Looking out my back door |
Sorry for skipping days. The rain and cold kinda get me down. This has been one of the wettest Junes in history. We need to make hay to pay the infernal property tax. We can live on our other income...we are pretty frugal folks....but the taxes we have to pay to keep on farming are pretty steep.
You cannot make hay in the rain. At least no flooding so far this year.
Great Spangled Fritillary right on the back step |
However, there is always a bright side. You can see deer and fawns pretty much every day without leaving the yard. Foxes. Bunnies with a predilection for beans and peas. I hung some fabric softener sheets on strings out in the pea patch and laid down a big swath of mulch between the brushy fence line and the veggies.
Time will tell if this will work.
The robins and catbirds are planting mulberries I wonder if they think they will grow here. |
I think there was a deer eating mulberries yesterday when I went out to walk Daisy. Something coughed right under the trees...about ten feet from me...and then the bushes rustled and parted as if something large was in there. The touch-me-not is already tall enough to hide a deer. It loves this weather.
Deer path going through our hedgerow to the housing development next door |
And speaking of crows. If you want to see...and hear...a small flock of Fish Crows, the parking lot of the Gloversville Tractor Supply has them, along with a mess of Ring-Billed Gulls. Their caw is very distinct from that of the American Crow that is more common here. Sounds kind of like a cartoon! You'll know it when you hear it.
So much green. Everywhere. Green. Hard to remember a season that wasn't green. I can well imagine your frustration with trying to get in the hay. Dang. Still you are surrounded with beauty and are so lucky to be able to record it and share. Nature truly sustains us.
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