Showing posts with label wildlife. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wildlife. Show all posts

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Rememberance Day Walk

We were both off work on Thursday this week for Remembrance Day and, unusually for this late in the year, it was a beautiful day. We decided to take a walk down to the stream to see how it was coping with all the heavy rain that fell since last weekend. We ended up touring around some of the farm fields back there, too. We took a lot of pictures to share with you and, just for fun, I’m including a map to show you where they were taken.

 The letters on the map corresponds to the letters at each picture.
The letters on the map corresponds to the letters at each picture.

 The privacy walls are complete.
The privacy walls are complete. (map"A")

We started off at the gazebo to check out Hubby’s latest efforts. He has completed (!) the two solid walls which face the road now and you can really see how the finished building is going to look. The white of soffits and trim nicely offsets the cedar shingles and spindles. Next we went down to the garden to talk to the pumpkins which are slowly disintegrating back into the ground. The crows are helping. There are a bunch of new holes where the birds have been pecking them.

 The pumpkins are slowly melting into the garden.
The pumpkins are slowly melting into the garden. (map"B")

We started down the path to the stream and were once again surprised at just how big the trees are getting. They have only been in the ground here for 6 years and some of them are already over 10 feet. There are lots of wild volunteers sprouting up, too. It’s always good to have some diversity.
When we got down to the stream we could see that the water level was high, almost as high as during spring run-off, but it didn’t seem as if it had flooded over the banks. It was running nice and clear, too. We even spotted some trout swimming in some of the deeper pools.

 We started our walk on the pathway to the woods.
We started our walk on the pathway to the woods. (map"C")

 The stream was very full because it rained almost non-stop for a week.
The stream was very full because it rained almost non-stop for a week. (map"D")

 A weird looking fungus was stuck to this tree trunk.
A weird looking fungus was stuck to this tree trunk. (map"E")

 Even though there has been a huge amount of rain this week the water in the stream is still nice and clear.
Even though there has been a huge amount of rain this week the water in the stream is still nice and clear. (map"F")

It was a fantastic day to walk in the woods. The wind was calm and the sun was shining. The trees still have some colour as well, just like this beautiful maple tree which was blazing in a clearing. We didn’t see a whole lot of wildlife, just some chickadees and blue jays, but we did scare one snowshoe hare out from cover. He was half way through his change from his brown summer coat into his white winter fur. He didn’t seem to be in too much of a hurry to get away. He had probably heard us crashing through the brush for an hour and knew right where we were.

 This maple tree was a beautiful splash of colour in the darkness of the woods.
This maple tree was a beautiful splash of colour in the darkness of the woods. (map"G")

 The birch trees have really taken over in this section of the woods.
The birch trees have really taken over in this section of the woods. (map"H")

 The dog wood bushes make a nice contrast to the golden colour of the grass in this fallow farm field.
The dog wood bushes make a nice contrast to the golden colour of the grass in this fallow farm field. (map"I")

Once we got to the top of the hill we to the opportunity to look back and see the house from a distance. The gazebo looked good at the side; its white trim really stood out. I just hope it doesn’t start falling apart like the grape arbour down in the fruit tree meadow. That poor old thing has lost almost its entire upper arch and the grape vines were long ago eaten by the mice. We found a couple of ripe pears on the ground under the pear tree. I had no idea that it had matured enough to actually produce fruit. Maybe there’s hope for my peach trees after all. After all they’re doing much better than the cherry tree which is not only dead but is now playing host to a weird fungus, too.

 Looking back from the dog woods you can just make out the gazebo to the right of our house in the distance.
Looking back from the dog woods you can just make out the gazebo to the right of our house in the distance. (map"J")

Back in our own yard now you can see just how much the arbour has failed in the last year or two.
Back in our own yard now you can see just how much the arbour has failed in the last year or two. (map"K")

While we were checking out the trees in the meadow we discovered that the pear tree had actually produced some fruit. Who knew!
While we were checking out the trees in the meadow we discovered that the pear tree had actually produced some fruit. Who knew!" (map"L")

Right beside then pear tree the fox den was showing signs of recent activity.
Right beside then pear tree the fox den was showing signs of recent activity. (map"L")

 This tree apparently died a while ago and now this interesting fungus has colonized it.
This tree apparently died a while ago and now this interesting fungus has colonized it. (map"L")

We had a great walk, got some sunshine and exercise, had an opportunity to remember just how lucky we are to be living in this wonderful country and appreciate the sacrifices others had made to allow us to do so. I’m very grateful.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Banana Spiders Remind Me Of Summer




We were reviewing some of our old pictures on the computer the other day because we are having a contest at work. The company has just finished renovating their customer hospitality suite and they realized that the walls seemed somewhat bare and bleak. Since a lot of their clients arrive from outside of the country without any idea of just how beautiful this area can be it was decided that it would be fun to ask the staff to submit their photos to decorate the walls. There is a prize of $100 for each of four pictures selected but it will be great just to have one of ours picked to be representative of our community to the world!

Anyway, spiders and summer, yeah, back to that. A couple of years ago we were touring around Atlantic Canada, doing the Bed and Breakfast thing for the first time. It was an absolutely perfect vacation with amazing sights, great accommodations and food and it was lots of fun. It was fantastic and just about the best time we have ever had on holiday. In fact, it was only bettered by the trip we took to the west coast with my father and my sister several years ago.

When we got home from the B&B trip one of the first things we did was check the vegetable garen to see how it made out while we were away. We were only gone five days but that can be a long time for a garden to go without watering. It turned out that everything survived just fine without us, including the pumpkins. It was while we were checking out the pumpkin patch that we first ran into the little bugger you see above.

That, dear readers, is the "Black and Yellow Garden Spider, Writing Spider, Banana Spider or Corn Spider" according to Wikipedia. The females, like the ones pictured here, can range from 19 to 28 mm in length and, in my opinion, are very beautiful. Harmless too, apparently. Her web is "a circular shape up to 2 feet in diameter, with a dense zigzag of silk, known as a stabilimentum, in the center". This is almost as distinctive as the spider, herself.

Now, whenever I see one of these in the yard or even one of these pictures I am transported back to the summer of '07, Wolfville, Yarmouth, Halifax and Mahone Bay. It's funny how memory works but for me the Banana Spider equals summer in the Maritimes.


Thursday, October 1, 2009

I'ts October, my favorite month.

Man, I can't believe it's October already.

We went apple picking last week and the Honey Crisps are just perfect. We picked 6 pounds and will probably be going back for more because I'm eating 2 apples a day and I still need some to freeze. We also picked some Cortlands because they are really good baking apples. I couldn't wait to bake an Apple Crisp which I did on Sunday. I added some toasted almonds on top of the oatmeal crumble mix and, well, it was delicious. Martha Stewart, if you are reading this blog I'm still waiting to hear from you.

We also started to decorate outside for Fall and inside (well, lets say I've been doing that for months!). Just sneaking Halloween stuff in here and there. I have my outside Plastic Pumpkins lit up every night. Today I bought a few more pumpkins from the guy down the road for our outside display but I still have 3 really beautiful ones growing in my own patch. I've babied them so much I hate to pluck them from the ground.



The fox in the picture was just having a snooze at the side of the road last Sunday as we were driving home from apple picking. As you can see it was a warm and sunny day and he was feeling so lazy that Hubby was able to frame up a nice shot before he decided to drag his (the fox, not Hubby) bum off into the bushes.



Hope you enjoy the pics.