Friday, August 21, 2009

Links I Like - Summer Vacation Edition


I’m going to the beach! Here are a few things you might want to read while I’m gone (or not).


1) The Grass Stain Guru explains why it’s good for the kids not to have anything planned once in awhile.

2) Viviane at Food and Style provides recipes for a first-class picnic.

3) The Lazy Mom and “Mrs. PR” on how to properly nag a husband.

4) The Avid Reader digs up some vacation spot gems.

5) The Worst Case Scenario on how to pee by the side of the road.

6) One of my gardening gurus, Barbara Damrosch on gardening as we get older and wiser.

7) A Classic Erma Bombeck column on the importance of clotheslines.

8) Pam at Hook Mountain Growers with some great tomato suggestions.


After vacation, school starts! And we haven't a thing to wear.....

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Arrow Park Nature Walk



On Sunday a group of “Friends of Arrow Park” got together to hike to the waterfall there in Sterling Forest, with the hope of identifying some native flora and fauna along the way. The hike was led by naturalist John Yrizarry.


He and his wife Mary are conservationists -- they’ve been working with the Orange County Land Trust on keeping Sterling Forest in its beautiful, pristine state. We have people like John and Mary to thank for making sure that future generations will be able to enjoy the serenity of rare and precious spots like Arrow Park – and maybe even tell their children what species exist there!

If you want to know how to tell a turkey vulture from a black vulture, ask John.

He knows his birds. But he can tell you a lot about plants, too. Below are a few highlights from our walk.


Knotweed (polyganum) –
It was notable that other invasive weeds like garlic mustard and purple loosestrife were mostly absent from the woods.


Since we’ve had such rainy humid weather here lately, the mushrooms and fungi were in abundance. John explained to us the difference between a "gilled" and a "pored" mushroom and provided examples.

There were lots of varieties of moss. Some of the most prevalent were pincushion (Leucobryum glaucum).
and Juniper (polytrichum) moss.

Turkey Tail mushroom (Trametes versicolor).
Old man of the wood mushroom (Strobilomyces spp.)


(I think I see an old man's face!)





Phragmites australis
(a common invasive reed often found all over the place in marshy areas)




Spruce trees are being planted on the ridge here in memory of victims of 9/11.
Wintergreen (Gaultheria procumbens).

Japanese barberry (Berberis thunbergii) - invasive in the northeast, but beloved by birds.





Red Oak (Quercus rubra).

John thinks this might be one of the biggest red oaks in the area - but it's not as old as you might think. It's just been very well nourished because it's near the waste stream.


I didn’t manage to get photos of any of the animals we saw – they just weren't posing for me. But among those spotted:

Water snake and leopard frog







Green heron and Blue heron












(photos from Wikipedia)


Then, finally, the falls...

Gotta get the feet wet to make the experience complete.






Special thanks to Sandy Derevnuk for organizing the hike and her devoted efforts on behalf of Arrow Park.



You can find out more about Arrow Park on their website at
http://www.arrowparkny.com/. The Orange County Land Trust site can be found here.
If you would like to join the "Friends of Arrow Park" email list, just send me an email at nyackbackyard@gmail.com and I'll make sure that you're added. There will be a plein aire painting class on August 29, and a yoga class on September 6.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

GBBD - August in Nyack, NY

GBBD stands for "Garden Blogger's Bloom Day." It's held on the 15th of every month.

I've neglected the flowers a bit this year because I was preoccupied with the new vegetable garden. There's a little patch that I let grow wild in the backyard - even let the weeds enjoy themselves there. I've been trying to plant bee and butterfly friendly plants and natives in that sunny spot, but I still have some work to do there.

First, here are a few shots from the school garden:










On my deck there are some mixed containers. Here is some echinacea, oxalis and anise hyssop.

I think this sunflower is called "Strawberry Blonde."



This is a new variety of petunia that I purchased at Matterhorn nursery.

The chinese lanterns are already producing big orange glowing globs.

First annual planted and still going strong.

Liatrus in the front bed:





Sweet potato flowers. I hope I get a few tubers!
Another sunflower.

Morning Glory teepee.


Shasta daisy, rose and hydrangea still showing themselves in front here and there.


Anyone know the name of this lily?

Got a bloom or two to display? Head over to Carol's May Dreams Gardens and join people from around the world who are sharing their flowers today!

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

10 Things I Learned from "Little Heathens"











Picking just ten things to highlight from Mildred Armstrong Kalish's wonderful memoir "Little Heathens" proved to be a challenge. The book is crammed with homespun anecdotes and wisdom that she gleaned from her years growing up on a farm in Iowa during the Great Depression. Although the subtitle of the book proclaims that there were "hard times," we come away with the impression that she lived in the ideal kind of world that we now crave more and more - a resourceful one of less waste, better food, and respect for animals, as well as each other. Despite her mother's "nonconformist lifestyle" and "loose routines," she also conveys a sense of true gratitude and appreciation for the unique way that she was brought up, and a desire to pass this appreciation on to future generations.

A few fun tips from Millie:

1)When making a pie crust:
To keep the bottom of a pie crust from getting soggy, beat one egg white until frothy, then spread a thin layer over the crust with fingers. Put in a 450 degree oven for 10 minutes, fill then return to baking.

2)When you have a splinter:
Break a fresh egg and carefully peel a small portion of the white membrane out of the shell. Place it on the splinter. Usually by the next morning it will be ready to be plucked out.

3)When comtemplating your place in society:
Remember the Protestant hierarchy: A Methodist is a Baptist who learned to read; a Presbyterian is a Methodist who went to college, and an Episcopalian is a Presbyterian who's made the social register.

4)When you get a bad bug bite:
Apply baking soda, black mud or earwax to a sting. If you get a canker sore, chew green pepper, but don't swallow, to relieve the smarting.

5)When you need wax:
Drain the honey from a comb and set the dry comb on some hardware cloth spread over an empty coffee can and place it in the sun. It might take a whole month to melt, but then you can mold the wax into a ball that can be held in the hand.

6)When you're coughing:
Place a flannel packet of hot, fried yellow onions and goose grease on the chest.

7)When your child has swallowed a bobbypin:
Have them eat sauerkraut. Since very young children do not readily digest it, the pin will become entangled in the undigested sauerkraut and pass safely through.

8)When you have lots of corn:
Make Corn Oysters: stir 2 cups of fresh corn kernals into a quarter cup of heavy cream. Mix in one tsp. baking powder, one tsp salt, and a dash of pepper with 3 tbsp. flour and add to corn mixture. Beat two large eggs and add. Fry, dropping by heaping spoonfuls, in oil or bacon drippings in a cast iron skillet.

9) When your hands are stained from shelling nuts:
Soak each hand in a large green tomato for about an hour.

10)When you only have one ball:
Repair as long as possible with a curved needle threaded with heavy linen cord waxed with beeswax. When it disintegrates take the inner core (which looks like a tightly wrapped ball of rubber bands), wrap in black tape and use it as a golf ball. To make a golf course, dig holes and sink coffee cans into them around the yard.


One of my favorite chapters was the one in which she described the forgotten tradition of making "May Baskets." The baskets were, ideally, made from old wallpaper sample books (having this kind of paper was considered a luxury.) The baskets were filled with treats and flowers and secretly hung on the doorknobs of favorite friends. At the end of the chapter Mildred wonders "Did this custom stop suddenly or did it just ebb away when no one was paying attention? Does anyone, anywhere hang May baskets anymore?" I wouldn't be surprised if Millie has inspired a few new traditions.

Hope you'll share additional "home grown" tips in the comments section if you have them!





Here's a link to a video of Millie talking about how her farm education has helped her throughout life.

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Salade Tomate


This past week brought my first full-size (that is, not cherry) tomatoes! The first one harvested was a Jet Star, closely followed by two Celebrities and then another Jet Star and a Vintage Wine. Isn't the vintage wine pretty on the outside?

Here's what it looks like inside.
I usually get a handful of tiny cherries, too.

My Grandma Lucy who lived in Sandusky Ohio, where they grow gorgeous tomatoes, made an delicious tomato sandwich: Two slices of wheat toast, I tsp of mayo, sliced tomato, Lowry’s Seasoned Salt. Awesome!

Another thing I like to do with fresh tomatoes is make Salade Tomate: combine 4 chopped tomatoes, 4 hard boiled eggs, ¼ cup of parsely or whatever herbs you like, juice of one lemon, salt & pepper to taste.


Can you guess what the most delicious part of this salad is?

That’s right – the juice. Use a slice of Italian bread to scoop it up.

Last night I had a nightmare that my tomato plants turned black with late blight overnight. It’s probably not so far out of the realm of possibility - I find a few blighty leaves and pinch them off every day. Part of my dailly harvest.