Sunday, September 21, 2008
Haunted mornings
This fog seems to be keeping first frost at bay. It is as if the earth has its feet in different seasons now, one firmly planted in summer and the other slipping over the edge into fall. We get freeze warnings and watches every evening, but so far, at least down here by the house, it hasn't frozen yet. Days the temp goes up near 70 and the sun is like a comforting beacon. It feels good to go outside and soak up the warmth.
Alan, our resident fisherman, is catching the gold fish from the garden pond for me....one by one. They are ellusive little beasts and don't seem to want to join us in the house. However, the past two winters I have kept them outdoors with a heater in the pond. First winter the heater failed and all but one froze. Second winter, heater worked fine and they all wintered over only to succumb (all but one again) to bacterial infection caused by stress in the spring. Enough already. We have a twenty gallon tank and a ten. They can join the guppies and the Betta and see if that works better.
We keep harvesting more sweet corn even though it is getting kind of tough. I am glad Agway keeps a record of whatever variety we buy because whatever this stuff is it is really good.Ike knocked a lot of it down but it is still easy enough to pick a couple of dozen ears in a few minutes. Tomatoes are ripening nicely. Some year I will realize that one or two plants of each cherry tomato variety is enough. I think I planted about ten currant tomato plants and discovered that even if you eat all you can stomach every time you go to the garden there will be hundreds (and hundreds) left. The grape tomatoes from last summer volunteered and produced well too. Never thought I could get sick of tiny tomatoes, but there it is.
Wish I knew more about harvesting sunflower seeds. I have been cutting the heads one by one (when they get low enough to bonk me on the head when I am digging potatoes....they remind me of giant showerheads. You wouldn't think it, but a sunflower head can deliver quite a thump). They remind the blue jays and chickadees of lunch counters. As we speak a whole flock of jays, silent all summer, are careening around the house, shrieking and beeping and barking.....I'll bet they are scarfing seeds up in the garden too. They will be welcome as soon as I get enough seeds saved to grow more next summer... I am hoping the ones I am picking are ripe enough to dry and plant. Some of them are the most amazing deep purple color...which rubs off on your fingers if you pick out seeds. It amazes me how much of our produce never makes it in from the garden. They are sure tasty.
I'm going with leaves on water in that last photo.
ReplyDeleteThis was a welcome fall post since down here the only hint is the slightest change in temp this weekend.
Speaking of fishing ... did y'all ever make it back to that culvert you posted about with all the fish stacked up?
We've managed to stay frost free here too. The leaves are just starting to change and the grass out back stays wet all day from the fog and the dew. The birds have left the sunflowers alone so far, so maybe they aren't ready yet. The squirrels haven't gone for them yet either. I'm hoping for enough seeds so I don't have to buy them next year.
ReplyDeleteCould it be fireworks? I'm not positive but that would be my guess. Since you said I probably know I figured it must be something from the races.
ReplyDeleteFall is strange here too, birds have left early, and the pileated are eating the apples that aren't ready yet, but things will not ripen. So we're early and late at the same time.
ReplyDeleteI hope my corn gets to the stage to eating let alone tough!
Fog, cold mornings...your photos show it so well.
ReplyDeleteMy grandson planted one sunflower in kindergarten. He is now in the fourth grade and we have a solid wall of volunteer sunflowers in the yard. Amazing flowers.
ReplyDeleteFC, getting chilly up here...polar fleece shirt every morning and evening, although it is summer during the day. We did go back to the culvert pond several times this summer. Most of the fish dispersed and it was just full of water. That is where we saw the otter though.
ReplyDeleteApple, barely any leaves changing here at all, although in the swamps down in Schoharie County the maples are already bare. I am eager to get some foliage photos....
NYV, you got it. Taken from a moving car over the roof of the Central National (or whatever its latest name is) bank in Fonda
Nita, wow, I had no idea woodpeckers ate apples. Sorry that your corn isn't ripening. Hope you get some warm, humid days so it comes on for you
Teri, thanks, yesterday certainly was a pretty one and so pleasantly warm once it got going
Jan, I am getting to really enjoy them...except the getting brained by them part of it. lol
I want to find a better spot for them next summer.
I figured Geese. Oh well. LOL
ReplyDeleteWR, sorry, I was trying to get a decent picture, while winding down the hill, through the trees into town. The timing was impossible and I only got this one because it was the finale and lasted for several seconds.
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