Wednesday, July 26, 2023

Back to VT.

7-26-23 VERMONT: We had a pretty easy trip back to VT with all the documentation to complete the purchase of Judy’s new Subaru, which we did on Monday. She had to sign her name at least 50 times. The car goes back tomorrow for undercoating.


We still have problems with the mail being forwarded from NJ, and so we are switching to all on line billing.


We are getting our second dry day in a row, but it looks like a big storm coming on Thursday.


Hillary was here today and did a lot of weeding. The biofilm on the pond is much reduced since I’ve been liming the swamp between the ponds. 


The game cams caught the usual deer and turkeys, both with youngsters. A neighbor saw a moose on the road about a mile from here. 


New blooms: tree hydrangea, helenium, butterfly bush, Indian pipe.

Moose in the 'hood.
Turkeys with chicks.
Frolicking fawn.
Mergansers dropped in on a misty morning.
Cedar waxwing looking very sleek in the willow tree.
Hummingbird tasting bee balm.
Echinacea, phlox and astilbe.
Hosta in front of teh new house.

Thursday, July 20, 2023

NJ Visit.

7-20-23 SHORT HILLS: We’re back in NJ for a short visit to collect the title to Judy’s car for the trade in on her birthday present, a Subaru Wilderness. We also found the title for my car and got the overdue registration on my car updated. 


We had dinner with Lynn and Bill last night, Alan was here for dinner tonight and tomorrow we meet Bebe and Ronny for dinner—very busy. 


I adjusted the water sprinklers because the yard was a bit too wet, ordered some meds from the pharmacy. 


The yard looks good. Nothing in trouble except a bit of the new grass where trees came down. The hydrangeas have rebounded nicely from the drought last year, but only one has a flower—the tree hydrangea is in bloom. 


In bloom: red spirea, peace lily, southern magnolia, rose-of-Sharon, tree hydrangea, hydrangea. 

Southern Magnolia has been blooming for over a month.
Rose-of-Sharon will bloom until mid-September.
The indoor plants are thriving outside. This peace lily, and the others, are busy flowering.

Tuesday, July 18, 2023

Mid-Summer.

7-18-23 VERMONT: Since the last post, we’ve had 0.95 inches of rain, and it’s been raining for two hours. This very, very wet summer continues to be very, very wet. 


Woodstock, home to the Woodstock Inn and a Disney-esque downtown, was nearly deserted when we visited with Val and Maggie on Sunday, they were here for the weekend. Turns out Woodstock’s water main was disrupted in the big storm, and they have no water, the Inn is empty, the usually bustling town is mostly empty, all the restaurants are closed. No water was no problem for clothes shopping it seems.


The biofilm on the pond is clearing, maybe it washed away or maybe the lime [CaCO3] on the pond or the pond drainage area has helped. All those fish I put in the ponds are in there somewhere. We haven’t seen any of them, live or dead floaters. The waterfall has been flowing for a few weeks. The clarity of the little pond is excellent, we can see the bottom from the bank. 


While we are not so happy with the daily rain, the gardens love it. Plants are big and bushy and spreading. Flowers are opening early. The terrace has thyme, ajuga, and dianthus planted between the pavers, and they’re all spreading widely. The mosquitos are doing well also.


The delphinium were bent and broken by the storms so I cut a bunch of the stalks for inside. They were beautiful but shed petals immediately and copiously.


New blooms: echinacea, more phlox, magenta bee balm, rocket ligularia.

Eastern Tiger Swallowtail on Asclepias incarnata, swamp milkweed.
Two Fritillaries on milkweed, aharing with a wasp.
More Fritillaries.
Delphinium are not house broken.
Nice color on these short-stemmed bee balm.

Friday, July 14, 2023

Big Rain.


7-14-23 VERMONT: The big rainstorm from Monday caused severe damage and flooding many places in the state and the clean-up will take a lot of time and money. We had virtually no problems. 


Last night there was another storm, with lightning and wind, and tornado warnings that gave us another 0.5 inches of rain. The big storm dumped 4.65 inches on us. The forecast warns of possible T-storms everyday.


The area between the new, upper dam and the big pond is a swamp that gets swampier with each rain. It all drains into the big pond, which has had a layer of cloudy stuff on the surface. Judy did some searching on line and identified it as a biofilm. The film is not toxic or harmful, just unsightly. Nobody seems to have a clear cure, but barley straw pellets and lime are recommended. I have done both. 


The barley straw is an oxidizer that fights algae, and the lime is to raise the pH of the water. A lot of lime, 80 pounds, hasn’t changed the pH more than a tweak, at most. I think the swamp drainage might be a factor, so I am liming those areas. We’ll see.


New blooms: lambs ears, summer azalea, milkweed, evening primrose, phlox, blue-flowered hosta, hybrid daylilies.


Hybrid daylily. How about that color!
Or this color.
Here's the whole bed.
Asclepeas incarnata, a milkweed, on the pond bank, beloved of all insects, especially butterflies, and of the butterflies, especially the monarchs. Monarch larva are usually all over these plants eating the leaves. I haven't seen any monarchs yet this year.
A monarda, bee balm, with a gorgeous color. I planted it last year and apparently didn't realise how short it is, it might need a different spot, althpouigh it seems happy.

Monday, July 10, 2023

Torrential Rain and Flooding.

7-10-23 VERMONT: It’s been raining hard for about 24 hrs, not so bad here in our neighborhood as other towns. Our little, lazy brook has turned into a huge monster that ate our road. We have only a damp basement. 


The ponds are overflowing of course, the waterfall looks like something from Iceland. The rain will continue at least until tomorrow. 

Our little brook...
Meets our road! [videos taken by Diana Wright]

Saturday, July 08, 2023

New Fish.

7-8-23 VERMONT: It continues to be a wet summer. We got another 0.85 inches since the last post. Last year we had nothing in June and July. 


Watching the pond, I have not seen any of the fish this year. We are not cold enough or big enough for trout, but have had shiners, bait fish, for many years. We started with a dozen and had hundreds after a while. I decided to replenish, but it was hard to find any for sale. Apparently shiners are the preferred bait fish for ice fishing, and everyone in the business has them in the winter, until about April. Judy found a store in the Northeast Kingdom that still had them. ‘Lead and Tackle’ in Lyndonville, VT is about 50 miles north of us, not too far from Canada, they also sell bullets and hunting rifles, hence the name. It was a nice drive, and we came home with about 50 fish, a couple went into the upper pond and the rest in the big pond. We’ll see how it works out.  

Nice folks run this place.

Hilliary and Matt, the garden assistants, were here Wednesday. We transplanted a bunch of Siberian iris that were under hemlocks to the pond bank near the lambs ears. Originally they were not under hemlocks. 


New blooms: astilbe, bee balm, filipendula, early meadow rue, coreopsis, hydrangea. 


The young lawyers studying for the Bar Exam.
The Ancient Mariner is back on the water while Bally watches.
Another water creature. Stonefly Naiad and a second on the left, plus tadpole, all intermediate stages of development.
Delphinium, the first ones are blue and the next batch are purple.
The first Hosta to bloom, we have many others yet to bloom.
Game Cam pix of doe and fawn opn the move.

Monday, July 03, 2023

More Rain.

7-3-23 VERMONT: We continue to get wet—another 1.1 inches yesterday. It was cold, 60’s, too. We had an afternoon fire. I remember the Fourth as hot, hot, hot. This weekend is more like a Memorial Day weekend.


Lily’s law school friends are here again, a total of seven kids, all very pleasant, all helping out around the house with meals, dishes and all.


I have to pull the boat up on the bank every day to empty the rain water. No rain so far today, but the radar shows green blobs headed this way. 


New blooms: daylily, daisy, mullein, ox eye, campanula, money plant, mallow, hosta.   

Daylily, always starts on July 1, ends August 1, or so.
I feel like I'm being watched by the peonies. The rest of the others, the doubles, have been wiped out by the latest rain and will need pruning.
Judy's latest find provides a home for the herbs on the deck.
After a load of rain a few days ago, the morning was foggy.
Mallow, seems early, but the summer is almost half over.
The upper pond bank is almost all ferns on the woody side, plus FMN.