Category Archives: Seasons

The sunflower farm

Boy… time sure does fly when you’re not paying attention!

I was about to tell you about our visit to The Sunflower Farm, but then, poof! and 3 weeks had gotten away from me.

There’s an actual festival here each summer, but I’ve yet to brave the heat and the crowds to attend. As it is, no matter how mild you think a particular day is, once you’re out in the middle of that ten acre field, it’s hotter than blazes!

The farm itself is beautiful and is a picture-maker’s delight. I first heard about the place because so many photo groups visit it. I go to pick flowers, tho.

I’m not sure there’s anything more cheerful than a field of sunflowers, except maybe for the bees and birds that visit it.

: )

I wondered aloud to the farmer if they sell the leavings for birdseed.

Nope, but they sometimes hunt the doves that are drawn to the seeds in the fall. That’s okay, too.

There’s plenty to photograph, here. Red (and green) tractors, old farm tools and a beautiful hummingbird garden. There’s even an enchanted forest nestled on the back of the property. And if you want directions to the little local place that sells the best homemade strawberry-cream cheese fried pies, just ask!

Plus, you get to keep as many sunflowers as you can carry away for $15.

: )

That makes for many old mason jar bouquets.

Time

Take time to look into the eyes of a stranger passing you on the street… can you find the real person there for a tiny tick of the heart?

Take time to go wonder shopping…

Look up. What beautiful view is waiting just above your head?

Look down. Who’s reaching up for help to rise above sorrow, hardship, a broken soul?

Look around your neighborhood… see the same old streets as if they’re yellow brick roads with a wizard waiting at the end.

Look around your house… what could you lose and still be you?

Look at your work… when was the last time you fell in love with it?

Look inside… what are the secret unlived lives that you could midwife?

Stop the clock and look around… it’s about time.

(Take time to set your clocks ahead tonight, too.)

Winter Solstice

Partridgeberry

“The year achieves another solstice as the great wheel of time turns with the earth and the seasons. Winter, by the calendar, begins tomorrow, though the year’s shortest days have been upon us for almost a week. The solstice is a marker on the charts, but winter abides by its own schedule of wind and weather.

Since man was first aware of the changing seasons, the winter solstice has been occasion for awe and wonder and a challenge to faith. Hope and belief are easy in a warm, green world, but when the cold days come and the sun edges farther and farther south, cutting a constantly smaller arc across the sky, the imminence of utter darkness and oblivion seems at hand. Then the sun stands still. The turn comes. The crisis passes and the sun slowly climbs the sky once more, reaching toward another spring, another summer.

It was, and it still is, an annual miracle. Hope and belief were, and still are, once more justified. There is order in the universe. The seasons still march in their eternal sequence, and winter is neither pause nor punishment, but a part of the year’s whole. Ice and stormy wind are inevitabilities, but they pass even as the leaf and the blossom, equally inevitable in their own season, ripen and are gone.

The year has its own fourtold truth, indelibly marked on the turning earth. Now we know it whole for another turn of the great wheel. The cold verity of winter completes the cycle.”

–Hal Borland, Twelve Moons of the Year

Dear June

I love your school’s-out new-found freedom. Your sweet morning sunlight that tastes like past-ripe strawberries. Your just-right weather that’s not too hot, not too cold. Your seventh inning stretches and horses waiting at the gate. Your sun-colored pines and blue-eyed skies. Your traveling butterflies and too many birthday celebrations. Please stay for a while…

Untold stories

There are a lot of stories I never got around to telling last year… these are just a couple to share…

Waiting for birds to appear on the CBC in January…
A very cold visit to the NJ Meadowlands in February…
Shadows of the March sun at the carousel in AP…
Walking the High Line with a childhood friend in April…
Lunch in Asheville on the way home from W. Va. in May…
Playing with reflections and a new lens on the boardwalk in June…
A couple hours on the beach in July with one of my favorite little people…
Playing tour guide for a flock-mate in August…
A September visit to California…
An October visit to Savannah…
My first (and last!) raw oyster in Apalachicola in November…
Exploring back country roads in December looking for birds…

I hope to be a better blogger in 2012…

Parting glances

Atlanta’s Centennial Olympic Park is ~the~ place to see confusing fall warblers… the trees are young and small so, in theory, you can see the birds easily, down low.

I’ve had parts of 14 species of warblers there in the last couple weeks:

Most all of this young Common Yellowthroat…

The water-tossed mantle of the Black-Throated Green in last week’s post…

The pale supercilliums of many Tennessee Warblers…

The briefest of looks at the yellowish wing bars of a Chestnut-Sided Warbler…

The white “handkerchiefs” on a handsome Black-Throated Blue…

The indistinct dull olive of a young Blackpoll…

(You get the idea!)

Are warblers still passing thru where you are or is it winter already?