Mockingbird Hill Cottage

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Where Were You 50 Years Ago?

July 20, 2019 at 11:16 am by Claudia

This is where we are today. Here, and in the den. The A/C has been on since 7 am. It’s so humid, you can cut the air with a knife. Don has already been out to water the plants and we’ll do it again later in the day. Today and tomorrow have been given an “Excessive Heat Warning.”

So, we’ll be staying indoors. No portraits for Don, which is frustrating for him as that’s two days lost. But heck, no one is going to want their picture taken in this weather! I sure wouldn’t.

I’m grateful for air conditioning, books to read, movies to watch, and shelter.

By the way, I went out on the porch in the dusk yesterday to water a few potted plants that had sagged from the heat. Earlier in the day, I had checked the nest in the clematis and the three eggs were there but no mama. I was starting to think they had been abandoned. As I walked around the porch, I saw a sparrow hop out of the top of the clematis and drop to the ground. So, the eggs are still viable and mama and papa are tending to them. Good news!

If you’re old enough to remember, where were you on this day 50 years ago, the day of the first walk on the Moon?

I was performing (what else is new?) out at a place called Camp Dearborn. It was a huge camp owned by the City of Dearborn, but at a distance from the city, where residents could spend a week or two camping with their families. Not unlike the Yogi Bear Campsites that are just down the road from us – lots of activities for families and kids, that kind of thing. My family never camped there – too many people, too much noise. My parents preferred to go ‘up north’ and camp in Northern Michigan, which was beautiful, but boring for me as a young kid. As you would expect, my head was buried in a book much of the time.

Back to why I was with a gang of teenagers at Camp Dearborn: We were doing a summer musical, something I did every summer when I was in junior and senior high school, so the city asked us to perform scenes from it that night. We knew the walk on the Moon was happening and, oddly enough, there were televisions in various parts of the facility – outdoor televisions with small screens that were on some sort of pole accompanied by a few benches. At the point when Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin were to set foot on the Moon, we all ran over to a television set to witness it. It was not unlike standing outside the window of a department store watching a small television set in the midst of a large crowd of people. It didn’t have the intimacy of watching in your living room, but it did have the energy and collective awe of a crowd of people who couldn’t believe what they were seeing, who cheered as Neil Armstrong said “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.”

I remember it pretty vividly.

50 years ago! Amazing.

Happy Saturday.

Filed Under: birds 36 Comments

Butterflies and Books

July 19, 2019 at 10:12 am by Claudia

As we sat on the porch, sipping our second cup of coffee and chatting, another monarch butterfly appeared. You’ve seen photos of the porch. Just over the railing from our adirondack chairs is the main patch of milkweed. We have the best seats in the house when a monarch appears!

This monarch was laying eggs on the underside of the leaves. Flitting from plant to plant.

It flew all around the property – Don encountered it when he came out of the kitchen. I saw another monarch later – at least I think it was another one, as it seemed smaller. Again, laying eggs and dining on the flowers.

I love them. What a treat to be able to sit there in our chairs and watch them do their work.

It’s going to be hot one today, an even hotter one tomorrow, as well as on Sunday. Yuck. Yuck. Yuck. I hold off turning on the A/C as long as possible but I have a feeling it will have to go on soon.

What am I doing? Reading. And vacuuming. And that’s about it. I’ve been resting my back, which is much better today. Oh, and watering the plants, which I’m going to do as soon as I finish this post.

From the side garden bed. I love these day lilies. See the spider?

I’m reading Case Histories  by Kate Atkinson, the very first book in her Jackson Brodie series. Excellent, as always. I ordered the newest John Connolly, A Book of Bones, via Book Depository because it hasn’t been published here yet, only in Great Britain. I couldn’t believe how heavy it was when I pulled it out of the mailbox. It clocks in at 694 pages! He’s never written a book this long. I’m saving it until I finish reading my library books, but what a treat it will be!

I remember reading Gone With the Wind  when I was in 8th grade. I had never read a book that was so thick and had so  many pages! It felt like a big deal, like I’d crossed the line into an adult-sized book. A rite of passage.

Aren’t books wonderful?

Happy Friday.

Filed Under: books, butterfly, monarch butterfly, reading 34 Comments

Day of Discovery

July 18, 2019 at 10:09 am by Claudia

Despite being so humid  yesterday that I could barely think, I did have some outdoor chores to attend to; watering, whiteflies, that sort of thing. Along the way, I met up with some wonderful surprises. I call it: Claudia’s Day of Discovery.

First up.

My constant check of the milkweed for whiteflies paid off, not only in getting rid of some them, but in this discovery:

A future monarch butterfly. And yes, those are eggs on the leaf, but they don’t look like whitefly eggs which are laid in a circular pattern and, sad to say, I’m now more than familiar with. Maybe Monarch eggs? Not sure. Have to do some more research. I also saw a smaller caterpillar on another leaf, but when I came back to take a picture, I couldn’t find it.

Then, as I started to walk back, I noticed some stray bits of nest making material on the clematis, which is held up by a metal trellis. I looked closer. Down under the top leaves, was a little nest. I had to pry back some of the leaves to take a photo and it isn’t all that clear, but here you go:

At first I though they might be wren eggs, but they tend to be buff colored with brown specks. These are blue, so I think they might be the eggs of a song sparrow. Very tiny eggs. I don’t know where mama was or – I hate to think it – if the eggs have been abandoned. I didn’t want to linger there in case I was being watched by anxious parents. I’ll try to casually walk by today and see if I see some bird activity.

Heading back to the kitchen door, I realized that I kept seeing a black butterfly. I was sure it was an Eastern black swallowtail, but, as I got closer, I realized it didn’t have the extension on the bottom of the wings that swallowtails have.

Anyway, this butterfly could fly and she did, but she kept landing on the pavement and staying there, while she pumped her wings over and over. This went on for quite a while, right outside the door. A bit of flight, then a landing, then pumping. I suspected it was a newly emerged butterfly. I took some pictures and did some research. It’s a Red Spotted Purple Admiral. They look brown here, but the wings have two spots near the top that are red.

Soon, another Red Spotted Purple Admiral joined her and they both pumped their wings. It was utterly fascinating. When Don came home, I headed him off at the pass and told him to come in the front door, so as not to disturb them.

https://mockingbirdhillcottage.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/joined_video_049b8e88239e4eeda3aa42075e113350.mp4

I took this short snippet of video. It’s also on my IG account.

Isn’t it amazing?

Then, this morning, Henry and a bunny rabbit were happily coexisting as they chomped on the grass.

Oh, and Lonesome Dove was on the birdbath the other day, taking delicate sips of water.

All my critter needs have been met for the week.

I was about to commit to reading another author yesterday as I didn’t get any notice from the library that a Kate Atkinson was ready and waiting for me, when, at 4 pm, one came through. Normally, that would have been too late, but on Wednesdays, the library is open until 8, so I hightailed it over there – I use that word loosely as my back is acting up, so I can’t ‘hightail’ it anywhere – and brought it home with me. It’s the very first Jackson Brodie mystery she wrote – Case Histories. While I was there, I spotted the newest Chris Pavone thriller on the ‘New Fiction’ shelf, so that came home with me, too.

It stormed yesterday and it’s going to rain today. Saturday? 98 degrees. Sunday? 94 degrees. Heat indexes of 107 degrees plus. The local weather guy was saying we should all stay indoors, and we will, but plants will have to be watered, which necessitates going outside. Yuck.

Happy Thursday.

 

Filed Under: bird nest, birds, butterfly, monarch butterfly 37 Comments

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Welcome!

Welcome!

I live in a little cottage in the country with my husband. It's a sweet place, sheltered by old trees and surrounded by gardens. The inside is full of the things we love. I love to write, I love my camera, I love creating, I love gardening. My decorating style is eclectic; full of vintage and a bit of whimsy.

I've worked in the theater for more years than I can count. I'm currently a voice, speech, dialect and text coach freelancing on Broadway, off Broadway, and in regional theater.

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