Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Busy as a Bird

Rock and dirt divider between two driveways made
spectacular by the Jays.  Not a drop of added water for
all that splendor!






Everyone knows bees are busy.  And ants are legendary for being industrious.












No shyness is this sunny head.  









But I've never thought of Scrub Jays as anything but noisy, though I acknowledge their smartly attractive bright blue plumage. Now I'm having second thoughts (even as a Jay takes a raucously noisy splash in the bird bath).






The most attractive and glorious points of interest in our whole yard this summer are what the Jays planted for me.

One of these plants had over 20 sunny flowers on it.  Now the heads are hanging heavy with seed.

Sunday, August 16, 2015

Robin Days

Squint and you'll see the teen Robin on
the fence framed by sunflowers.
Sad to say, they are all but finished.  Robins hang out nearly year around.  One can count on hearing the chur-up, chur-ee in the morning light no matter where you live.  But sometimes the Robins come by the dozens, and Robins are not a flock bird.  They are independent and territorial.  However,  toward the end of summer when all the Robin children are learning their dining skills and manners, the yard is covered with them.

What draws these winged messengers of happy tunes at this time of year is our front-yard Choke Cherry tree. That tree is another story. We discovered that it suckers (information not in the property disclosure when we bought the house).  Not just a few here and there, but enough that on-line searches say the only way to deal with the suckers is to remove the tree. Pluses of the Choke Cherry are its lovely blossoms in the Spring, the dark chocolate leaves that match the house trim and the black, large-pit choke cherries--breakfast, dinner and dessert to the Robins.

Choke Cherry: a feast for the Robins
The tree is mostly bare of fruit now. The Robins are on to other diners. The tree will no doubt stay another year.

Monday, August 3, 2015

Even the Sidewalks!

It's everywhere.  That touch of beauty, of whimsy, of vibrant color seems to show up everywhere one looks in this town of Bend, recently new to us.
Giftor




Only a careful eye will notice
Why was I so surprised to see it in the sidewalk?  Perhaps it caught me attention because it was the result of very happy accident.
Not by accident at all






Workman broomed the finished on a sidewalk; the tree dropped a handful of its leaves; the leaves were pressed forever into the now uncommon concrete.




Thank you to the artists



Now that I expect to see more, I expect I'll see more.