Monday, August 26, 2013

The Cornucopia Institute

I have newly linked (see side bar) to the Cornucopia Institute's blog.


The Cornucopia Institute

The Cornucopia Institute, through research and investigations on agricultural and food issues, provides needed information to family farmers, consumers and other stakeholders in the good food movement and to the media. We support economic justice for the family-scale farming community – partnered with consumers – backing ecologically produced local, organic and authentic food.
Lots of good information.  However, the entry that really struck me was the one from August 18th, which opens with, "Why do we need farmers?"  It literally made my stomach hurt to read this piece.
Lots of information about corporate non-food, GMO's etc.
Won't necessarily warm your heart, but might get it beating a bit faster. 

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Little things...

I've been thinking about little things.
Little things that lots of people don't notice.
Things like leaf skeletons.
Leaf Skeletons
Things like the 7 porcupine quills
Pulled from Libby's lower lip.
Each end so very sharp.
Porcupine Quills 
This black monarch butterfly caterpillar.
Found in the garden on a dill sprig.
Came close to squishing him,
But decided to find out what he was.
My curiosity saved him.
Black Monarch Caterpillar
So today
When I heard a hummingbird 
Making a big fuss.
I went over to see what the little green thing was on the hummingbird perch.
A praying mantis.
Being somewhat misguided, I thought that the praying mantis was in danger.
Praying Mantis
So I did what any nature loving gal would do.
I removed the praying mantis from his high perch,
and placed him in some lower bushes.
Can you find the praying mantis?
(Just below the middle of the picture.)
The hummingbird continued to come around.
It dived bomb me a couple of times, 
which it has never done before.
It was obviously stressed, 
So I came inside.
Hummingbird
Curious about praying mantis and hummingbirds,
Praying mantis have been known to ambush and kill hummingbirds.
They can kill birds, frogs, lizards, scorpions, snakes, fish, and even small rodents.
Woah!  Perhaps they should be prEying mantis.
I have always liked them, 
But now I feel a little creepy about them.

I'm glad the hummingbird was astute enough to realize
 that the praying mantis was laying in wait on it's rusty garden perch.

And here I thought it was the praying mantis that should beware of the hummingbird.


Thursday, August 15, 2013

A good year to garden...

Planted the hops 5 years ago.
First year that the hops actually has hops.

Pepper plants are loaded,

And the corn is coming on.

A great year to be a gardener.
Earliest that we have ever had ripe tomatoes.
Lots of potatoes, onions.
Lots of everything.

A friend once said,
"The only problem with the Willamette Valley is you can't eat it all."
But we can try.

Sunday, August 11, 2013

New Word...

Petrichor (/ˈpɛtrɨkər/ or /ˈpɛtrɨkɔər/) is the scent of rain on dry earth.

Our first rain in almost two months.  The petrichor permeates the air as we take a late evening walk.


Sunday, August 4, 2013

Not for the squeamish....


The processional.....
An elk cow had been laying just beyond the pond for a day and a half, when we realized that her hind legs weren't working well and she was dying.  A slow death of old age or injury is acceptable. However, our fear was that coyotes would find her before she was dead. So we called the state police and asked that an officer be sent out to put her down.  By the time he arrived, she could no longer walk.  In fact, seemed like she didn't even know that people were near her.

Yesterday morning we watched as her herd came to pay their respects.  The new calves simply laid down in the grass as the herd elders stood for a half hour almost motionless watching her body.  Then the lead cow slowly led the herd away from her, past the pond in a slow procession.

Anthropomorphizing?  Maybe.  But this is what we witnessed.