I also bustled around the yard and ran the mower over some late invasive cool season grass and mulched up a few leaves in the process. I do like a lawn with a nice even trim, don't you? I also realized there were a couple of hoses that needed draining, the purple martin houses needed to be cleaned out and brought indoors, and my pack rat-bait stations near the house were empty. All the usual and none too soon as, sometime between the strident warnings about new COVID variants and the apocalypse, the frantic media voices tell me that winter is coming. Sure, except for the 70ºF temperatures predicted this week. Those strawberry plants must think I'm nuts and just cut off their sunlight.
Also completed was the annual "over the rivers and through the woods" to our Indiana past trek of Thanksgiving, in our case the "over-the-river" being the Missouri and Mississippi rivers and the "through-the-woods" was of the forested Illinois and Indiana I-70 corridor. A few days gone in a cloudy and colder Indiana landscape where it actually even rained one day, and Mrs. ProfessorRoush and I were never so glad as to come back Friday into this gorgeous sunset, occurring just as we made those last few miles through the Flint Hills to home. Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home....err Kansas.Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
Showing posts with label Thanksgiving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thanksgiving. Show all posts
Sunday, November 28, 2021
Bedding Down & Tidying Up
ProfessorRoush accomplished several main fall chores last weekend and during the week. Last Sunday was a windy, but pleasant and sunny day which I took full advantage of in a fit of tidiness. Of highest importance, I covered the strawberries with a nice thick bed of straw to protect those tender buds from any further frosts and freezes. Last winter I neglected it as the bed was in poor condition anyway, but this year, with 50 new plants out, I thought a nice golden blanket was in order for the patch. It looks so nice and cozy and protected now, don't you think?
Thursday, November 26, 2015
Housebound Thanksgiving
Thanksgiving, yes, and outside the wind is howling and the rain is coming down in sheets. We had planned to visit my son in Colorado today, but a bad forecast and a winter storm watch convinced me that the return trip tomorrow might be a dangerous thing, and so, here we sit, Bella and I, staring out the window into the storm. The photo to the right is from a happier moment, yesterday, when we took advantage of the last warm day to play in the sun. Bella likes to hold the frisbee with her paws and doesn't give it up easily after she retrieves it.
Thankfully, my fall garden-related chores are essentially complete. Hoses are drained and stored, peonies and irises and daylily beds hacked down, and the lawn mower oil has been changed, blades sharpened, and gas preservative run through. Out the back window, the garden has entered dormancy and has turned to sienna, ocher, and umber, colors that are enhanced when the fall rains come to the prairie as you can see in the garden and distant hills below. I wish I had not yet cut down the tall native prairie grasses in the foreground (see the bottom picture below), but in the midst of this dry fall I had given up on seeing any moisture and I wanted to stem the incursion of the field mice and rabbits this winter. And "plant" the seeds of this year's penstemon.
Along with the fall chores of the cultured garden, one of my annual chores is to clean out the eighteen birdhouses that I've placed on the the periphery of the twenty acres I call home. The trek up and down the property provided a perfect opportunity for me to photograph the house and gardens from the back hill, a clear Kansas sky presiding over the scenery on a gorgeous fall day early in November. This is an overview that I don't think I've shown on this blog before. The hill in the foreground falls away to a farm pond, hidden out of the bottom frame of the photo below, and then rises again to the house and barn. The overall garden looks small from this vantage.
My "bluebird trail" and the Professor-Roush-customized bluebird houses were unusually successful this year, perhaps due to the extra moisture of this past spring. Thirteen of 18 houses appeared to have fledged bluebirds, containing the thin grass nests characteristic of the species. Four other houses, all near the woods and pond, contained the deep stick-formed nests of wrens, and one decrepit old commericial house contained only a dead wasp nest. Thirteen bluebird nests is a PR for this little spot of land, a moment worthy of contemplation and celebration.
On the morning of the bluebird-house-cleaning, the back garden was just waking with the sun, long shadows aimed west, and somehow duller, and ready for winter. Seen here, below, you can see the shoulder-tall height of the native bluestem that I have since mowed off. I am always torn between leaving them unmown to capture the moisture of the winter snows and to witness the joyous rusty tones they exhibit when wet, but one of the reasons I cut them down is so that the seeds of the forbs among them drop closer, spread only by the whirring mower and hidden in the debris in hopes of increasing their density. Spring penstemon and fall echinacea are always welcome and appreciated here in my prairie garden. Now if only next spring would hurry up and come along.
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Gratefully Thankful
ProfessorRoush is fully aware, and mildly abashed, that it has been quite some time since my last rose posting on this blog, but I promise that I'll get to one soon. The next victim has, in fact, been chosen and is waiting in line.
Today, however, I awoke uncharacteristically grateful and I would be distinctly ungrateful if I ignored the feeling. I'm not given to displays of random emotion, but I can't shunt aside the contented feeling warming me up on this cold Kansas morning. I'm grateful for my life and my home and my love with Mrs. ProfessorRoush. Grateful for my children, now almost grown and gone. Grateful for the donkey's and the new barn cats and my garden.
I'm grateful for the plants and life of the prairie. I'm particularly grateful for the native blue sage that pops up randomly in my garden beds and provides a cooling reflection of the clear summer sky in the doldrums of August. I'm grateful for the prairie grasses, and for the ample sunshine that makes it all possible. I'm grateful for the mornings given to my life, fields dewy and golden with the rising furnace.
I'm extremely grateful for the Internet this morning, ready with all the information of the world at my touch-typing fingertips, including the origin of the word grateful. ProfessorRoush's mind doesn't work in a straight line, often taking bends and u-turns through a maze of thought, and somewhere along this little piece of writing, I began wondering why we say that we are "full of grate." There is no definition of "grate" in the English language (to sound harshly, to irritate, a frame of metal bars to hold wood) that seems pleasant. Happily, a short search informed me that "grateful" derived from an obsolete meaning of grate as "pleasing", from the Latin grãtus as in gratitude, and that the first known use of "grateful" was in 1552. It seems odd that "grateful" would have survived in the English language while "grate" no longer is defined as "pleasing." It seems odd that I would even wonder about it.
But, strange as it is, I'm also grateful just to wonder about it.
Today, however, I awoke uncharacteristically grateful and I would be distinctly ungrateful if I ignored the feeling. I'm not given to displays of random emotion, but I can't shunt aside the contented feeling warming me up on this cold Kansas morning. I'm grateful for my life and my home and my love with Mrs. ProfessorRoush. Grateful for my children, now almost grown and gone. Grateful for the donkey's and the new barn cats and my garden.
I'm grateful for the plants and life of the prairie. I'm particularly grateful for the native blue sage that pops up randomly in my garden beds and provides a cooling reflection of the clear summer sky in the doldrums of August. I'm grateful for the prairie grasses, and for the ample sunshine that makes it all possible. I'm grateful for the mornings given to my life, fields dewy and golden with the rising furnace.
I'm extremely grateful for the Internet this morning, ready with all the information of the world at my touch-typing fingertips, including the origin of the word grateful. ProfessorRoush's mind doesn't work in a straight line, often taking bends and u-turns through a maze of thought, and somewhere along this little piece of writing, I began wondering why we say that we are "full of grate." There is no definition of "grate" in the English language (to sound harshly, to irritate, a frame of metal bars to hold wood) that seems pleasant. Happily, a short search informed me that "grateful" derived from an obsolete meaning of grate as "pleasing", from the Latin grãtus as in gratitude, and that the first known use of "grateful" was in 1552. It seems odd that "grateful" would have survived in the English language while "grate" no longer is defined as "pleasing." It seems odd that I would even wonder about it.
But, strange as it is, I'm also grateful just to wonder about it.
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