I wiped away the weeds & foam. / I fetched my sea-born treasures home... Ralph Waldo Emerson







Monday, April 16, 2018

Went to the Beach



Happy Monday! On Saturday we had a few brief hours of sunshine, calm wind and slightly warmer temps. I layered up and hiked down to see what  recent wind and flood storms have done to my late winter beach.
Below, wind sculpted dunes.


The big earthmover trucks are gone, much of the boardwalk is back, as are the benches. The fences and warning signs for the terns and plovers are installed.









No hint of green in the dark winter weeds and grasses.


The beach is surprisingly huge. 7/10ths of a  mile down to the waterline. It was mid-tide, on a waxing moon day. [so a moderate tide, not high or lower than usual].

















There was a slight mist or fog over the water. The ocean is much colder than the air right now.















A few brave people walking.


NO oystercatchers. None. I've been watching them arrive and do their mating prance/ dance with binoculars from the house, but none were at the shoreline this day. A few dark shapes huddled back towards the dunes, maybe they have chosen nest spots? Although it is too early, as they normally lay eggs around May 9.



Only Gully and a very few sanderlings were playing in the waves.


This is washed up seaweed and beach grasses.







It isn't pretty but it can make for good beachcombing, though I found nothing except a few plastic bags to carry home to put in the recycle bin. The beach is usually raked and groomed twice a day, dawn and dusk, but sometimes the mid-day mess is left for the shorebirds for food, tiny creatures that are in the tidal wash line. As long as the washed up material is natural I don't much mind it; the few plastics are usually picked up by people walking; we even have a little waste collection bag dispenser for people to use, there by the lower bench
.

I was so tempted but I didn't walk far. I am taking over more and more of Mo's three long walks per day, and must conserve my energy. Mo's needs come first, of course, as he is a little guy who loves his time outdoors with me.





Later that afternoon, a strange dark front of clouds swept in with 40 mph winds. The darkness was so sudden, and early, at 4 PM. Then last night the wind howled and banged all night, deck chairs slamming into the deck railing, anything not bungeed down whisked away. Weather Bug said 45 mph gusts, but as always here at the shoreline, the winds is much stronger.


Mo hid under my desk until noon today, not scared but hibernating. It was a day for the dogwalker, who coaxed him out and now it's time for him and me to go again. We'll look for daffodils.


Have a good week. Here is another happy wildlife story: Bald eagles nesting on Long Island! I would dearly love to see a real eagle, what an amazing thing.
HERE.

love

lizzy

gone to the beach....





































Friday, April 13, 2018

Looking for Spring

Mail - robin750@msn.com
trom Penny in S Africa

Hi! Happy Friday the 13th! The ''unlucky'' day has finally brought us a warmer and sunny day. Today I am sharing delightfully springy photos sent to me by friends here and family, folks who don't have blogs so these will be wonderfully new views for you all.

From Mel in Kansas:














Something to look forward to in May.



From Kel in Southern California. Tropical beauties!



From Penny is South Africa, below. I ignorantly had a vision of South Africa as a place of dry grasslands, but her area is said to have a "Mediterranean" climate. Of course it is late summer to her. So reminds me of my parents' home in Cape Cod, the lush maritime weather and flowers.

Mail - robin750@msn.com

Additional info from Penny: "They're Japanese anemones (also called Windflowers). The most commonly grown here are the white and pink. They shoot up to well over a metre in Autumn and sometimes after heavy rain and Autumn winds they keel over. You also get dark pink/almost maroon ones with thin strip-like petals. 
The hydrangeas are the common white Madam Emile Moulliere (usually the cheapest white ones in the nursery). Our soil is fairly acid and they then become spotted with pink and a glorious green on the more shady side. These also dry beautifully. "

Her hydrangeas are the most perfect shade of pink.








From Cat in Scotland, a wonderful description: " As we drove home from England today, I spied from the passenger window, a carpet of snowdrops in the woods somewhere in the Scottish borders. The ground was covered in them, all lovely and white. On our way south last week, everything was covered in snow. What a difference a week makes."   Photos from Mel.  







And from my brother in the southwest. He has  a hummingbird nest in his courtyard tree! He said, "Two tiny eggs, the size of the tiny Jelly Beans." And yesterday I got a text that the eggs had hatched.  The babies must be impossibly small!




I was so wanting spring to arrive that I considered doing my main rooms in blue/ white/ daffodil yellow. [but no.]



 Flowers from Trader Joe's, tiny nosegays, including that misty grey seaside thistle.





And some local, uplifting news, Homeless Ospreys: Have a good weekend!




love

lizzy


gone to the beach...



Our roadside or "parkway" plantings:









From the weather bug, look at the City!


Then mainland here...


keep in mind it's at least 10-15* colder where I am on the water. Parka still in use.