Showing posts with label color. Show all posts
Showing posts with label color. Show all posts

June 7, 2024

June Blooms

Making this a crossover post with my much neglected photography journal.

daylilies
hydrangea

buckwheat

pickerel

butterfly weed

rose of sharon

chicory

June Blooms © June 2024 by Leigh

November 14, 2019

Change of Seasons

Autumn is officially here. After a several scattered frosts earlier in the month, I finally lost the summer garden to Jack Frost last weekend. Fortunately, I heeded of the weather warnings and gathered in the last of the tomatoes and peppers still on the vines.


The leaves have been changing too.



Our color is never very spectacular because of the kinds of trees we have.

Reds and yellows from the sweet gums.

More sweet gum.

Mostly we have silver maples, which turn an unspectacular
yellow. However, I get a few red maple leaves here and there.

More maples

Most of our oaks turn brown, but this one is red!

Dark red from the dogwoods.

The brightest red is the fire bush in our front yard.

The yellow is from Tulip poplars, which have lost their leaves.
By the end of the month, all leaves will have fallen to the ground.

Autumn may be short for us, however. My telltale sign isn't caterpillars, it's this particular cat choosing to sleep indoors at night!

Meowy

In the summer she only comes in if hunting hasn't been good. Then it's just to grab a few bites of food and she's off again. Sleeping inside is proof of cold nights! Lows in the 20s are unusual for us in November but that's what we've got! Winter's on the way!

What season are you enjoying? Autumn? Winter? Spring? Summer? Post some pictures and show us!


Change of Seasons © November 2019

June 28, 2018

June Blooms

Closing out the month with a collection of photos I've been taking. Color abounds! All of the May flowers have continued blooming in June, while others are made their debut this month.

Southern Magnolia

Butterfly Weed

Mimosa

Black-eyed Susans

Multiplier Onion

Hardy Hibiscus, AKA Rose of Sharon

Okra

Meyer Lemon

Summer Squash

Beauty Bush

What's blooming in your neck of the woods?

June Blooms © June 2018 by Leigh 

May 31, 2018

May Flowers

It is said that April showers bring May flowers, so I'll close out May with exactly that.

Daylily

Elder

Echinacea

Lamb's Ear

Chicory

Yarrow

Marigold

Lavender

Honeysuckle

Actually, we've had so much rain this month that it's been nearly impossible to get much done outside. Anyplace we've prepared the ground for spring planting is too soft and muddy to walk on, so not much is getting done in the garden. Still, the flowers are happy, and that's always nice.

May Flowers © May 2018 by Leigh 

March 3, 2018

Around The Homestead

Last month focused almost solely on baby goats and Dan's hand, with the exception of my last post which showed you our recent progress on the goat barn. What else is happening around the homestead? Actually not much. Even though February finally brought us mild temperatures, it also brought a lot of rain which means it's been very wet and muddy. Still, here's a look around at what's going on.

Spring Color

Spring flowers are blooming everywhere!

Daffodils

Peach blossoms

Violets

Canning

Soggy weather isn't good for working outside, but it is a good time to catch up on some canning. I grabbed a cushaw from the pantry and made seven pints of pumpkin butter and one pumpkin pie.
 
Slow-cooker pumpkin butter from cushaw.

I made jam from my frozen figs and a bag of fresh cranberries I bought on clearance after Thanksgiving (happily, cranberries store well). The combo could pass for strawberry jam!

Cranberry-fig jam

Color, texture, and flavor are very similar.

Garden

It's too wet to work in the garden and there isn't much left to harvest. I lost most of my winter garden because of the severe cold, except for the cabbage-collards.

We like cabbage (or heading) collards better than the leaf kind.

The temperatures have been so warm, however, that now it's starting to bolt! It's still very tasty though.

Foraging

Chickweed is everywhere. We eat it in salads and I feed it to the chickens and goats.

Chickweed is thriving.

Also I dry it for the goats' vitamin and mineral mix and for chickweed oil for salve.

Winter Wheat

I have to say eating our own homegrown whole wheat this past year has been a real treat. We plant it in the fall and growth slows during the cold. With warm weather again it's growing.

Winter wheat

It should be ready to harvest in June.

Pasture

We had such a cold winter that we didn't have much in the way of winter grazing for the goats. Everything remained dormant until the tail end of February, and then started to grow. I've been taking advantage of mild days to do some spot seeding with my modified Fukuoka planting method. When the days are warm, it starts to grow in a hurry!

Mixture of pasture forage seeds growing through barn cleanings.

I planted this section at the end of January
when I cleaned out the kidding stall.

For the Chickens

In order for the pasture to grow I have to keep the chickens away or they will devour the seed. So we've been keeping them in the chicken yard and experimenting with grazing beds.

Grazing bed planted with wheat & oats for the chickens.

The chickens love it so we think it's a great idea. Hoping to add one new bed per week for awhile.

Big Duck

Big Duck was our Muscovy drake. One day I shooed him out of a newly planted area of the pasture and went into the barn. A few minutes later I came out and saw him lying on the ground. I went over to see what was going on and he was dead! I couldn't believe it. Gone. I went to find Dan and we decided on another three-handed project, harvesting at least the breast meat and legs. So even though we are now without a drake, at least his death wasn't a waste.

Baby Goats

Getting photos of nine baby goats is no simple task! Here are four out of the nine.






Parting Shots

Meowy in the box

Katy in the box

Sam in the box (or as much as he can be, anyway).

And Riley? Riley is too dignified to take a turn at anything the other cats do. He's on equal terms with the humans, after all, and far too superior to stoop to ordinary cat level.

Around The Homestead © March 2018