Ten Little Celebrations – April 2017

It’s spring…and there is a lot to celebrate.

Second graders coming to Mt. Pleasant for the Science of Soil field trip. I’ve done two file trips for them so far and both have been a lot of fun – using the soil auger in several places while we hike, talking about rocks looking at the old rock wall dividing the fields, seeing how the stream restoration work done during the winter is greening up and full of puddles after a rain.

Azaleas. There are some in our neighborhood but making the trek to the Brighton Dam Azalea Garden is the day we celebrate the profusion of blooms and colors.

Pre-schoolers on a Nature Tales field trip. I’ve done three of the pre-school field trips at Belmont in April: two that were rainy days and one that we made it to the forest. I’m learning how to keep the younger children listening and participating for the whole 20-30 minutes I have them. There are so many little celebrations in every session because the children are so enthralled with the new things they are seeing and doing….I can’t help be celebrate with them.

Delmarva birding. My husband and I spend a day at the Delmarva Birding Weekend late last week. It was our first time to attend and we enjoyed it. I celebrated that there were so many birds to see (and photograph) not that far from where we live. I’ll be posting more about our experience in the coming days.

Faromir. One of our cats died in April. We celebrated his life…and that he was will us for 13.5 years. He was my husband’s little buddy.

Favorite lipstick available again. I’ve always liked Cover Girl Bronze Glow lipstick and was very disappointed when I couldn’t find it anywhere…but now it is back. I celebrated that Cover Girl has started making it again.

Fitting into smaller jeans. I discovered that I can fit into some jeans that I thought were too small. That’s always something I’ll celebrate. I also celebrated that I hadn’t put them in the giveaway pile last fall.

New blade for old paper cutter. I was thrilled to find a new blade for my 20-year-old rotary paper cutter. When I couldn’t find the replacements in a local store and the new cutters did not look at all like mine, I thought I was going to have to buy a new one….but Amazon had the size I needed.

Roman Art and Archaeology course from University of Arizona. I’m not taking as many course from Coursera as I’ve gotten busy with other things…the few I’ve taken recently have been fabulous. I celebrate the availability of the course as the perfect time (the lull before the ramp up of spring field trips) and the well done videos and other references.

Boxes of old documents shredded. We’ve cleaned out some old boxes full of paper (spring cleaning!) and took 2 to be shredded at a local shredding event. I celebrated getting all that old paper with account numbers and social security numbers securely recycled.

Preserving Spring

When I used twigs to show pre-schoolers about how the tree buds and seeds looked during the spring…it occurred to me that it would be good to have those items to show for more than just the early spring. I decided to enclose some of them in clear contact paper. Maybe the plastic would seal off enough air to keep the plant material from deteriorating…and it would not require the heat of a laminator. The red maple samaras were my first experiment. The seed part of the wings bulge a bit, causing a little bubble. As I looked more closely after I’d finished encasing them front and back with the contact paper, I realize there are still remnants of the flower (red) where the seed is connected to the small stem.

My next attempt was with sycamore leaves that had unfurled from the branch I put in water after I cut it when it has enlarged buds.  I got several sizes of leaves from the buds that split open and have leaves unfurling now (see my previous post about from a few days ago).  The smallest ones are the size of a finger nail. The clear contact paper on both sides makes it possible to view both sides of the little leaves and to notice that one is still curled – not quite unfurled from how it was packaged in the bud.

I had some sycamore leaves from last summer that I had pressed in a book. I used the contact paper with them too. They are very dry and fragile at this point but the contact paper may stabilize them. The leaves are the size of my hand or larger. One of the them had lots of holes in it….so would be good to reinforce that trees are food and home for other creatures.

Next time I am a volunteer naturalist talking about trees….I’ll see if they survive!

Sycamore Buds

I cut some small sycamore branches from tree at home to show the pre-K field trip groups. When it cut the branches, they only had buds – no leaves - and that’s what the children saw. I decided to put them in water when I got home to see what would happen. The buds split and tiny leaves began to emerge about a week after the field trips!

Once they started, progress was rapid. The pictures below were taken 2 days after the earlier ones. The leaves are curled at first but quickly flatten out and begin to look like sycamore leaves.

The branches have been indoors and are not ahead of the rest of the tree. We’ve some cool nights here in Maryland and the buds on the tree are just now popping open --- at least 5 days behind my branches inside.

I also put the maple branches that I cut in water and the samaras have continued to develop but the leaf buds are still very tight.

My next project is going to be encasing some of these small leaves and seeds in clear contact paper. Hopefully it will preserve them enough that we can use them with field trips later this month and into May.

Tulips at Brookside Gardens

The tulip beds at Brookside Gardens are full of flowers. When I walked around last weekend, many of them seemed to be in full bloom but then I notices some beds that were still mostly buds. The signs in some beds still indicated ‘tulips sleeping’ were clearly old – and not accurate.  The mesh that covered the beds all winter must have worked since the beds seemed almost overflowing with flowers.

I like to take pictures with the sunlight coming through the petals – make the flowers glow. Often the flowers that seem red at first glance have more orange and even yellow with looked at in brighter sun.

My favorite color combination might be red – orange – yellow…reminiscent of sunrise (or sunset) colors.

There are so many varieties of tulips – some with just a simple cup and others will significantly more petals. Most of the time I like the ones with fewer petals because they curve outward as they flower ages…I like the wayward curls!

My ‘art picture’ for the day was a peach colored tulip with a yellow center…a glowing world, half hidden.

Signs of Spring? – Part 2

The first part of this post was posted last week after a walk around our yard…on a warm afternoon. I posted the series of American Robin images first…now for the rest of what I saw --- There were some milkweed pods in the litter of one of our flower beds (yes – I let some plants go to seed there); there is the first milkweed bug of the season too!

I saw a bee investigating something in the leaf litter too. The day was so warm that the insects probably thought it was spring already.

The crocuses are come up through the leaf mulch left in the flower bed. I’m going to plant some out in the yard next fall since I like the look of the flowers in the lawns of Belmont.

 The miniature daffodils are blooming too.

There some of the larger and taller ones that are still green leaves and buds. When the leaves first emerge, they sometimes have kinks that straighten out before they start blooming.

The red maple is blooming. This time of year is it easy to tell the difference between this tree and other maples. All the others look dull compared to this red.

There is a tree in the forest behind our house that has lost its top and there are woodpecker holes around the wound in the part that remains.

There is a holly that has sprouted under a downspout – not a good place for a holly so I will have to pull it next time I put on my gardening gloves.

Part 1 was posted last Friday.

Signs of Spring? – Part 1

We have had an unusually warm and snow free winter in our area of Maryland. This morning there is a cold snap and I am wondering if some of the pictures of our yard I took for this blog over the past few days are of things that will be frost damaged next time I walk around. I have been seeing one or two American Robins are warm days for the past week or so. The robin in the slide show below was in a neighbor’s yard – looking for and finding worms. It looked like a fat and healthy bird enjoying the bounty of our neighborhood lawns without a lot of others of his kind around. It is easy to associate a personality with this bird on a mission!

I’m noticing the advantage of having the 40x optical zoom on my camera (rather than 30x of my previous camera or 0 optical zoom of my smart phone). The image stabilization is good too; all these were taken hand held – no monopod or tripod.

Rhythm of my Seasons

The Rhythm of my Days and Weeks were posted a few days ago. This post is about seasonal rhythms.

Clothes. I still move things from closet to storage and back twice a year (usually spring and fall…whenever the temperature changes enough). I don’t wear corduroy pants and sweaters when the weather is warm just as I don’t wear shorts, skirts and capri pants when it is very cold. Some things stay in my closet all the time – and they wear out the fastest.

Volunteering. Spring and Fall are when I spend the most time volunteering. Those are the seasons that the schools have most of their field trips and stream assessments.

Travel. My husband likes to do traveling in the spring and fall – and that is probably the time for most our travel…but it happens in the other fall and summer too so there might not be a season for travel.

Classes. There is more time for classes in the winter and summer. I’m always a little surprised that I enjoy them more in winter although I am not sure why.

Outdoor work around the house. There are chores that dominate in every season. Cleaning out and planting in spring. Watering and mowing in summer. Raking leaves in the fall. Shoveling snow in the winter.

Food. Pomegranates in December. Orange squashes and apples and pears and cranberries in the fall. Tomatoes and melons at the height of summer. Garlic scapes and strawberries in late spring/early summer. Yum (even though sometimes I buy them out of season because, these days, many are in season someplace in the world).

I still have not come up with any of my rhythmic habits that I want to change in 2017….but writing these posts has heightened my awareness of the rhythms…and confirming to myself that they are what I want them to be.