Trying To Deal With The Fantods

Fundamental hinge point facing the nation. Here’s hoping.

Fifty robins (approximately) enjoying the remaining fruit of Vi/Anna’s NATIVE crab apple. (Photo doesn’t really show them all.)

Clematis seeds showing off their odd star-shaped seed clusters.

Ginkgo leaves (luckily a male tree, so no stinky seeds). Ancient tree with unusual fan-shaped leaves.

Gutters Cleaned…

…again. (And, I believe gutter cleaning was the topic of my first blog some November many years ago.)
Also on the pre-winter-better-get-it-done list, the three old-fashioned window screens were replaced by the three old-fashioned storm windows. (All the other windows in the house have been modernized, but we like these three old-timers, and they are not too difficult to manage.)

Witch-hazel flowering, as it does at this unusual time of year. Who pollinates?

Young Ohio buckeye done for this year but fully ready to get growing again come spring

Windrows

Most of the downed leaves have been blown into windrows. Big drifts and little drifts, everywhere you look.

Because of a wind strong enough to peel bark, it was somewhat surprising that any leaves still clung to their twigs. But, even with that incessant wind, we took our tightly leaf-packed trailer to the compost site and off-loaded it.

Windows Open…

…curtains billowing, leaves flying everywhere.

In other words, very warm and windy. Reminds me of the time our yard-work-avoiding-neighbor raked his substantial collectinon of downed leaves into the air and watched them scurry elsewhere.

Actually, as in most neighborhoods, we mostly share the leaves and don’t mind dealing with each other’s. After all, all the trees benefit all the neighborhood.

Autumn Leaves

Some trees bare, others still fully clad, but overall, a majority of deciduous foliage is on the ground.

Liriodendron tulipifera still holding on.

Locusts, maples, ashes, crabapples and others have lost all. The oaks are half bare.

While it’s best to mulch leaves, not to remove them, the presence of so many trees can leave a thick (and when wet, heavy) mat in spots. Therefore, we make a first grinding pass with the mower, compress them into the trailer, and take them to the compost center. Everything else that comes down or blows in from now on will be mulched.

Indian Summer

According to my definition: sunny, still, dry, hazy—with temperature over 70 after a hard frost. Today qualifies.

Yesterday’s blog post was designed to go on the Arboretum website, but would not post because of technical issues. So I put it here. Parsimony or conservation of energy might be an excuse. Certainly not laziness.

Today, the farmer’s market in Janesville. Downtown JVille is working hard on a comeback, and has the feel of a European plaza.