Showing posts with label sweet peas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sweet peas. Show all posts

Friday, April 4, 2025

cat coup d'etat

 We've had some frost...


...but it's mostly been cool and rainy.  Some normal warmer-weather activity has been happening.  Mowing the back field...


...and cleaning out the gutters.



We thought that Claudia would be really excited to leave the barn in the spring, and she has gone outside...with some encouragement.


To our surprise, though, this formerly-feral cat who protested every time we tried to bring her into the warm barn during freezing temps does NOT want to be outside...at all.  On really warm days when we put her out, she mostly sits on the barn doorstep and waits for Todd to open the door, hoping to slip inside unseen.


When inside, she's either sleeping or sitting next to Todd on the couch, begging for attention.  She's basically taken over!


From what I've read, she's probably feeling vulnerable because she's compromised in hearing, sight, or both.  She doesn't move very quickly, and she'd probably be easy pickings for a coyote...or a stray.  For now, we're going to keep her in the barn nights, but still encourage her to go out during the day to get fresh air and a little stimulation.  Hopefully this compromise works!  

The spring ephemerals are popping!

dutchman's breeches

cutleaf toothwort

putty root orchid

Spicebush trees are budding out...


...and the redbuds are fully popped!


his expression after zinged with a particularly funny insult - all in good fun!

Red-winged blackbirds are everywhere.  


I've also heard meadowlarks, cowbirds, robins, bluebirds, jays...so many different birds!  More bulbs are coming up...

hyacinths

scillas

...and seedlings are starting to press against the lids of the greenhouses.


I'll have to take the lids off tomorrow, after the worst of the rain is over...but the lids need to be replaced (or most likely, a tarp used) to protect them from the frost that's coming in a few days.  As soon as those roots hit the bottom of the "greenhouse," they'll be ready to pop into the garden!  Not that the garden is ready...I haven't touched it since late summer.  But I will baby-step my way through it this year.

Speaking of gardening, my sweet peas germinated nicely in my dark, chilly attic.  Now they're out under lights.  Ready to go in the ground in a couple of weeks!


We're seeing more new life on our trail cams...this heron caught a bluegill!


We've got quite a herd of deer coming from the forest into our fields every evening, too.  They're still shaggy with their winter coats!


Coyotes, rabbits, possums, squirrels, raccoons, geese, and skunks are still making regular appearances as well.  No babies yet but I'm watching closely.

Have a great week!  












Monday, March 17, 2025

spring things 2025

 There's a slow creep of green...

columbine

hairy rock cress

sedum

field speedwell

...and a bit of color too!  These daffodils were ready to POP earlier this week!



The best time to pick is just before they open up.


...because they open...


...fast!


We've got daylilies coming up too.


We had a big storm last week, and several trees were down....some completely uprooted.  A blooming elm tree was one such victim, but at least I got to pick some branches for another spring bouquet.

 
I love the flowers.


Almost a month later than planned, I finally got some sweet peas planted as well.


They're so easy.  No soaking, no nicking, no heat mats or special lights.  Put them in containers with damp soil...


...and put them in a cool, dark place.  In ten days, you'll have seedlings.  Calendar marked!

The warm weather turned our normally rambunctious kittens into drowsy, lazy cats.




The reprieve is kind of nice.  Maybe they're finally growing up!

Have a great week!  

P.S.  Check out the SPRING CHORUS at one of our favorite spring hiking locations, Bean Blossom Bottoms.  The spring peepers have been out in force in our pond and as soon as the water level recedes, we'll be heading to "BBB" to check it out!

Monday, April 1, 2024

mandible mouthful

 Beautiful warm mornings for hiking!

I love seeing the woods wake up.


red maple

rusty blackhaw

spicebush

silver maple

anemone ran.

senecio aus.

Sometimes, when looking into the woods, the woods looked back! Someone did, anyway.

white-tailed deer

Things are stirring everywhere!

american bullfrog

There's definitely plenty of water for frogs to play in.  :)


At home, I'm picking the last of the early daffodils and the start of the late daffodils.


I love bringing them into the house!


When I was out picking daffodils, I noticed that carpenter bees were bypassing the flower throats and stabbing directly into the nectar pod behind the petals.



You can see how short their tongues are...


That makes it difficult for them to penetrate tube-throated flowers, like daffodils.  Instead, they use their cutting mandibles...so helpful when they're chewing wood fibers...to cut directly into the nectar pod.  The flowers are still getting pollinated by other visitors...

northern paper wasp

...and the bees get the nutrition they need.  So interesting!

In other news around the house, both sugar snap and sweet peas are thriving and ready to go into the ground this week!


I'm getting some nice growth in the outside mini greenhouses, too.  If our weather remains above freezing for the next two - three weeks, AND if the forecast is positive, then I will be able to put out the summer flower seeds by the third week of April!  Hooray!  I've got a lot of great plans for the garden this year, shoulder permitting.

Have a great week!