Showing posts with label Aruncus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aruncus. Show all posts

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Woven Tapestries of Flora and Fauna Overcast and Bright























Apple tree where Robins rear their young.













Empty Catbird nest

Catbird fledgling 








Soft single roses
please most in simplicity 
garden tapestries 

 Robin in earnest
through rain and sun weaving cup
 holding fragile young

Always a mouthful 
detritus and twigs for walls
upon apple branch

Squealing worms for all
clamorous hunger needs met
endless work for mom 

Abandoning nests
looking in the shrubberies 
fledglings stand alert

Catbirds build anew
no empty nest syndrome here
fresh cup add blue eggs

Butterflies take care
near the bottom of food chain
 needed sustenance



There is much ado about the garden with many fledglings here and there. If you would like to read and see the tale of the Catbird's first brood, please visit Native Plants & Wildlife Gardens.


Thursday, June 25, 2009

Blooming Friday





























It's Blooming Friday hosted by Katarina at Roses and Stuff http://rosorochris.blogspot.com/
Be sure to visit her blog and see other gardens in bloom around the world. Here in New England it is finally feeling like summer and today was even dry with sunlight bouncing off all the leaves and flower petals. The air is cooler this Thursday evening, as I write this post, and outside fireflies are filling the night sky with their luminous glowing flashes, all in the name of courtship. I am offering an overview of the gardens, as seen from my barn studio and some details from within the north garden and the blueberry field. The hydrangeas are swelling along with currents and blueberries. The Catbirds have nearly wiped me out of the currents and all the birds are excited about the blueberries, so I must cover some bushes for myself very soon. The Cat Bird has my currents in it's bill and he was trying to get to his babies when I took this shot. The baby Cat Bird nest is hidden in a hydrangea bush. The Indigo Bunting is using the vacant Blue Bird house to perch and peek often lately. The indigo feathers are echoed in the blue waves of the Mount Holyoke Range in the distance. We are in between peaks here for now, with lots of dead heading and pruning going on. You can see my pruning assistant Nate busy dead heading the lilacs, and it is due to his faithful labor that we can look out over the gardens and not see hundreds of vertical shoots in most every shrub and small tree. The forms of the trees and shrubs have been sculpted this way over the years. Our largest Japanese Tree Lilac got hit hard by the ice storm last winter and is not flowering this year. It is usually like a white fluffy cloud this time of year and is greatly missed. You can see a smaller one next to it in full bloom. Flower Hill Farm is part of the 'garden tour', for our fabulous local library this weekend... much to ready out in my wild garden. Enjoy your weekend!


Related Posts with Thumbnails