Final flowers

We have had more Indian Summer days this season than for the last 10. A fleeting freeze followed up by days of balmy weather confuses not only people but the plants surrounding us. The first seasonal misfit I find is a lone buttercup emerging from the bed of wild strawberry leaves surrounding it. Its tiny […]

Continue Reading

Stacking wood

It is late in the season to be stacking wood next to the house. We typically do it in early rather than mid Fall. But this year’s spate of warm and active days has let us delay this task. Every year we burn at least a cord and a half of wood so it is […]

Continue Reading

Lovely grasses

Northern sea oats (Chasmanthium latifolium) is one of my favorite grasses that persist well into Winter. Developing expansive seed heads that turn a purplish brown, it waves to and fro in even the most gentle breeze with a soft and pleasing rustle. Its stalks become a light brown but not a dry looking brown as […]

Continue Reading

Splitting logs

Time and age make me hire help to split a felled 60-foot plus red oak tree. For nearly a year a 40-foot-long pile of logs (some of which are 30-inches plus in diameter) have been sitting in the back, drying out. It is a perfect day to work outside with just a touch of crispness […]

Continue Reading

Persistent leaves

Japanese maples continue to be the last to lose their leaves. They stubbornly hang onto them almost as long as do oaks. All the large Japanese maples planted on our property started as seedlings on Long Island over 30 years ago. We brought them over in pots and today they surround the house. Other smaller […]

Continue Reading

Autumn colors

Autumn light is unique. Spaces that have been in constant shade for months now are illuminated with dappled light and colors. The carpet of newly fallen leaves each day changes with the light of each hour. It is noisier season as a scampering chipmunk sends up rustles of sound with every step and leap. I […]

Continue Reading

Pumpkin muffins

With Jack-o-Lanterns lined and lit up and candy in a bucket, Juana and I wait in vain for Trick-or-Treaters. Like many years prior, no children make the trek up our stairs to our front door leaving us with a pot of candy to consume. That’s why we now buy candy the we like best. Prior […]

Continue Reading

It’s been a month since my last horticultural therapy class. This will be my last one in person with my clients from Ann’s Place till the Spring. I am putting together a mash up of my Fall Festival and Dream Pillow classes to make up for lost sessions. It is a crisp, windless day for […]

Continue Reading

Rare flowers

In the dark days of Winter many of us keep an eye peeled for signs of Spring. A lone crocus, snowdrop (Galanthus nivalis) or grape hyacinth (Muscari) is hoped for. This time of year I look for some of the final Fall flowers. One of my favorites is saffron (Crocus sativus). Leaves of saffron appear […]

Continue Reading