Monday, July 13, 2009
July and Hollyhocks
July is upon us already, and it's almost as quickly slipping into the past. True Summer's noontime heat, and beautiful evenings, and drop-dead-gorgeous nights, are so easy to get lost in, to where you don't even notice that the calendar days are surging on like the click-clack of a railroad car.
(As I imagine a railroad car would, at least. I wouldn't actually know. [I like 'railroad car', it sounds so classic and elegant and sophisticated, even if it were only a third class ticket. {Even 'third class ticket' sounds so thrilling!} It's mostly the era, I imagine, and all the movies made it seem so stylish.] But I think I would like to ride on a train, someday.)
And so summer steals by us, and on toward August...
But first, there's Hollyhock season! It wouldn't be right to leave them without an accolade for all the beautiful blooms they put on. So in honor of hollyhock season, take a look at these...
They make a terrific show by the front gate, and Bard the boxer likes to lay in the cool damp earth in their shade. When he isn't waiting for somebody...
What a vibrant and lovely soft pink! The colors all coordinate beautifully. Who says red and pink don't go together?
How Does Your Garden Grow...
Haying!
In the latter part of June haying began, and with the intermittent rains and slow-drying muggy days, it covered a good two weeks of mowing, raking, (often re-raking after a rain,) and baling. Once these were accomplished, by bits and pieces as the fields dictated, the bales needed to be hauled off.
Mom got this shot of the summertime sky on one of her trips to and from the field. Rather iconic...
And here you can see the 'work-place'. You can almost feel the coolness that that cloud shadow brings... and the sky is picture perfect summer time!
It gets pretty hot in the middle of the day... but you can't beat the view...
Haying is one of the major milestones of a country summer, a huge expenditure of effort that, mercifully, is over as soon as you've finished. Unlike, I suppose, most things on the farm, which are more slow and gradual progressions where 'finished' is a lot harder to define.
Mom got this shot of the summertime sky on one of her trips to and from the field. Rather iconic...
And here you can see the 'work-place'. You can almost feel the coolness that that cloud shadow brings... and the sky is picture perfect summer time!
It gets pretty hot in the middle of the day... but you can't beat the view...
Haying is one of the major milestones of a country summer, a huge expenditure of effort that, mercifully, is over as soon as you've finished. Unlike, I suppose, most things on the farm, which are more slow and gradual progressions where 'finished' is a lot harder to define.
Evening Rainbow
All spring we have been getting a lovely profusion of scattered small storms and rain showers, and after one of them we noticed this. Isn't it gorgeous?
Of course, when hay needs to be mowed the moisture is harder to appreciate... but ignoring beauty in the sky won't change the weather. Make the best of it, and glean a lovely memory... at the very least.
Of course, when hay needs to be mowed the moisture is harder to appreciate... but ignoring beauty in the sky won't change the weather. Make the best of it, and glean a lovely memory... at the very least.
Turkey Chicks
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