Showing posts with label Mountain laurel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mountain laurel. Show all posts

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Recalling Landscape Tapestries of Summer Twenty-Twelve


While many are shoveling out from deep blankets of snow-drifts, I would like to escape our white wintry hillside by recalling landscape tapestries of summer twenty-twelve. Storms of blossoms unfurl throughout the spring and summer here at Flower Hill Farm attracting pollinators, birds and other beasts to our gardens, fields and forest. It is this living tapestry of color, texture, fragrance and sounds that inspired me to create this blog four years ago . . . February 6, 2009.











Over the last four years I feel I have grown as a photographer, writer and gardener from sharing the virtual world of gardens and nature with all of you. Lovely and brilliant fellow blogger Sarah of Sarah Laurence.com expressed it so perfectly in her sixth anniversary post when she wrote . . .  "What I see, I want to share with you. I do not walk alone in the snowy fields thanks to your company."

It is a joy to see the snowy fields of Maine through Sarah's eyes, as it is to see the opulent world of fellow bloggers and now dearest of friends Jane and Lance of the acclaimed Hattatt Budapest and Brighton blog. Blogging builds bridges to worlds we might never have known. It connects kindred spirits and activists for wildlife and I am so honored to know and be a co-author with so many talented gardeners and photographers on Carole Sevilla Brown's Native Plants and Wildlife Gardens blog and Ken Billington's  Focusing on Wildlife blog. I have just published the fifteenth installment of 'A Bestiary' which is a compilation of many tales regarding the wildlife that share Flower Hill Farm.

I want especially to thank all those of you who continue to visit and grace this blog with your thoughtful words even though I am not able to reciprocate as I once did. To gracious Eva, who has been with me since the beginning, who has no blog or link to share, please know that I am so deeply appreciative of your words of wisdom and endless support that always touches me to the core and inspire so much more.

The riot of life in these image memories is in such contrast to the cold and raw world that actually barricades me inside right now. I do have one door that opens inside but would have to trek through hip high drifts to get to other doors to shovel . . . and shoveling is not something I can do anymore either. Someone will arrive today or tomorrow to clear doorways and pathways, as well as, uncovering my little car. Having this medium to reach out to the world is fabulous anytime, but now, being literally 'snowed in', I appreciate it all the more. I am so grateful for not losing power and feel so for those who have. May it be restored quickly.

MANY THANKS TO YOU ALL! 



Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Gathering Wildflowers Fields and Meadows Gone To Sleepy Seed
























Growing seasons green
a field and meadow withdraw
life filled colors fade

quiet and stillness
within November landscapes
new life floats and waits

gathered from this season past
brighten up our day


This cold and dreary day will pass, while warmer sunny days are forecast for Thanksgiving and throughout the weekend. May you all have a safe and happy holiday weekend. Let's not forget that when our ancestors first visited this land, it was filled with native wildflowers and was also populated with many native peoples who loved their land and rituals. It is important to remember. 
Do you remember the true story of Thanksgiving? How the Wampanoag people brought food to the starving 'pilgrims' ? You can learn why Thanksgiving is now 'A National Day of Mourning' for Native Americans. 
A dear friend has introduced me to a beautiful film 'We Are Still Here'

Other Thanksgiving posts here and here

Please look to my labels below to identify the flowers above. 

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Wednesday Wildflowers Buds and Birds

Dutchman's breeches      Dicentra cucullaria





Bloodroot    Sanguinaria canadensis

Yellow trout-lily    Erythronium americanum 




Palm Warbler             Arrived Three Weeks Ago

Mountain Laurel    Kalmia latifolia


Trillium  Trillium grandiflorum

Mourning Cloak   Nymphalis antiopa       Arrived Two Weeks Ago

Highbush blueberry   Vaccinium corymbosum  


Red Elderberry  Sambucus racemosa



Pileated Woodpecker

Eastern cottonwood  Populus deltoides


Red maple    Acer rubrum

Yellow-rumped Warbler  (Myrtle Warbler)   Arrived Three Days Ago. 

Wordless Wildflower Wednesday, for gracious Gail at Clay and Limestone


Monday, June 14, 2010

June Garden Bloggers Bloom Day

Mysterious morning mist moves in to envelop the gardens.
Misty Mountain Laurel

Thalictrum aquilegifolium calls out through the mist to serpentine Black Cherry.
Here an earlier portrait not so disheveled with Beauty bush in the background.
Rosa Rugosa dripping wet . . .  still blooming before soggy Peonies and Thalictrum.
Peonies earlier on . . .
now shamelessly blown full open!
Lupines looking over toward Foxgloves.

A new addition to the garden Weigela Ghost.
Peonies in lower garden.
Oriental Poppy petals playing angel with a beard.
A Ruby-throated Hummingbird is enjoying Salvias that are waiting to be planted in their containers!
A Red-spotted Purple Butterfly on Garden Heliotrope with Lupines nearby.
Fading Beauty Bush leads into Japanese Tree Lilac
Tiger Swallowtail swimming in Japanese Tree Lilac's fluffy blossoms.
Mock Orange sweetens the air.
A simple single Peony unfolds revealing it's golden center.
It is nearly Midsummer and it seems as in a mist . . .  a fog of mind and time . . .  days have just fallen by. . . petals unfurl and fade in heat waves or watery showers . . . fledglings fly while one dreams of changing skies . . . the peelings of moments and hours combine . . .  to entwine a life with that of a garden. 

For now . . .  it is Bloom Day and here is my offering a day early. Visit our hostess Carol's May Dreams Gardens  to see more blooms from near and far.  

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