July 27, 2023
Good morning from Hermit Hill, this very fine Thursday.
Its not overbearingly hot today, on account of the cloud cover, my Iwatch is telling me that it's only 70 degrees at 9:00 a.m. Yay.
I don't have much to report, plantwise, except to say that the purple spiked plant I was trying to figure out yesterday, was indeed Spirea, as Plant Snap indicated. Spirea Tomentosa, in fact. I am glad that Plant Snap was right, once again, as I have found it quite useful in the past and the price was right (Free). I know loads of folks don't like it, but I suspect it's due to user error, on account of, you have to have really great pics to get accurate results. Good Pictures are hard to get; I know this from trying to snap my art, the results never do it justice!
I really despise using any of the groups on Facebook, however; like the Plant ID groups, because they so quickly devolve into sarcasm and belittling, just because folks are anonymous and can get away with it. That's the number one reason I have this haven. It's because if folks CAN get away with being belligerent, without recourse, then they will do so readily. It's been my personal life experience that people in groups will almost always stoop to the lowest common denominator, especially if there is zero accountability. I believe it's called Mob Mentality. I spent most of my childhood dealing with this crap from all 5 of my siblings; I witnessed and experienced first hand, just how much harm this can do to the innocent.
It took me many, many years, just to recover from the ensuing PTSD, and achieving one of my dreams of getting a higher education; which I finished the year I turned 50. I don't think I will ever get on top of the PTSD, but I have learned to mitigate it through tons of self work. I now have a pretty solid and regular meditation practice, and being here really helps me stay on an even keel, emotionally. It's just so expansive, in general, in Maine, because it's such a wide state, geographically.
Vermont has become so congested that people go nuts there, on a pretty regular basis.Both Burlington and Brattleboro (the two largest towns), have crimes of homicide on a regular basis; often for no real coherant reason.
I am not sure the interstate has helped the State, to any degree, because it's only served to make it way more accessible to an enormous amount of mostly unsavory individuals.It's a well known societal trend that the more people there are, in a small area, the more crime increases. Is it the ensuing congestion that causes the trend, or is it something else? Who knows for sure?
In any case, It's fairly obvious to me, whenever I go back, that the roads were not built for the amount of vehicles that use them, and that that is only one rather large problem the state has. I believe the other large problems are only compounded by the poor factions living on top of each other, and the folks who arrive to exploit them. But it's soooo greeen, ma! lol. Reminds me of the James McMurtry lyrics: I'm not from here, I just live here".
The state is, in fact, at the Govermental level, run by mostly imports who do not have a clue what it takes to actually live there if you are poor and/or disabled. Even Bernie Sanders, who has done an awfully lot of good, is not from there. I don't hold it against him, but I also know that he is not in his job, just for altruistic reasons; but rather for the "charge" that wielding loads of political power gives him. On a good note, however; he is likely the ONLY senator in the entire USA who has an on-the-ground office that any citizen can walk into and ask for (and receive) help, so he at least understands that it's the little guy who props up the states economic substructure.
Well, I wasn't going to talk politics on my blog, but there it is. I often look through a sociological lens when reflecting, which it seems like a good thing to do on a rainy day.
On a different note, and back to the purpose of this blog, let's get back to plant talk!
Here is the lovely Spirea that is all over the property. It has many names, apparently (most plants do), including SteepleBush, Hardhack, Rosy Meadowsweet, etc. etc. Here also is a lovely little passage from Robert Frost, that a person left on my FB post, and for which I am most charmed and thankful.
At the present rate it must come to pass,/And that right soon, that the meadowsweet/And steeplebush, not good to eat/Will have crowded out the edible grass.
And here she is, in all her glory:
On a final note, I noticed that both the Bees and Hummingbirds just adore her, so I will be marking all of the scattered volunteers so I can move them into the protected space behind the cabin. I am pretty excited to be able to have enough space to grow flowers here. (I only concentrated on edibles in Vermont, because of space constrictions = only 1/3 acre).
My inner Bear is so very grateful. I may even keep bees again, someday......I can dream here.....lol