A walk in the woods one summer day.
Grapes, sycamore, banana, cypress swamp
Those grapes were ripe and tasty. Muscadine, Vitis rotundifolia. This is down by a beaver pond. Continue reading
A walk in the woods one summer day.
Grapes, sycamore, banana, cypress swamp
Those grapes were ripe and tasty. Muscadine, Vitis rotundifolia. This is down by a beaver pond. Continue reading
A late June day.
Maypop, bananas, cypress swamp, Arrow in bathtub
A month later, the Passiflora incarnata are still blooming, there are more banana bunches now, there are puddles in the cypress swamp, and Arrow still likes to cool off in her bathtub. Continue reading
Dug out of its winter cocoon, with tractor blade and hoe. Then planted by hand in rows made by the planter, later covered with dirt by tractor cultivator. Later this year: more cane syrup.
Continue readingUpdate 2022-03-20: McCoy turpentine cup 2022-03-20.
It’s been 80 or 90 years since turpentining paid off the farm during the Great Depression. Yet we still find turpentine cups, and sometimes cat faces.
Downed catface with Carolina dog, closeup of turpentine cup
Blondie is a Carolina Dog, which is a native landrace breed, as in they bred themselves. Carolina Dogs were discovered in South Carolina in the 1970s, thus the name. They were living in longleaf pine forests and cypress swamps, just like where Blondie and Arrow (and Honeybun) live now in Georgia. Continue reading
Interpret this, facebook AI! Pair of dogs, ten years apart.
Yes, they are all Carolina Dogs. Continue reading
Tasty for breakfast.
Gretchen planted these bananas only a few years ago, when they were not even knee high. Look at the banana jungle now!
Ripe bananas, bees, dog, flowers
The dogs alerted me to this.
Fortunately, they kept their distance.
How many rattles do you count?
-jsq