The challenges and rewards are greatest where two systems meet.

Sunday, July 29, 2012

barryandgretd's photostream

Mom and baby loonMating Calico PennantsGreat novelty. Great Blue Heron New Hampton ,NHGliding TreefrogsAdolescent Coyote
Scarlet Macaw IMG_1161helo DamsalIMG_2135 Tarant-3IMG_0895Happy sloth copyIMG_1190IMG_1210 capy copy
IMG_2421heliconiaIMG_2846IMG_2367vinesnakeIMG_2205IMG_2174IMG_1861
_MG_3917_MG_3441 copyCRW_2236_MG_2626_MG_2586IMG_7216 Polyphemus Moth NH,NH

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Friday, May 11, 2012

The Edge of Green

April was an unusual month with morning temps ranging from 27 degrees on the 28th to 61 degrees on the 17th. Blossoms formed and then just sat there for much of the month. Both the pear tree and the apples finally opened around the 21st.


The maples started to leaf out too.

Choke cherries still hadn't opened.

The ferns couldn't wait.

The beech leaves all seemed to fall in early April giving a great background for the emerging Canadian Mayflowers.

Any ideas on this bee or wasp? He was just under an inch long hunting for small insects on our "spring" toothed harrow.

One of my favorites .
"Sow your........" very prolific this year.

Then a paddle on Hermit Lake in Sanbornton 4/2. A remarkable day for Painted Turtles. I counted 128 of them. 
  

 

Click on the photo to find the 10" Painted Turtle. This beaver lodge is over 6' tall!

           The daily changes in the shades of green, makes Spring
                          my favorite time of the of the year.


Saturday, January 7, 2012

The Edge of Winter: January 6, 2012

As a friend stated: "You don't look a day over 65!" -- and that's the truth today, January 6, 2012.

I'm starting this blog with photos from November 2011, not long after a snowstorm had dumped over 16 inches on us. We thought that snow might stay until Spring, but it didn't.

First, on the Pemigewasset River I saw these Canada Geese hanging out on the Jenness' pasture.
Next, on Nov. 6, I kayaked Hermit Lake and spotted this painted turtle warming itself in the sun. This is the latest in the year I have ever seen a reptile in New Hampshire outside and on the water.
December:  The new green house still produces greens even though we've had three nights of temperatures in the single numbers (Farenheit).

We've had some unusual birds during our unusual (warm, snowless) December. This goldfinch has strange coloration, more like summer than winter.
Then, there's the Red-Bellied Woodpecker. It's not a great name, seeing there isn't one red feather on its belly.  These woodpeckers migrate north now with our warmer winter temperatures.

Gret and I spent New Years Eve at home with a small bonfire in the upper garden. Follow the spark:
Here's the garden the day after.
The New Year is time to throw out some of the useless "stuff", like these skis I broke on the summit of Mt. Cardigan in 1988 while skiing with David Roth.  He had Bush Whacker skis.  I used duct tape, the best thing to have in an emergency like this.

The Christmas bird count was January 2. The ground was basically bare and frozen. Our biggest surprise was a cut worm crawling across the ice on the driveway at the fish hatchery.
As for the birds, it was an average year for our count. Our favorites were these Hooded Mergansers on Calley Pond in Sanbornton.

Gretchen and I spent my "65th" birthday up north, after my eye appointment.  We had a fun day at the Basin at Franconia Notch, then on to the bookstore and diner in Littleton.  Luckily we missed the politicians stumping for next week's primary.
What's interesting for me is to look at last year's records at this time.  Once again we had very light snow cover, yet lots of water in the ground. 

All species strive to survive and adapt to the changes in the weather and the environment.  These "rock doves" are doing just that on a frigid January day.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

The edge of summer

This is a late posting of my early summer photos. Our spring was very cool and damp. Here are some ramps I have in a damp area near a stone wall.

This photo was taken on 5/8/07 - four years ago.
Ramps are wild leeks.

Same ramps 4/8/09

Ramps again 4/15/10

And this year 5/12/11

Over 4' of snow still at the back of our house on 4/27/11

By 6/11/11 the Red Maples blossomed

Other flowers followed soon after.... 
Blood roots

We had a year for wood peckers. 
A Hairy Woodpecker Nested just off our deck in a 
poplar tree. She's doing the house cleaning.

And a Yellow -Bellied Sapsucker set up house just west of us.

The pair of loons on Hermit Lake reused a nesting spot from 3 years ago. They successfully hatched two chicks. One hatched 6/20/11 and the second 6/21/11.

By 6/26/11 there was only one chick. 

A week later, the surviving one had grown considerably independent.

I will close with a carnivorous Pitcher Plant flower blooming on the bog next to the Loon's nest.

I promise to have a new post up within a week.
Be on the lookout for those spectacular little butterflies. Chive blossoms are a favorite haunt.