Archive for the 'phenology' Category

The red fox returned last week. About 9:30 p.m. I heard the alarm calls for a few minutes, then silence.  It’s strange how this is the first time I’ve heard it calling since March. That’s from vernal equinox to summer solstice, almost. Does it have some kind of internal clock that sends it to this [...]


    In the late ’90s I was walking up the main road to the back entrance of the Palace. I encountered a very large turtle on the side of the road opposite the Palace driveway. It had a shell that was about 12″ in diameter, so I knew that it was very old. I was [...]


Motherwort

21Jun07

This is the herb motherwort (Leonurus cardiaca) in flower:


    There is a chorus outside my window. This haiku seems appropriate for this first day of summer:
The cricket
proudly pricks up its whiskers
and sings.
—-Issa
(trans. by Stephen Addiss)


Today marks the summer solstice, the longest day of the year in the northern hemisphere. It is also the first official day of summer.


    Today is celebrated as West Virginia Day, in honor of the entrance into statehood of West Virginia. It split from Virginia in 1863 and today marks the 144th anniversary. West Virginia is noted for great natural beauty, an abundance of wildlife, and a huge variety of plants. This is a photo of [...]


Daisies

19Jun07

“I think of each life as a flower, as common
as a field daisy, and as singular . . .”
—-from When Death Comes, by Mary Oliver


Haying

07Jun07

Our neighbor has begun the mowing of the hayfield above our place.


Resident Deer

06Jun07

A mother deer and her tiny spotted fawn are browsing in the orchard in the morning and before dusk.


Catalpa Tree

03Jun07

    The catalpa tree (”catawba,” “Indian bean” ;) is in bloom. Two large ones are on the Ghosh family property, and a huge one is just across the street from the front entrance to the Palace. I don’t know if they are Southern or Northern species. Here is a photo of the lovely blossoms.