I was killing time yesterday waiting for some focus groups to begin, so I visited a Barnes & Noble where I loaded up on lots of new bird and garden books. The whole time I was there this Canada Goose was visiting with the shoppers and wandering around the parking lot.

I don’t know if he is always there, but he seemed quite tame and happy to be hanging out with the shoppers. It seemed a particularly curious site since here in Maryland we usually see them hanging out in huge congregations in the newly cut fields. Perhaps this is a new breed of shopping goose?

Shopping-Gooseweb.jpg

In another point of interest, those wicked smart professors at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology have posted a number of nestbox cams including some mating barn owls (!), some abandoned bluebirds they’re doing nothing about and some invader wasps. Check it out for yourself here.

Robin
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You have to admire the imagination–and wonder at the torrid love lives–of our Colonial ancestors. Their preoccupation with all-things-of-the-heart is revealed in the names they gave to their favorite garden plants.

Certainly, many plant names were descriptive, albeit colorful. Names such as Bear’s Ears, Bloodroot and Crowfoot.

But to others they gave heartbreaking names, such as Love Lies Bleeding and Love-in-the-Mist. What we know today as a pansy was then called Heart’s Ease.

Welcome%20Home%20Husband.jpgThis is one of my favorites (pictured). It’s called Welcome Home Husband No Matter How Drunk. Now, of course, we know this plant as Hens and Chickens.

These days, the naming of plants is in the hands of those corporate hybriders, so we get names for roses such as Strike-it-Rich Grandiflora Rose, Aromatherapy Hybrid Rose, Ronald Regan Hybrid Tea and Geraldine Ferraro Rose. Our new and improved tomatoes get names such as Health Kick Tomato and Tomato Taxi.

It’s almost worth dipping my toe into the hybrid scene so I can get to name some plants too. I think I could be quite good at it.

How about a Hysteria Wisteria? Or a Don’t Give Me No Lip Tulip? I think I would rather like some Get Your Fat Butt Off the Couch Potatoes!

Robin
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I visited Woodend in Chevy Chase, Maryland, on Sunday following my Iyengar yoga class and thought I would share with you some interesting photos.

First, let me put to rest the questions you no doubt have about the difference between a naturalist and a naturist.

A naturalist is a handy person to have around when you’re lost in the woods for any length of time and get a bit hungry, as they can tell you all the many names of things and what you can eat without turning blue and dying. A naturist is probably not someone you want to spent a lot of time with in the woods (unless you like them quite a lot) since they have the alarming tendency to shuck their clothes and prance around au naturale, so to speak. What we are talking about in this blog are naturalists. There are no naked people here.

(As an aside: There is a consultant I work with from time to time who did some strategic planning work with a naturist association whose members did their hard thinking in the buff. She said that it gave a whole new meaning to the importance of eye contact when addressing a group! Hah!)

Woodend Exterior.jpgAnyway….Woodend is the headquarters of the Audubon Naturalist (not Naturist) Society. I happened on it because of one of those handy little brown signs that often signal a place of interest. Hal, my on-board navigator (so named because he sounds like the computer in Space Odyssey 2001), handily helped me find the place not five minutes from the yoga studio.

The historic home was donated to the society in the 1960s by the estate of some “captain” and his wife. The society’s headquarters is now located in the home. It obviously has seen better days although it seems to do a brisk trade in the wedding reception business, which no doubt brings in a tidy sum for the society.

I dropped into the gift shop first since there were signs warning me that the house and grounds were closed for a special event. They have an amazingly excellent selection of books on birds, gardens and nature. I purchased the Thayer Birding Software’s Guide to Birds of North America, so you can look forward to all kinds of interesting bird facts in future journal entries.

The extremely kind shop lady and her very-well-informed-handsome-young-man-assistant told me that there was a wedding planned later in the day. Nevertheless, she offered to show me the house and sign me up as a member. How could I refuse?

Hemlocks5 with flowering.jpgThe house is mostly empty, which I’m sure suits the brides and grooms who prefer to have tables laden with steamed shrimp and steamboat round to dainty furniture. It’s a bit shabby, but the society probably doesn’t have the big bucks for a major overhaul since they’re busy taking care of nature and all.

The gift shop lady showed me the Members Library. I truly wish I had not left my camera in the car and was too embarrassed to ask if I could go and fetch it. I can only tell you that it was like stepping back in time to some old men’s’ hunting club. It was dusty. There was a big old oriental carpet on the floor. There were many books that members could borrow on the honor system. A big table for member meetings and some winged chairs to pontificate from. And the walls were lined with HUNDREDS of STUFFED BIRDS. Extremely creepy that.

Anyway, back to the other stuff…

I was told to help myself to the grounds now that I was a properly registered member. They had some nature trails that took me on a meandering path past some interesting specimens of moss that I’ll share at some later date. I was most intrigued by some of the flowers flourishing in the shade. (Note to self: Identify flowers flourishing in the shade.)

Hemlocks.jpgBut the most fascinating part of the whole visit was the hemlock grove. This grove of trees is arranged in a rectangle of extremely flat ground. Today it is used for wedding ceremonies, but speculation is that at one time the ground was a clay tennis court.

The hemlocks are truly amazing, as you can see for yourselves from the photos. They are architectural and artistic. I believe they have been given a bad rap by the whole Socrates episode.

Also, there was also a HUMONGOUS black walnut tree, but my photos don’t nearly do it justice.

Anyway, if you’re ever in the neighborhood, be a good naturalist and visit Woodend. (Naturists not welcomed.)

Robin
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Right Now at Bumblebee

February 6th, 2012

Another Monday.

Harry and I spent the better part of the weekend painting the master bedroom. We traded off between rolling and detail work and we both made our fair share of messes. For a while Sophie perched on top of a chaise to supervise our work. Sarah was distraught. She does not like change.

Today we get back to normal. I will have to do something about my manicure. Speckled fingernails in Benjamin Moore Light Pewter is not really a good look.

Here’s wishing you a happy, calm and productive week.

Robin

February 3rd, 2012

If you’re in the neighborhood and just happen to have your paintbrush and paint clothes with you, stop on by. Harry and I are taking the day off from work to start painting the master bedroom. We figure it’ll take until Sunday. Harry does most of the rolling—no small chore with high ceilings—and I do all the tedious detail work. You, of course, can pitch in wherever you like.

We’re painting it a dove grey. So if you see some grey in my hair in the next few days, it’s paint. Got it? The grey is paint.

Robin

February 2nd, 2012

Happy Groundhog Day! What are you doing to celebrate?

We’ll have a special dinner of NOT groundhog. Dinner will be a special pasta (TBD) and some yummy homemade yeast rolls. Then we’ll pull out the photo album of past Groundhog Days and reminisce. We will toast Puxatawny Phil by opening the first bottle of my homemade apfelwein, which I hope is sparkly by now. If it’s any good, you’ll hear more about it.

Cheers!

Robin

February 1st, 2012

Working from a home office is not always what it’s cracked up to be. I have a lousy IT department (me). Interruptions range from barking dogs to crowing roosters. I hear my business phone ring during non-business hours.

But there is a lot good about a 15 step commute. Such as today. It’s cloudy and a bit drizzly, but the temps will climb into the mid 60s for the second day in a row. I will turn off the heat, throw open the windows and give the house—and office—a good airing. Ahhh!

Robin

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