Thursday, November 19, 2020

A New Neighbor

 One of my neighbors must have thought that in order to be a real country dude he had to have a rooster. This rooster is apparently brain-dead or at least has no idea of time. He certainly loves the sound of his beautiful voice at all hours of the day and night. I'm hoping a fox or coyote has a stomach for his melodious singing. Hmm? I haven't used my slow cooker for awhile.

Backroads of Morrow County Update November 2020

 Backroads of Morrow County Update:

And they thought I was slow before. 😊 I've heard some people call this the Ugly Fall. All the leaves are gone leaving only bare limbs. I, of course, have a different view. The soy beans are almost all harvested. It looks as if a huge vacuum came by and whooshed them up. It always seems to be an invitation to stroll the contours of Morrow County. Or just put a chair on the top of one of the small rises and peacefully survey the hillsides as far as one can see. They have begun to bring in the corn. Stubble everywhere. Loose cobs litter the gravel roads. I'm sure the critters are ecstatic. If it was sweet corn, I'd be ecstatic too!!!
in the midst of all the stark contrasts are the red barns, rusty silos. flocks of sheep and goats, small herds of Steak n' Shake. (I wonder if I can eat that?) Guard mules here and there among the herds of sheep. Don't see too many of my feathered-friends along the backways. They are busy traveling from house to house enjoying the free meals. Meals on Wings, Inc. The owners are enjoying the visitors as well--maybe more so.
Scattered amid the barren trees are the evergreens. More shades of God's favorite color than you can imagine. Hidden or in disguise among their "brothers" all summer, this is their time to shine. And in sunlight they can be torches of flames. And wait until God brushes on the blue-silver snow!! Now, the blue and gray of the clouds adds movement and change to every moment. The songs of their barren neighbors--exquisite moans synchronized in the winds of autumn. brings the woodwind section of the orchestra to the beauty of the country ride. Please, roll those windows down!
We should all be so ugly. 😊

Saturday, September 12, 2020

September at The Acres 2020

 September at The Acres. Cooler days, gray clouds mingling with the blue. Still need lots and lots of rain. The pond--my own personal mud hole--is way too low. And though the Wild Area is a luscious yellow--still waiting for the asters--it's not over-your-head tall like it usually is. Those flowers have lived so long out there, I doubt that the weather can slow them down too much. One of the wonders of 2020 is another dearth of Japanese beetles. Last year there weren't many; this year I've just seen one. One! My Gardening Angels must have gone into the extermination business.

There are still lots of things blooming, just not much on the new side. But being a fan of old, no complaints. The monk's hood and fall crocus are sure to bloom later and perhaps a re-blooming iris or two. I don't know how the lack of rain will impact them. Ah well, I will enjoy the walks and live off the expectations. Would anyone like some white iris with a touch of orange/yellow on the flags? They need morning sun, and they spread like crazy. Dry soil as well. I have a few I'd be willing to pass along. I have some seeds I need to mail as well. And always some work to do.
Two months I imagine until the first killer frost, but who really knows. Until then I will walk, smell the phlox, wait for the asters, and try to avoid the ragweed--unsuccessfully. Then, I will stroll through fallen leaves, banks of snow, and wait for the cycle of growth and beauty to return again. Lord willing. Oh, I've started to feed my feathered friends again--no one has caught on yet. I'm sure it won't take the chickadees long to recognize that the catering business is open again--and then the parade will begin. Entertainment for the Homesteader.

Saturday, August 1, 2020

Backroads of Morrow County July 2020

Backroads of Morrow County Update:
Hot. Humid. Dry. Some of the backroads have been tarred to reduce the dust, I suppose. One short section was being repaved today. It's maybe fifty yards of pavement in the middle of six to eight miles of gravel road. Someone must have clout. Or else everyone else loves their munificent red barn as much as I do. It's a lovely little farmhouse too. No fields, unless they own the massive hilly tract around the corner. Knee deep in corn this summer. I love the hills as well. When I grow up and become a farmer . . .
The roadsides are still green for the most part. Some sprinkles of blue chicory. Lots of orange day lily hangouts. Feathered friends on the wires of course. Red-wings, the loyal mourning doves, cardinals, hawks, a redheaded woodpecker or two. And myriads of barn swallows--my velvet jet-propelled friends. Some of them joined me as I mowed the front of The Acres today. Not a whole lot of human traffic, but as always, everyone has the waves--even the road workers.
Crop-wise, most of the corn looks good. Soy beans--not so much. This week--especially today--must have been wheat harvest time. I miss the golden grains once they are gone though the fields retain the golden strands until a couple of good rains. First, they reap the wheat, then they make hay of the stubble--nothing wasted. I love wheat fields, then the corn, and last the soy beans (a distant third.) Many fields dotted with hay bales as well. As you know. I love that scene. If only I could paint. My Ziff cousins got all the talent in that area--and it's considerable.
Perhaps some rain is on the way to rescue the soy beans and get the Queen Anne's Lace up and about along the sides of the roads. The mosquitoes were active today. Maybe they know some is coming. I certainly contributed all I could to the continued thriving of the species.
A few surprises at The Acres in addition to the return of the elderberries. Blue flag iris in one of the beds--who knows from where and why a month late. Astilbe in the swamp itself. (I am worried about my cardinal flowers.--I hope the late freeze this spring didn't get them. They were spreading like crazy across the bog. All those red beauties surrounded by numerous hibiscus in every shade from white to red. Tall pink Queen of the prairie--think meadow sweet in hazy pink instead of white. Yellow sneezeweed mixed in. Lots of milkweed. Makes for a lovely fall vista.) I do have some hair allium in the meadow--exotic and beautiful. If it rains, it will be "exciting" to see what responds. Needless to say, The Acres and the Backroads are as gorgeous as ever--different gorgeous each year--but always gorgeous.

Thursday, June 18, 2020

Talking Turkey

This summer I have come to a walking agreement with Tom, Mom, and the Young Turks. I don't see them as often as last year, but occasionally we cross paths in the Wild Area. The agreement came about serendipitously on our first encounter. I was walking one afternoon in the Wild Area when suddenly the whole family flushed out of hiding, and I was surrounded by wings. Tom, headed for the trees. (He still does whenever we meet. Macho man!) Mom flew a few yards and settled back down out in the open, and several of the Young Turks joined her. I was about twenty yards away, and she just looked at me and gave me a lecture in Gobbly-gook. I am even less proficient in Gobbly-gook than I am in Catonese, but I got the message. So, I turned and walked away in the other direction from her and the Turks. Now, whenever we meet up, she just gives me the same talking to, and I turn and walk in another direction while she and the Young Turks continue on their way. Tom still heads for the trees, but the rest tolerate my presence--at a distance and headed in a different direction. In fact, I can be headed in the same direction as long as I'm a couple paths over. I hope the agreement lasts all summer. Maybe by August we'll be talking turkey.

Green June

Update at The Acres and Beyond
First, the confession. I haven't even pretended to do any work so far this week. So much to do . . . Sometime I will at least get started. I have three beds that need re-doing and, at least, a little mulching. I'll do it--probably. Some of it . . . probably. A little bit of it anyway . . . probably. I am, of course, getting my walks and my moments at rest on the top of the hill. Alas.
The last two rains seem to have been the catalyst for the fields along the backroads to perk up. Yep, things are starting to come up--"things" being soy beans and corn. As you know, I love to cruise the backroads and check things out. Green is the color of June. Not much else is going on--but, ah, does green have its colors. To just say "green," seems unworthy. There's soy bean green, corn green, varieties of tree green, more field greens than you can count, pine tree greens. "Green." The Creator must have a separate--huge--palette just for His greens. If I was an artist, I could give you the name of all the greens--but I'm not. So, the world is magnificently "green" in Morrow County and The Acres. Best I can do--use your imagination. Or go for a walk and count the "greens."
The Acres are pretty much dried up--so rain must be coming. The cool breeze of country is always at work--especially pleasing on humid days. The Toad Bass Choir is in full voice in the evenings. The morning symphony is a cacophony as usual--beautiful. It's as if they were having a soloist competition, but everyone had to sing at the same time. No choir director at work here. Unity of purpose, praise for a new day--harmony, not so much.
The last iris has bloomed--well, at least, until re-blooming time in the fall. It is beautiful!!! (join me Saturday for a walk and I'll show it to you) It is, however, not anything like I expected!! Mind must be going--well, faster than normal anyway. Though I did get three books read since Sunday (Started a new one, today.) and added a memorized poem to my summer collection (26 now!) And wrote a little bit on facebook. So the mind is not completely gone! The day lilies are starting to take over now. There will be a wondrous variety there as well--now it's mainly just yellows and peaches. Always a few other things as well.
Life in the slow lane is a marvelous thing. The world can "offer me its busyness" all it wants--I'm not buying. Or selling.
By this time in the summer, the days no longer exist--it's always just today. It's a good thing The Acres aren't paid for or I might just disappear forever into a life of Today. Probably not--the Lord's calling is impossible to resist.
Pictures Saturday of this week's walks through The Acres. Love you all. Embrace the green!

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Friday, May 29, 2020

Summer Begins

I had a student write me a note of thanks and encouragement. Yep, a real letter--none of that tech stuff. Is there hope for the world? 😊
I was asked how the quarantine would impact my summer. As I thought about it, it dawned on me that it won't at all. I spend my summers in isolation anyway.😊
And so it has started. I confess--the first couple weeks I sleep in a little bit. Lazy. Homesteader is not a fan. She thinks I'm home all the time so I can spoil her more. But I do eschew 5:30 wake-ups for a bit. Other than that--same old, same old, says the same old man. This first week I walked of course multiple times each day. (The ticks are awful!) I take my pictures for your Saturday walk while I'm indulging my own ramblings. It's been a down year for iris, but don't feel sorry for me--they're are still plenty of beauties out there. A lot of buds shriveled up--the rain maybe?--and some beds just took this year off I guess. One bed with nearly thirty plants--one bloom. What you going to do? Lots of other things are starting to join the promenade as well.
I've been doing some mulching. Should have the first loads used up in a couple days if it doesn't rain. Then, I'll have to order some more. Going to be a mulch/Roundup summer. I hope to get a lot of clearing done as well. Mowed the front and back each once this week. The only normal thing that hasn't started yet is my cleaning up the cave a bit. Well, I am a male--let's call it straightening up the cave a little bit--very little bit. And I did have a surprise encounter at the new nursery. The Hassey's were there. Sorry John for mentioning the place on face book.
Two Gardening Angel moments so far. A lovely red iris in a bed I didn't remember having a red iris. And a yellow flag iris showed up at the exact opposite from where I planted some near the pond. I have no idea how it got there. Can flag iris swim?
The only strange thing going on is that I have been memorizing poems. No, I have no idea why. Something more to forget later on I guess.
In family news everyone seems well. Moira graduated from Illinois University. Evie graduated from Dublin. No comments about getting old were asked for thank you. Oh, and Ben and Jamie bought a house.
Hope your summer is marvelous!!! I don't know if I can stand being quarantined at The Acres all summer. Life is tough.