Saturday, May 23, 2009

When little ones leave the nest.

Yesterday morning, I heard some peeping from the nest-ish area of the arbor vitae. I figure everyone returned home safely. Some time during the day the family seems to have moved to a tall willow a few houses down. I still see the parents, they visit our yard, but no sign of the fledglings. Well, I did find a broken egg shell, woohoo!

The cat was the only one thrilled by this since she can now go outside. Unfortunately it is getting warmer outside and she would rather we come inside to pet her. Poor, misguided kitty.

Good bye little birds, hope to see you soon just leave some blueberries for me.
christopher

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Our Backyard Aviary

A month or so ago, a cardinal couple moved in to one of our arbor vitae. This evening we watched two fledglings leave the tree. The first launched hirself* in my direction, mom flew with hir. The little bird landed behind my chair. We moved away so the parents would approach. It looked like a lot of work to feed them and help them back.

We quietly cheered hir through several mighty flights, and stifled chuckles as others ended in lightly comical thuds against the compost bin. There was a bit of drama involving other birds. A man sparrow landed in the garden, his intentions unclear, dad felt the fellow should leave. Despite our earnest pleading to remain in the bush for hir parents sake and sanity, the second fledgling leapt/dropped to the ground. Everyone was playing now.

A cat bird (grey bird? darker scalp color? variety of songs/noises?) came along and jumped into the arbor vitae. Mom swooped back. We heard the sounds of a tussle issued from the shrub and the grey bird darted out. The parents returned to aiding their babies toward the nest.

It is dark now, they seem done flying for today. One is perched on the glider ten feet from home. The second was last seen in the parsley. I think the parents are high in a neighboring tree, watching the area. The little ones are still and quiet. I placed a potted crape myrtle nearby, hopefully it will make it easier in the morning. I'll keep an ear out for them tonight.

Sleep well. Rest up and try again tomorrow.
christopher


* not knowing the gender of the young bird I have chosen a contraction of "him" and "her" over the less warm "it".

Thursday, June 07, 2007

Another reason to buy local and in season

I just found a map of large corporations involved in organic food. It looks like several of the brands I like to buy are no longer little guys. Boca, Arrowhead Mills, Kashi, Horizon, Rice Dream and West Soy to name a few. I know some of these are owned by Hain Celestial which appears to have the common good at heart, but it shares alliances with Cargill and Heinz which have less than savory reputations including genetic engineering and toxins. according to profiles at Responsible Shopper.

So if you really want to know what's in your food grow it yourself or get to know the people who do.

christopher

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

so much going on!

The past month has seen everything from freezing temperatures to the current temperature of 81°. Some how the yard manages. I have added more seeds to the veggie plots: radishes, spinach, carrots, lettuce, maybe some kale. The front yard received a nice layer of leaf mulch.

Many blooms over the past two months, in rough order of appearance: crocus, daffodils, serviceberry, blueberries, columbine, violets, wild strawberries (real ones, not mock strawberries), fothergilla, foam flower, woodruff is just starting. The beat up azaleas look as though they’ve not given up. Several ferns have returned as well as solomon’s seal, tradescantia, the hostas, echinacea, some form of white Joe Pye weed, and the cardinal flower seems to be regaining strength.

I’ll have to post some photos soon. Until then,
christopher

Friday, March 16, 2007

Not out of Winter yet

I’m so glad I put those seeds in the ground. Now they’ll be safe from the squirrels under a covering of snow and/or ice. Whoohoo!

The weather is also reminding me how much water pools up around the raised veggie bed. Maybe I should move that to the higher side of the yard. Then think about a rain garden with blueberries and cranberries! Time to pull out more graph paper.

Sunday, March 11, 2007

First seeds of the season


gardenstart_031107.jpg
Originally uploaded by mr_christopher.


Alright, so I have finally started sowing seeds for the new season. I figured I’d start with early vegetables, because a) it's early in the season, and b) they should be done, by the time we figure out what we’re going to do with the yard.

I planted the 1st and 3rd rows with a mix of radishes and kale, then I added spinach to the 1st row and beets to the 3rd. The beets are a long shot since the seeds are a few years old. Heck, the whole venture is a long shot, but it gives me something to do. I also figure that since I am logging it here, I’ll see it next year and decide whether it was a good idea.

I plan to sow rows 2, 4, and 5 next week. I’ll also sow lettuce in the big bed again. Woohoo!

g'nite.
christopher

Flickr

This is a test post from flickr, I'm not sure if this worked right...

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Heat zones!

I've been doing my homework and found a useful tool called the Heat Zone map, which shows the average number of days per year above 86°F (30°C). This is different from the USDA Hardiness Zone map that gives you the average minimum temperature. I’m basically in the same zone, 7 for heat and 7a for hardiness. Both maps are fairly detailed and you can find ones that will indicate your county, if you know the shape of your county, which I’m sure we all do... ahem, yes. I like the color of the heat zone map better, 7 is a refreshing green, which I’ll call lymon after the popular soft drink flavor. 7a is a pale salmon, mmm, pale.

Now I must warn you, zones are known to shift a bit from year to year, so don’t get fond of your color. Of course, if you have read or heard about the recent climate reports you’ll know that you can soon look forward to growing plants from zones far south of your current region in the not too distant future. Woohoo! Time to order some new catalogs. You may also want to pick up some salt tolerant species if you live in low-lying areas (20-30 ft above sea-level), those of you near the coast may want to inspect your PFDs.

Alright enough talking about climate change unless I’m going to do something about it, which at 22:27, I can only accomplish by reducing consumption through powering down the computer.

cheers,
christopher