April 17, 2008

  • At Last, My First Foray into Gardening!

    Finally, after many many years of liking the idea of growing my own vegetables, I have taken action at last.  For almost 4 years now I’ve had this great raised-bed organic gardening site complete with pond for watering available to me within easy walking distance, but I’d lacked the time or energy or motivation to delve into it.  It was previously used as a community garden, but for various reasons folks stopped using it.  I mentioned to my neighbors recently that I wanted to garden this year and would appreciate any guidance or aid from those with experience with whom I could share the harvest, and I got some takers.  I feel so, so grateful that I have the time and the energy and the motivation to do this!  It feels so good to just feel so good

    My neighbor JB grew up doing extensive organic gardening and has been passing on to me valuable tips and pointers.  Yesterday he and RK brought up a very stout rototiller machine and both men lent some of their GREATLY appreciated higher muscle mass to tilling the highly overgrown beds.  We tag-team tilled for most of the day – okay, so they tilled a lot longer than I did per turn, but I did give it my smaller all – and we managed to get both of the two good-sized beds thoroughly tilled!  Then I raked the beds and planted my very first crops yesterday and today.  I am very excited, and I am hopeful that at least some of the veggies will deliver a bountiful harvest in this my first year’s gardening attempt, enough for critters and for people!

    Here are three action shots of us tilling: first JB then RK then me, followed by a shot of the first finished bed.

April 12, 2008

  • Spring has Sprung!

    Things in my life have been more hectic than I like in the last few
    weeks, but hectic with mostly good things, and I am very grateful to be feeling really really well recently! 
    My energy and mood are steady and rising.  The weather here lately has been cold and cloudy, but the coming of spring
    marches on regardless.  Every day I walk my trails and I am amazed by the tremendous
    changes nature can manifest in a mere 24 hours.  New wildflowers are
    popping up every day, and buds on the trees are gradually unfolding
    from their protective but constricting embrace, breathing and stretching and
    growing and transforming in the open air toward full glory.  I feel in many ways like I am finally doing the same and it feels so delicious!  I have been taking pictures like a madwoman possessed by awe at the beauty and miracles of nature, but haven’t gotten to the more mundane uploading step yet despite my best intentions.  All in good time. 

March 11, 2008

  • A quick catch up entry

    Yikes, the weeks are just speeding by!  We’ve been blessed with early signs of springs including the songs of the spring peepers, the green tips of daffodil leaves emerging from their winter bed in the earth, extra vocalizing from the breeding coyotes and the nesting barred owls, and a general warming and sweet smells from the soil.  Last week (the week before?) I was sitting writing with pen in a paper journal at the little waterfall near the cabin when a sleepy looking oppossum ventured forth from a cozy burrow along the bank of the little gully.  A few days ago I was serenaded by two big beautiful pileated woodpeckers, god they are so beautiful!  I get to see downy and red-breasted woodpeckers who frequent my feeder and they too are lovely to see I must add, in case word should get back to them somehow that I was less appreciative of their merits!   There is at least one rabbit who seems to have taken up residence in or near a brush pile I made for wild critters behind the cabin with a surprisingly bright white fluffy cottontail.

    It has been beautiful sunny weather the last 4 days with temperatures up to 60 and I was inspired by the energy of spring building within the earth and have begun establishing a new little trail from the cabin.  I’ve been feeling so full of peace and joy and gratitude and am so filled with love and light.  It has been such a delightful blessing to continue to feel so well so long!  My trailmaking is progressing much more quickly than anticipated, and I have the satisfyingly sore shoulders, wrists, and hands to show for it.  The tools I use are a leaf rake, a small hand pruning saw, and a small hand pruning shears, and for me it is a very zen-like process I find grounding, centering, and connecting.  Dog May and cat Abie have been very attentive and helpful during the trail work, keeping me company and overseeing my efforts.  I need to go rest now but wanted to at least post a few lines here before even more time lapses.

February 27, 2008

  • General musings on life at the cabin

    Did any of you get to witness the total lunar eclipse this past week?  It was too cloudy here that night, very disappointing.  But my goodness, the night before that was delightful.  No clouds at all and a gloriously full moon shone so brightly down upon this frozen forest that my dog May and I walked the full length of the 1/2 mile trail with its three currently live water crossings both out and back without a stumble or a splash, aided only by the lusciously luminous moon.  There was a palpable timeless quality in the bright forest night.  The nocturnal chorus of barred owls calling back and forth: “Who cooks for you? Who cooks for you-all?” was accompanied by an armadillo foraging through crisp leaf litter against a babbling brook background, all with a clarity that seemed heightened by the magical moonlight.  Much to my [and the armadillo's] relief, May’s nose led her elsewhere when I quite closely encountered the armored but peace loving critter, and after a few minutes I moved swiftly away so as not to draw May’s attention.  This was the first middle of the night walk we’ve made successfully all the way to the end of the trail.  Other nights we’ve tried it we’ve only gotten partway, often due to mutual unease inspired by a cacophony of coyotes calling out their eerie song.

    It is easy to tell when turkeys have been foraging in an area of forest.  To facilitate food finding they use their strong legs and big feet to kick leaf litter away, baring the naked soil for acorns, insects or tender shoots.  In doing so, they leave scattered mounds of leaves alongside the bare patches, bringing to mind for me an image of tiny tornados moving across the forest floor.  In snow or mud their tracks are also distinctive, as their three long toes leave memorable marks.  Turkeys can also be very noisy just by their loud rustling through leaf litter, but also their chatter within the flock can be raucous, and is sometimes accompanied by loud flapping of large wings.  Several times during forest forays this week I have come close enough to the flock to glimpse their scurrying forms highly intent upon foraging the forest floor.  Upon noticing me they most often will scatter, some running with remarkable agility and speed along the ground while others loudly flap their way upward to treetop perches in the safer sky.  I’m linking here to a picture I posted of a turkey behind my cabin last spring, since I’ve not yet gotten any better photos of them, their coloring camouflages them extremely well and they are much faster than I am.

    There has been a great deal of activity around the bird feeders right at the cabin enticed by this very wintry weather to come have their fill of food and drink freshly warmed water.  There have also been a number of red and gray squirrels partaking of the these offerings alongside the birds.  The avian visitors this year routinely include members of the following species:  cardinal, chickadee, goldfinch, purple finch, blue jay, junco, white-breasted nuthatch, white-throated sparrow, downy woodpecker, and red-bellied woodpecker.  I love watching this wide variety of birds, and the squirrels, at such close proximity.  Some of them prefer eating right from the ground while others prefer the suspended feeder.  At least one of the red squirrels will sometimes hang upside down from the suspended feeder on one side pulling sides out with front paws while the birds use the other side, undaunted.  Of the birds, some stay in place eating many seeds in a row while others come and go frequently, obtaining only one seed at a time then carrying it off to consume on a nearby branch or tree trunk.  Especially colorful is the scene when they feed with snowy or icy backgrounds.  How happy and fortunate I feel to share this special space and time with all the creatures here, I feel very blessed.

February 18, 2008

February 17, 2008

  • A Few Photos After the Snowstorm

    Here are a few images I caught after the recent snowstorm…


    Snowy cedar bough 1


    Snowy cedar bough 2


    Little Abraham the snow kitty


    Emma May forges the trail for us to follow

    I hope to post some photos I took after the recent the icestorm too.