IWe're almost finished with this year's planting of flowers and bushes. The Better Half has handled most of the flower planting. We dug some larger holes for a few bushes we're trying out, if I can trap enough pocket gophers to protect their roots.
pear tree blooming: May 10, 2017
Photo by J. Harrington
In the east, spring leaf out is 1-2 weeks early in the upper Southeast, and 1-2 weeks late across the Great Plains, southern Midwest and Mid-Atlantic. (Emphasis added)
prairie smoke: May 10, 2017
Photo by J. Harrington
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If it doesn't rain hard all weekend, we'll take another look to see if the prairie smoke flowers have emerged. A week or so ago they hadn't, again unlike 2017 when they were about ready to open up around May 10. While we're at it we'll also take a peek to see if we can spot any trillium blooming.
Still no signs of scarlet tanagers or indigo buntings, but, for the most part, we're beginning to enjoy a typical, if tardy, Spring around here. We'll be pleased when there's more natural forage for the bear(s), because we're getting tired of returning the compost drum to an upright position.
Franco, the Better Half's rescue dog, May 16, 2011
Photo by J. Harrington
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One last thing for today. According to our records, it's been eight years since Franco the rescue dog came to his forever home with us. Please join us in wishing him many more happy returns of the day.
Wildflowers
Coleridge carefully wrote down a whole pageof them, all beginning with the letter b.Guidebooks preserve our knowledgeof their hues and shapes, their breeding.Many poems have made delicate word-chimes—like wind-chimes not for wind but for the breath of man—out of their lovely names.At the edge of the prairie in a cabinwhen thunder comes closer to thump the roof harda few of them—in a corner, brittle in a dry jarwhere a woman’s thoughtful hand left them to fade—seem to blow with the announcing winds outsideas the rain begins to fall on all their supple kinof all colors, under a sky of one color, or none.
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