Like all gardeners, I have been mostly out of commission for the past three weeks, engaged in the annual race to clean up the remnants of the autumn leaves and get seeds and plants into the ground after the danger of frost is past, but before it gets too hot for delicate seedlings. Normally I take a week's vacation from my job specifically to work in the garden. This year, since I'm working at home, I had the luxury of spending quality time, and it has really paid off.
My house is situated deep in the forest on the north face of the mountain. Though it is a beautiful spot full of native wildlife, it also means that I am engaged in an ongoing struggle with the deer who eat all my plants and shubbery. In addition, this year I have been doing battle with a little gopher, who has worked diligently behind me each evening, digging up everything I plant, neatly laying it on its side next to the empty hole! I don't use traps in the garden (I figure the animals and I are sharing this patch of earth). I also don't use chemicals, since we eat herbs, edible flowers and vegetables that grow there. Luckily I found a biodegradeable, granular spread called MoleMax, which is activated by water and repels burrowing animals. For the deer, I am using a spray called Liquid Fence (all natural ingredients like hot peppers and rotten eggs which make everything taste terrible), combined with a technique suggested by an Amish gardener near Highland Lake, Pennsylvania (where I grew up, and still vacation with my siblings and their kids). She puts chicken wire on the ground around plants that she doesn't want deer to eat, and told me that they hate to step on the wire. I have tried it around my azaleas and some flowering perennials. So far, so good.
Today, for the first time in weeks, I didn't spend the cool morning hours hauling gravel, digging, and planting. Instead, I took a cup of coffee, my camera and tripod, and photographed the results of my work.
Usually, the sage in my kitchen garden is an annual - I have to replant every spring. This year, the weather was so mild that my sage wintered over, and I have a HUGE patch which is flowering (I've never had sage flower before - very exciting!).
This is a Dock-Spider, which I found warming itself on one of my paving stones. It is a beauty - nearly 3-inches in diameter.
My Clematis didn't flower last year (often the case with a new planting), but it is in full bloom this Spring.
I love the perfect symbiosis between ants and peonies. The ants drink the nectar, and their constant movement is thought to help open the dense, double flower buds. This bloom was literally trembling on the verge of opening when I photographed it this morning. As I post this afternoon, the flower is open and the ant is gone - his work is done!
Lots of wrought iron - both new and antique - in the shady "Angel Garden."
The Garden Shed
And finally, the porch. We are ready for "a long summer's rest" here in Cornwall-on-Hudson!
A tesseract exists in the 4th dimension where Time wrinkles, or folds onto itself, creating new paths that allow characters to tesser, traveling through space and time in an instant.
I have always loved the idea of 4D media, which is why I call my company Tesseractive Pictures.
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
Showers with Occasional Sunny
Sunday, May 13, 2007
Flowers in our Hair
I was so pleased that Jules, my 15-year-old, decided to give me a "breakfast hike" for Mother's Day. I used to do it often as a treat when she was little, but in recent years she has flat-out refused to consider an early morning hike to be a pleasant thing. Which is fair - she's a teenager, after all.
This year, she knew that a hike in the woods would please me more than anything she could buy me. We prepared breakfast together (lox & bagels, and a bowl of fresh strawberries), packed our knapsack, and headed up into Black Rock Forest for a wonderful morning - just like the old days!
Saturday, May 05, 2007
The Hush Sound
Great set - which will be on YouTube before the night is out. The crowd in front of me is a sea of camera/phones...
Dusk at the Bamboozle Festival
Amazing. There are 200 bands on multiple stages, and this schedule runs like clockwork....bands go on EXACTLY when the program says. I saw the lead singer for a band called The Audition surreptitiously glance at his watch while he was rocking out on their last song, to be sure he was finishing on time. How times have changed! Heading over to see The Hush Sound (who I love), and we'll call it a night.
(posted from my mobile phone)
On the Scene
Boys Like Girls
Bamboozle Festival Day
This morning I'm psyching myself up for the 12-hour Bamboozle Festival, 5 stages in the parking lot of the Meadowlands Arena. I am chaperoning three 15-year-olds.....so funny, after all my years at MTV, to be the grownup, rather than the participant! It's actually a pretty great lineup - The Hush Sound, New Found Glory, My Chemical Romance, and a whole lot of alternative bands I've never heard before but will probably enjoy. And out of the blue, M.C. Hammer is on one of the small stages. So, at least there will be SOMEBODY else as old as I am in the house!
..// THE BAMBOOZLE \\..
..// THE BAMBOOZLE \\..