Things have been very busy here around the farm. Renovations are ongoing, but S-L-O-W-L-Y. I haven't taken too many pictures lately, because I've been busy as a bee—first with writing, and then my son's wedding, and lastly with trying to get a garden going and cleaning my tool shed, AKA the milk room on the barn. My helpers have been gathering my gardening tools and supplies and kind of tossing them in there willy-nilly, to the point where I can't move around or find anything. Add to all that continual shuttling of belongings from our old homestead to this one as well as attempts to ease the overcrowding at that other house. The recent purchase of a big camper that was on the farm property already will help with that. It makes a nifty apartment and guest house and is already occupied. So you can imagine how nutz this spring has been!
And now it is summer, and it feels it too. Yesterday and today were in the upper 90s and sticky. Ugh, I hate this weather! With no AC, the house is miserable by afternoon. The fans are blowing hot air around, and my lovely sunny yard is like a blast furnace. We could use some rain, and cooler temps.
The garden is going in slowly. I am way behind. I want the rocks out of there and there are hundreds if not thousands of them, from pea gravel size to two fist's worth big, with the occasional piece the size of your head. They are gradually filling up a small gully up back that is not a vernal pool and makes mowing treacherous.
So here are some random pictures of Winter 2011 turning into Spring 2012 at the farm...
And now it is summer, and it feels it too. Yesterday and today were in the upper 90s and sticky. Ugh, I hate this weather! With no AC, the house is miserable by afternoon. The fans are blowing hot air around, and my lovely sunny yard is like a blast furnace. We could use some rain, and cooler temps.
The garden is going in slowly. I am way behind. I want the rocks out of there and there are hundreds if not thousands of them, from pea gravel size to two fist's worth big, with the occasional piece the size of your head. They are gradually filling up a small gully up back that is not a vernal pool and makes mowing treacherous.
So here are some random pictures of Winter 2011 turning into Spring 2012 at the farm...
An amazing late November sunset. |
An abandoned bird nest in the Autumn Olive brush down by the block building, all crowned with berries for the holidays. |
At the far end of the barn the dreaded strangler of trees; Oriental bittersweet, garlands an old railing. |
One of the most amazing sunsets I've ever photographed, it looks like it's from an alien planet. This was early December. |
Blackbird singing in the tree across the road, proclaiming that winter is now over! |
Ariel out for a walk with me. |
We've got mallards visiting our pond. This drake seems to be quacking up about something. |
A redwing blackbird finds something to sing about amongst the cattails. |
Across the road, a redwing male preening for the ladies. |
A peachy sunset in April. |
Lee acting as Ariel's press agent. "No pictures please! Paparazzi, go home!" |
If only life could always be this peaceful and serene... |
I did mention that the sunsets here are magnificent. This was shot in March. I love the barn roof silhouette. |
I couldn't dream up color combinations like this! You can see a little rime of snow that hadn't disappeared yet. It was not a very hard winter. |
The first daffodils in bloom, up by the house. At their feet the shoots of common orange daylilies that have buried their old foliage and are in full bloom now in June. |
My domicile. This year, it feels like home! |
A brilliant patch of moss we spotted on one of our walks. This is between the lower driveway where the truck turnaround was, and the pond. |
I gave a couple of little clumps of forsythia to my dear departed friend Bev and she planted them here. They are still thriving, and it's just one more way I feel close to her. |
A lonely clump of daffodils on the other side of the pond, perhaps replanted by a squirrel. |
The marshy lower end of the pond. |
My winter feeder setup, I had suet out well into April because the nights were still cold. The green feeder holds mixed seed. A male brown headed cowbird is sitting there sunning himself. |
Across the road, the bigger of three weeping cherries in bloom before the frost got them. |
Like a bird on the wing, my heart soars with the clouds when it's spring... |
The second crop of daffodils down on the wall between the house and barn. That area is a weedy mess right now that I'd love to have time to clear out. |
Our pond at sunset in May. |
A buttercup in the lawn, which was spangled with them in mid-May. |
A doe grazing on new grass in the big field. We see deer here often. |
A male house finch on the feeder. |
One of my more successful attempts to catch a chimney swift on the wing. They move very fast! |
Not a clear shot of them because they move too fast, but these are swifts circling above the chimney in evening. |
They had closed for the day when I took this pic, but where we cleared out a snag of vines around a telephone pole, some kind of little white flowers popped up. I have yet to identify them. |
Wild white campion is all over the place here. |
Wild cherry blossoms in the hedgerow. I often see butterflies in them. |
There is just something to look at in every season! |
Most enlightened doggie, Ms. Ariel says, "Doggone it, we've run out of pictures to share for now. Do come back again!" ~Nancy |