The stands of almost-blooming sweet pepper raise an aura of expectation for the future...for their aroma and what lies ahead. The dappled light in the Squam swamp is soothing and the first red Tupelo leaves dot the sandy floor. There is even a look backward with the scent of late swamp azalea. It's so quiet...with sounds of the breeze rather than the birds, and only an occasional fly buzzing by or a jet thrumming overhead.
Friday, August 5, 2022
Breezy
Saturday, July 23, 2022
Bogs in the Fog
| Milestone Bog with Steeplebush |
The midsummer weather has swung into high gear, with steamy days in the eighties. It was 80 degrees by 9 am yesterday and stayed in the eighties until 6 pm. The nights are foggy and the early mornings, too, until the sun burns off the fog.
A killdeer keening at Milestone draws me to observe ; A swarm of red winged blackbirds rises up from the reeds. I then chase savannah sparrows before heading back to the car, home and the grandkids.
| Eastern Phoebe at Windswept Bog |
| Windswept Bog , July 21 |
| Savannah sparrow |
| Killdeer |
Tuesday, July 19, 2022
In the Company of Towhees
| Wood lily, lilium philadelphicum |
This morning I went on my Pout Ponds walk at 7 am in a brisk 24 mph wind from the southwest. The temperature was already 75 degrees; the weather changed to mugginess. Southeasterly winds that had kept the weather crisp and in the low seventies for the past several weeks.
A new gate has been erected...#wildnantucket continues to be civilized, even in the moors. Planes coming in to land also remind me of the hustle bustle of the mainland. I walked back to my car and headed home. There, hundreds of people walk the road up to the Sankaty Light every day.
The Buck Moon
The moon is at its closest to the earth this month, its perigee. The full moon is called the Buck Moon because the male deer begin to grow their velvety antlers this time of year. We saw just such a buck on the way to the beach near the airport. In Europe, it is called the Hay Moon.
Thursday, July 7, 2022
Early July
I feel like I missed most of June in Nantucket this year. Josh and I hiked the West Highland Way in Scotland during the first two weeks of June, and when we came to Nantucket in mid-June I was diagnosed with pneumonia. That began two weeks of double antibiotics, staying inside and not wanting to do anything. It had me wondering why I like to bird and walk in nature and spend my time the way I do. I read The Nature Fix by Florence Williams to cure me of the blues. The grandchildren arrived to distract me (Joe, Amy, Frankie and new born Simon here for a month!, and Sam with Arthur and Noa for two weeks).
Today I hiked Norwood Farm to get back in my groove. It was kind of quiet except for the towhees and catbirds. The scent of the swamp azalea, rhododendron viscosum, was the highlight. The common yellowthroats were wichity-ing near the ponds; Easter Kingbirds hunted insects. I tasted my first highbush blueberry.
I am looking forward to loving this all again.
| Hoary Frostweed, Crocanthemum Bicknelli |
| Common Yarrow, Achilliea Millefolium |
| Whorled Loosestrife, Lysimachia quadrifolia |
Wednesday, July 6, 2022
Strawberry Moon
Saturday, April 23, 2022
Seeking the new
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| Brown Thrasher at Windswept Bog |
I love a new experience. It may be why I love birding. There is elation at hearing or seeing a bird that I’ve never seen before, or that I rarely see. It makes the day somehow special and memorable.





