Showing posts with label finch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label finch. Show all posts

Monday, July 1, 2024

more Hercules, please!

 The season is marching along, with so many daylilies...when did I plant these?


Hosta flowers are starting to come up, too.


The garden is really starting to pop (I'll have better pictures soon)!  It's definitely more tame this year - no 4' cosmos or marigolds - but it feels more manageable, too.  We've had regular rain, which is a big help!


Right on schedule, we have squash bugs.  And where there's squash bugs...


I had terrible germination with my pumpkins (like with everything else) and was only able to plant about 10 this year...and many of these were volunteers from the yard!  Even though the pumpkin plants are just a few inches tall, they are swarming with squash bugs.  I have to crush the eggs every couple of days, or the babies will eat the pumpkin leaves and possibly kill the plant.  

Herons are still visiting the pond regularly...

heron pouncing on a fish 

...and many other interesting creatures are around, too!

eastern tent caterpillar moth

eastern whitelip snail

house finch

song sparrow

plume moth

[look away if you're spider-averse!]

venusta orchard spider

hentzia jumping spider

Todd found this beauty in the driveway recently.


It's a female eastern Hercules beetle (a male would have gigantic 2.5" horns!).  Isn't she a beauty?  Check out her wings...it looks like a watercolor painting!


She was legs-up days ago, so I put her on the porch, where she moved sluggishly.  I didn't expect her to live, but she continued to do so, so I moved her to the garden.  She's gone now.  I hope she's laying eggs somewhere...I'd love to have more of these around!  

There was a rabbit right by the house...or there used to be.


The weather has been...amazing.  With one hot and humid exception, we've been in the 70s for several days.  It was 55 degrees when I woke up today!  Beautiful sunny days and blue skies.


The kittens watch me from their perch while I'm working outside...


...unless they're otherwise occupied.


Pleasant days indeed.


Have a great week!  













Monday, April 19, 2021

fleeting cold and sheeting, old

Beautiful spring weather has helped to make our outdoor-work time really pleasant. Todd has been hauling wood...



...and clipping out extraneous metal debris on our old fences.


They were in pretty bad shape...


...so they're all being replaced this week!


Many of our old fence posts have bird houses attached, but only one of the houses is chock-full of bluebird eggs.  Todd set up a post about five feet away from the old post and quickly transferred the bird house to minimize nest disturbance.  Mama bluebird has been happily visiting the new spot and hasn't seemed to notice her new real estate!


We've also got nesting finches in our front porch eaves.  See the little head?


We're pretty suspicious characters and the finch pair watch us closely as we traverse the porch each day.  


Besides regular work, I've been planting cold-hardy seedlings out into the garden. I've planted in about 1/4 of the space, and we're plowing up another plot in a week or so.  Hooray!


Sunny days...blue skies and fluffy white clouds overhead.


Such a nice variety!




The apple tree is in full bloom and the blossoms have an intoxicating scent.



Dead nettle is rising in the back fields, and their little purple tips are the exact color of the redbuds that border their space.


The woods around our house and all along our main road are full of redbuds and dogwoods.  Coupled with the chartreuse color of the tender new leaves, the colors are gorgeous!



I love cutting a few branches for the front porch.


We've got horses directly and diagonally across the street, and I've discovered that there's a grazing pasture just beyond our back woods.  I can see a group of horses out in the mid-afternoon, peacefully eating.


It all makes for a wonderful and bucolic atmosphere for being outside.  

My perennials are starting to fill in!




Claudia is feeling more frisky with the warmer weather too.



Blooming apple tree, rapidly-sprouting roses, peonies, hydrangeas, and lilacs, unfurling hostas and maple leaves, all after a prolonged period of warm weather.  And then, directly in middle of two 70-degree stretches, we have...dum dum DUM!...snow.  

Snow!

Tuesday night's forecast:  rain turning to snow, with up to an inch of accumulation.  Temperatures dropping down to 27 degrees.  

If I do nothing, we would have another year with no apples.  Many of my seedlings would be toast.  My bleeding hearts and roses would probably die.  Just like last year, our hostas and even hardier perennials like ground geraniums would survive, but be blackened.  


I'm going to have to pull out every old sheet in the house and cover as much new, tender growth as I want to salvage.  All seedlings will have to be covered, again.  It's a big frustration with a midwestern spring.  Hardy annuals prefer cooler weather, so if you want beautiful May and June blooms, you need to get them into the ground as soon as possible in April so that they can establish roots and set up buds. Moving them into the ground frees up space under grow lights as well. But, of course, you run the risk of these random freezes.  So I'll be rolling up my sleeves and covering, covering, covering on Tuesday afternoon.  Gritting my teeth and reminding myself that this hard work should pay off nicely in a month or so...I hope!

Have a great week!









Monday, December 2, 2019

and thus, Caius

Chilly temperatures mean a lot more birds coming to our feeders.  There's always a round, clear circle underneath the feeders, as foraging birds clear leaves or snow, looking for castoff seed.

Everyone knows red cardinals, but I am partial to house finches.  Their song is prettier and they just seem more pert and cheerful.


I often see birds, like this chickadee, rubbing their beaks against branches after eating.  It's their equivalent to a dainty napkin wipe!



Nuthatches are here, there, and everywhere, keeping an eye on everything that's happening on the ground below.


Woodpeckers find lots to eat in the dead branches of the tree!


Birds aren't the only creatures that we're seeing more of in these colder temperatures.  One stray has come often enough to warrant a name, so here is Caius, sticking his tongue out at us from a safe distance.


We've increased the amount of food we're putting out to help keep these guys a little bit warmer and better equipped to survive a cold winter!

Speaking of food...Thanksgiving was this past week.  So much food!  We hosted, so I put together a pretty large dessert table.  All pictures taken hurriedly with my cell phone...so the quality is not very good.  I made cherry muffins with almond glaze, an apple slab pie, pumpkin cake, chocolate no-bake cookies, maple brown sugar cookies, and confetti sugar cookies. 



My first attempt (but not last!) at making dough lettering for pies!



With the kids at a separate table, we had just enough room for the grownups at the big table.



Nothing fancy, just a couple of Fresh Thyme bouquets...


...and some leftover pumpkins from October.  I picked some rose hips from the bare multiflora rose bushes outside and interspersed them with the pine cones to add a little color.  


I think I made too much food...besides feeding 17 guests, who even took platefuls of food with them, Todd STILL has a week's worth of leftovers!  I love holidays, but I'm glad that Thanksgiving has passed.  Holiday seasons are tough for people who have food issues, like I do.  This has been a rough year with the upheaval of another move, and I think I've gained about 30 pounds!  I can't really get into a rhythm of losing weight again until the holidays are over.  Just too many pitfalls.  So I will enjoy a few more tasty pitfalls and then look forward to getting back on track in the new year.

Have a great week!