb ? Where would those have come from ? I lifted the clump and seperated out 8 of the sturdiest looking ones and planted them alongside the garlic that was planted last October. The very next day a neighbor gave us some small red onion sets...proper little onions bulbs. Having never grown onions, I read up a little and see that I have to put a little thought into planting them ! I really wish that I had spread thick manure and straw over all the beds last Fall ! Well, I'll give some a try anyway.

March 31st is also Circumference Day...the day we go measure the circumference of most of the trees in the yard. It's a fun thing to do, something I wish we had started the year we'd moved here. As good a clelbration of the return of the growing season as Easter, I think. Pop came over and helped J and I measure and record the trees' girth. The big surprise was seed pods on one of the baby Catalpas that I started on Pop's 72nd Birthday started in Feb. of '01. We had a nice Mexican casserole ( layers of corn tortillas, roasted veggies, tofu, beans ) a big salad for dinner and then watched Who Killed The Electric Car. Everyone should see this film. Especially anyone contemplating buying a new car. It's a wake-up call for an individual's responsibility as an informed consumer and a scary look into how that information is twisted manipulated by and for the automobile and oil industries, aided by friends in the White House. Yikes.