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Friday, April 17, 2015

The View from the Outer Pen

There is an eight foot fence surrounding our back yard, That is mostly for privacy for Bow. It means that delivery people and others who mistakenly drive onto our property don't immediately have to spot Bow and start gaping at him, if he happens to be outside. But the privacy fence does not keep Bow from seeing things that are going on in the outer yard, if he wants. He can climb high and get a view of what is going on in the world beyond.


From the top of the bench rim, you can see the nearby tulip tree and the Weigela bush in the distance.


The tulip tree is getting ready to flower.


The old, dried out blossoms are still there, but this year's green flower heads are already visible and getting ready to open.


When I go to check on the Weigela blossoms, I know that Bow is watching me, and he sometimes vocalizes in my direction to let me know.


The Weigela blossoms have been open for a while now, and they are getting a little droopy. Their petals are falling one by one to the ground.


Still there are insects who find them attractive.


Sometimes I have trouble putting a name to the insect.


But sometimes they are just the familiar honey bee.


Back in the pen, Bow has a clear view of the flowering dogwood.


You can see the orientation of the pen toward these trees in the short video embedded below.


When I go for my afternoon walks, Bow also gets to be outside, if he wants to be.  Our grass has not been mowed yet, and so I get glimpses of tiny little flowers shooting up that I might otherwise never have gotten to see.


The clover flowers are so delicate and fresh.


Dandelions, both young and old, are making a nice showing.


These little tiny yellow flowers are so pretty, whatever they are called!


To make the flowers grow, sometimes all you have to do is not mow the grass for a while. The same is true for trees. Much as I hope that the new fruit trees we planted in the orchard will make it, there is a very good chance that some of them will not. When you "plant a tree" you are doing a very unnatural thing. It's not at all what the tree huggers would have you believe. You are not planting, but transplanting. You are tearing out roots and making them grow someplace else. It's a shock for the tree. Some survive and some don't.


But if you just don't always mow the lawn, you will be amazed at what shoots up all on its own, without any work on your part. On the other side of the driveway from our majestic tulip tree, a baby tulip tree is growing.


Nobody planted it. It just volunteered. But already it is getting ready to blossom. This little tulip tree, if left undisturbed, is better than any tulip tree I might buy in a nursery to plant, because it already has strong roots here.


Of course, just because a plant is growing, that does not mean its survival is guaranteed. Predation takes place at every level of the trophic pyramid. This peony by the lagoon is getting ready to blossom, but will those black ants let it?


When I get back from my walk, Bow usually wants to go back inside, and he tells me so.


Bow needs my help to unlock the metal door, but he opens the glass door all by himself.

2 comments:

  1. Wow, you have so many blooming plants right now, Aya! Your Weigela is beautiful! Enjoyed the tour! So, does Bow vocalize at your lawn mowing people too?

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    1. Hi, Kathy. It's funny you should ask, but Bow demands to know all the lawn care people personally. If he sees someone he does not know on the property, he gets very upset.

      Sometimes repair think that just because they have been invited to work here then they can bring with them anyone they like. That is so not true! Bow goes ballistic when he sees a total stranger, and I find it hard to explain. But our current lawn care people do know that any new person needs Bow's okay.

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