Thursday, despite the forecast for a widespread freeze, not frost, we managed to dodge that bullet. Maybe it was all the preparation, read that as gathering all of the vegetables, fruits and flowers that you can in one day, that jinxed the frost. Whatever, count me lucky. I woke around 5 am and checked the thermometer. Not that I could DO anything, but you know, I had to know. It read 33.8F. Okay. Still, the temperature often drops, just about dawn. Would it, or wouldn't it.. I went back to bed. When the coffee machine beeped its "coffee's ready" noise at 6:15, the temps were holding steady. By now, the cats were yowling to go out and I had a cup of the strong, hot elixir of life in my hands so I grabbed my camera, wrapped a shawl around my bathrobe, stuck my feet into my rubber clogs, and walked out the door. You can't do that in the city. Well.. you'd get a reputation.
The mist was rolling across the pond. It is a magical way to start the day. Cold though, with my bare legs hanging out below my robe. The grass looked wet. It was. But here and there, why I wonder, were small, really small, patches of frost. Probably Mother Nature letting me know just how kind she had been.
There's no way to ignore the inevitable. This year, even the plants seem confused. The clematis is in bloom with more buds coming along. There was still a hummer at the feeder this morning when the sun finally showed.
Go by the calendar and it says September. I put the string beans I'd picked into the freezer along with more bags of blackberries. I took the elderberrys off the stems with a fork and froze a couple gallons of the liberated fruit. I grilled squash. I uncovered and put out the plants that had gone into hiding the night before. I picked more apples. I ate cooked apples for breakfast and had apples with chunks of cheddar cheese for my dinner. It is a good year for apples. I hear they are fattening. Does it matter when you're running a race? I'll win some and lose some and run like crazy until Mother Nature freezes it out.
hmm… for those of you that asked if that was bear scat.. I was trying to ignore it, but, it looked like it to me and upon checking it out in my handy "scats and tracks of the northeast" book, I'd say, that it says, bear. Okay then, I'll sing louder.











12 responses to “freeze or frost.. the race is on”
Frost. No no no! Although, I’m sitting here and my feet are cold. But there’s no way I’m putting on socks just yet.
Beautiful pictures. This year summer did not hang on to September like it often does. It was gone on Labor Day and the days have moved to fall very quickly. It must be amazing to live so close to the land like you do and watch mother nature in her glory.
It’s weird weather here too. It’s supposed to be fall here – and it is this morning…but then supposed to be 87 by Monday again.
The peaches are late as well. Apples are too.
The only fall we’ve had is the height of hurricane season. Our morning low was 78. I’m enjoying your fall vicariously. What a pond picture!
You take the most wonderful photos! Thank you. I can feel the cool moist air on my cheeks (and my shins. Brrrr!)
I trot outside in my robe and slippers all the time to take out the garbage, get the paper, snap photos of the sunrise or the leaves or whatever. I wave to passing motorists and joggers, chat with the dog-walkers and the dogs. It’s not like I’m out on the sidewalk in New York though. We have yards and trees and stuff. It’s the ‘burbs.
Sigh. Frost. I think we get that a few times a year… It’s hard to live in tune with the seasons when the seasons refuse to change.
That was a short summer. Wasn’t it just yesterday that the snow melted???
🙂
I’m not in the mood for winter this year. Fall – maybe; winter – no. I need more warmth and sunshine!
Apples? Fattening? Surely not! Apple pie, however, would be another story.
Beautiful photos.
I have faith in you, Judy. You’ll harvest a lot more before that first hard freeze comes.
…and so fall begins again…or did summer just end? whichever way you look at it, seems it’s time to turn…
your pictures tell the story…beautiful!
(ps..I sometimes wear my rubber clogs and bath robe out into the early morning dew…the chickens don’t seem to mind at all)
I am energized by this season, by cooler temperatures. The kiss of frost is surely a warning that you heeded.
Our hummers left September 10th, a week later than last year. Maybe I’ll see yours.