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Saturday, July 13, 2024

Friends


 
When longtime friends who haven't met yet get together IRL for the first time, the stories fly. They race across the table, collide in mid word, then burst like fireworks on high, each spark racing into another tale, then another, and yet another, until a web of magic floats over all, right there in McDonald's.

What joy! 

What amazement!

What sheer, unfettered delight!

And, yes what love...

We loved meeting you, Cathy and Keith!



We knew it would be a great event, all those years of building friendship over the miles that separated us could not have been wrong about us all. We were sure to like each other.

However, it turned out it was so much more than we could possibly have anticipated. Ohio turns out the most wonderful people.

I hope you pass this way again and thank you for taking time out of your journey to share an hour of sparkling stories and heartfelt smiles. I am so glad you liked our river.

Hugs to you both. ( How nice it was to share real ones, and so very heartfelt.)




Monday, July 08, 2024

The Best Blueberries

 


The boss took me up to Bellinger's Orchard today so I could pick some blueberries. Becky has been keeping me in the grocery store variety. As you might expect there is no comparison, although I am grateful to have any kind for my salads.

However, as soon as we got home I rinsed a couple of handfuls of the fresh-from-the-orchard kind and put them in a bowl on the table.



Before I was even done putting away the other stuff we had brought home from a morning's excursions the first ones were gone. It only took a little longer to eat the second bunch.

10 out of 10 would recommend you go pick a quart or two, but do your best not to eat them all at once. I did manage to curb my enthusiasm, but they aren't going to last long.

Yum....



Sunday, July 07, 2024

Birding with the Pros

Yellow-bellied Sapsuckers

 
I had the best fun this morning anybody could ask for. I joined a Hudson Mohawk Bird Club field trip to the Caroga Lake CE breeding bird atlas block in Bleecker and got to spend several hours birding with two highly skilled experts. What a way to learn!

 I drove myself up to the turn around on Pinnacle Road (go me!!) much earlier than I needed to, just to catch the earliest birds that I could. On the way, driving through another priority NY Breeding Bird Atlas block, I spotted a hen turkey on the edge of the road with a mess of really new poults milling around her feet. I stopped and listed them and continued north.

Once at my destination I birded by myself for a while. In 37 minutes I counted 20 species, most of them fun mountain birds, making a change from my usual farm country denizens.

Then as I sat in the car waiting, (and hiding from the deer flies) a Sharp-shinned Hawk nailed something right next to the car, carried it to a nearby branch, adjusted it in its talons, and carried it away. About as easy a confirmed species as you could ask for.

After David and Mark arrived, we walked the road, finding birds ranging in size from Ruby-throated Hummingbirds to a family of noisy Common Ravens. My personal total at the end of the trip was 45 species, but I know they got at least a couple more than that.

I am always hesitant about joining group birding expeditions for fear I will slow more athletic birders down too much, but I was certainly glad I went on this one. As a lovely side benefit I got over 14,000 steps so I don't have to walk this afternoon. If you are local and want to have some birdie fun, I highly recommend joining the Mohawk Hudson Club and undertaking a field trip or two.



Tuesday, July 02, 2024

Squirrel Baffle


This is the third one of these I have made
. I was desperate to keep the vermin out of my bird feeders, and thus designed this thing. So far the other two work pretty well. As long as the tape stays on they foil chipmunks and even big Grey Squirrels. It is pretty funny to see a great big skerverrel start up the post, get his head stuffed in the bottle, and fail to progress.

Hopefully they will continue to function as planned and this one will work too. 



I use a 2-liter soda bottle and duct tape in the construction. Tin snips are employed to cut through the neck of the bottle to split it so it fits on the pole. Then scissors are used to cut the rest of the way down the bottle and to slice the bendy strips.

Kinda ugly, but the bottle is only worth a nickel deposit and I always have the tape on hand anyhow. Can't get much cheaper than that.

Good luck if you try one. LMK how it works out for you.



Friday, June 28, 2024

Sunnycrest Orchard

 


I don't remember the exact first time Ralph took me there. He and his mom had been buying fruit and plants there, probably since the place first opened, but Schoharie County was new territory for me. My adventuring had been mostly to the north, Fulton and Hamilton Counties, and I was in for a delightful surprise.

The front part of the building in those days was filled with tables heaped with fat, glistening apples, all red, green, and gold, bursting with sweet juice, and even sweeter temptation, for an old apple hound like me.

And then there was Mr. Schilde. He knew Ralph and Peg and delighted in telling them of his extensive travels all over the world. He had served in the Peace Corps, and, did he ever have stories to tell. Just talking to him for a few minutes as we shopped was like a college course but a lot more interesting and no homework either. We often discussed what he taught us all the way home and sometimes for days afterward. There is nothing that rivals someone who makes you think and he surely did. We  miss him still.

Later the apples were joined by greenhouses full of treasures to tempt the most blasé gardener alive. There was something for every taste and always blooming with health and vigor.

Every year we lamented the late winter closing period and eagerly awaited spring opening day. I thought it was better than baseball's Spring Training, even though I love the game.

As Ralph grew busier managing the farm It was I who took Peg for her spring plants. She loved the place as much as I did. Such delight in  walking into the dense, humid air of the greenhouses with the glowing array of flowers stretching wall-to-wall. Often the air buzzed with hummingbirds sampling the flowery feast and the only challenge was picking which plants to bring home.

Along with the popular standards like petunias and marigolds, there were always fascinating exotics. Last year I bought a Lion's Ear plant and enjoyed it mightily as it grew higher than my kitchen window. (Thanks again to the nice lady who sent me seeds, which I started and set out this spring). There was always something cool tucked away in the odd corner that I just had to bring home and try. I also got some Pineapple Sage last year and loved that too. (Thanks Matt and Lisa.)

In recent years Sunnycrest became my go to for tomato plants. I used to start from seed, but trays of tiny tomatoes were crowded out by my ridiculous array of houseplants hogging the big windows. Theirs were of varieties I liked and hardy, sturdy, and ready to grow. This spring was no exception.

Last week we learned that the business had been sold. At first it was like contemplating the end of an old friend. We truly love the place. Since the announcement we have been over twice, first to find something to put in that ugly purple planter pot. Pink Gomphrena and dark purple Salvia....perfect...it is pretty now!

Then yesterday we went back just to kind of look around and enjoy the nostalgia of a place we visited with great delight every year since we met, forty-some odd years ago.



Becky came along, and somehow the two of them each bought me a new plant. Becky chose a gigantic fuchsia. Hoo boy! I tried one bitd and failed dismally. Ralph picked out a cute little green job with leaves like strawberries and fuzzy pink kitty-tail flowers. Hope I can keep them growing for the summer. Can't wait to see what the hummers think of them.

Anyhow, we nodded goodbye to Tim and Laurie, and carried off our treats. I managed to step on a cherry tomato that fell off a plant someone was carting out. Splat. It was kind of a comical ending I guess. 

However, now I am allowing myself to be excited that the business will be rising like a  phoenix, hopefully this fall. I guess the new folks are returning to three seasons of operation, which should be fun. Who knows what cool new plants and ideas will be forthcoming!

If you get a chance, run over to Sharon Springs and grab some of the great bargains available until they close on the 30th. It's never too late to add something fun to your garden and you can always find a bare spot or an empty pot. (I thought I was done planting and out of room, but lo and behold, both the new treasures found attractive homes on the sitting porch. I would not be surprised if we somehow happened to wander over that way for just one more visit...

Best wishes to everyone at Sunnycrest and to the new folks carrying on the tradition. Maybe we will see you there.

Also, if anyone has any advice on keeping a fuchsia going, let me know. Thanks!