leaf out!
After Monday’s soaking rain, most of the trees have now had bud burst and early leaf out. Except the oaks of course. Those guys always wait to go last. Their such pikers.
bud burst and baby maple leaves
tight in the bud
This vine looks dead for intents and purposes, but the those new spring buds give it away. A few feet further down this vine, the buds had already burst and were leafing out showing tiny grape clusters. But I liked the tendrils better on this section. You know how I am about tendrils.
wild grapevine with old tendrils and new buds
P.S. Happy May Day everyone! Make a posie and put it on your neighbors doorstep.
abundance
It is hard to communicate in a single image the sheer abundance of even a single tree of crab-apple blossoms. Think Washington DC or Kyoto, Japan during cherry blossoms. That is Minneapolis/St. Paul during apple blossom season.
crab apple blossoms
Two words: Apple. Blossoms.
It’s apple blossom season here in the North! We have a lot of apple trees, which means we have a lot of trees loaded with pink and white blossoms. It’s pretty spectacular. We had 24 hours of rain yesterday, and that was clearly the memo all the trees were waiting for, because when I ran to the grocery store around noon today my world looked entirely different than it had only the day before. It doesn’t always work this way–all the trees blooming on the exact same day. But it sure is fun when it does happen!
crabapple blossoms
planting trees is a an act of hope
Planting a tree is an act of hope. It is a profound act of hope. It is a self-less long-term investment with lasting ecological benefits. Planting trees is a gift to the future.
This past weekend, Steve and I planted five trees. Three fruit trees and two evergreens.
quince blossoms
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My husband and I recently planted a plum, peach and an apricot tree and also a Desert Willow. We are 86 years old. I have a 95 year old friend who plants acorns, but most likely squirrels dig them up.
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