The Garden Worm blog Digging up the best dirt on gardening!

January 23, 2012

Back to nothing

Filed under: Creatures,Parks,Winter — Judy @ 7:04 pm

Today we are back to 50 degree temperatures and the snow is gone – again! I’ve been out cross country skiing a total of three times, but I guess that is pretty good considering the weird weather patterns we are having. On one of my trips around the Quaker Pond loop in Mendon Ponds (more pictures of past visits here and here), my sister and I saw a whole flock of bluebirds zooming around. The blue was just striking. These birds are not known for hanging around these parts in the winter according to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology so it was totally unexpected and a marvelous sight to perk up one’s spirits at the end of a relatively long ski run.

Eastern Bluebird

© Beth Donald

In other news, the snowdrops are still blooming and the daffys are up even further. My amaryllis on the windowsill that I have had for a number of years has decided that it has slept enough and is starting to poke a little green point up. The Gartenmeister fuchsias that I brought inside at the end of the season are putting on growth and blooming like crazy. Nice!

I really would like a little more winter outside though as I am not ready to come out of hibernation yet!

January 13, 2012

Wha?

Filed under: Our gardens,Winter — Judy @ 1:32 pm

Well, folks, apparently winter thinks it is finally time to arrive! Yesterday we had temps almost to 50 and the grass has been brown for weeks. The daffys were poking up about three inches, the grape hyacinths and crocuses were in full fall foliage, the snowdrops were blooming, and we were stuck somewhere between fall and winter, yet the date was almost mid-January. The weatherman said that we had had a little over seven inches of snow thus far at the airport, but I would definitely dispute that around our house. A full inch would have been generous – total! But overnight? A different story is being told. Here’s the proof:

Upper window

Deck door

Garage door and pots

Deutzia covered in snow

Chamaecyparis in snow

Frozen pool

Snowy pines

Yep, some pretty snow going on right now, but a few days ago we had this sunset.

January Sunset

I love the weather changes! Makes life exciting!

December 13, 2011

Lime green

Filed under: Decorating,Winter — Judy @ 10:40 pm

I’ve had a few holiday decorating projects to do for clients this year and oddly enough, the major color I’m using is lime green! It’s not a color I usually use for decorations, but I’m really liking it this year. Add some glitz and shimmer with gold glitter, and you’ve got something special! Behold!

What holiday decorating fun do you have going on this year?

December 12, 2011

Geese

Filed under: Creatures,Fall,Miscellaneous,Winter — Judy @ 2:16 pm

Christmas is coming, the geese are getting fat,
Please to put a penny in an old man’s hat;
If you haven’t got a penny, a ha’penny will do,
If you haven’t got a ha’penny, God bless you.

(English nursery rhyme, set to music in the late 1800’s and often sung as a round, appeared in The Real Mother Goose book in 1916)

The geese flying overhead are very noisy these days. It is seen as a sign of the season, but I wondered why, instead of flying south, they were all flying north! Perhaps they were all meeting up on the banks of Lake Ontario before deciding where to winter.

According to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology here, there is plenty of grain left in the open corn fields and usually open waters in the lakes and ponds to allow them to stick around in some places in the winter. Our town lies along one of the traditional migration routes, but the numbers of geese around here in the winter definitely seem to be growing. The ponding areas around the malls are full of them all year-round.

Cornell also says, “Migrating flocks generally include loose aggregations of family groups and individuals, in both spring and fall. Flights usually begin at dusk, but may begin anytime of day, and birds fly both night and day. They move in a V formation, with experienced individuals taking turns leading the flock.”

So, long story short, I don’t know why there were so many geese flying north for several days. Perhaps our winter will be milder than usual!

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