and there were long tables of wine and cheese and some helter-skelter jazz trio playing, would skinny young people in heavy horn-rimmed glasses and long black coats assume they were missing some Greek literary reference they really ought to know, gather around and speak in low tones of the immense loft of my artistry?
Showing posts with label clammy groundcherry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label clammy groundcherry. Show all posts
Clammy Groundcherries, Everted Opossums, and Art
I go on to the second barn, but find it full of honest machinery. It's a better barn with a better roof. I guess I like the skeevy one better. It tells more stories.
I go a bit farther beyond the second barn and see a huuuge whitetail buck in the hidden meadow.
It's interesting how I have come to be able to tell a buck from a doe, naked eye, at such a distance. To judge the relative size of an animal that, through my iPhone, is but a dot, and know that it's really large, or at least larger than a doe would be. And darker. Bucks tend to be darker and bluer than does in fall.
I long for my telephoto lens. I can count ten points on his antlers through my pocket Swarovski binoculars.
Busted, he takes off. Wish I could do better than this, but I can't run with a 70-300 telephoto weighing about 8 lb. You can just make out the bone-white tips of the tree of antlers on his head.
Hope he made it through gun, bow, youth and muzzleloader seasons. Oh, and the three-day December shootin' spree.
Chet and I move on down the road, noting a very nice patch of wild ginger still showing yellow- green! I hadn't known the leaves persisted so long into November.
At the point on this beautiful road where I can see the little church, I always start to sing "Little Brown Church in the Vale," one of the songs my dad would sing as he took my mom, my sister Micky and me on long drives into the Virginia countryside when we were kids.
Oh how I loved when he would sing. He could carry a tune, but his rhythm was a little off. It drove my mom crazy. Dale! You skipped two measures!
Of course we all sang along. Micky was really good at harmony.
I strove to be as good as she was.
She also drew better than I did.
Consider these things, how having a talented older sibling can burn a hole in the younger, less gifted one, make her long to excel.
My father knew about that.
It occurred to me as I uploaded these photos that I have never crossed the creek to snoop about in this church. For one thing, it looks like it's locked up tight.
But maybe it's not.
Shiver of delight if not.
Big disappointment if so.
I think that's why I haven't tried.
In such a public place my guess is it will be locked and barred.
I'll get back to you on that.
It sits, a little jewel in the landscape. This spring I will go and see what's blooming around it,
even if I can't get inside to sing and dream.
In November, the damp bank of the stream was full of clammy groundcherries, Physalis heterophylla.
I became enchanted by these members of the nightshade family.
They were so similar to the tomatillos I'd grown all summer (which I adore; like a crisp, citrusy tomato!) that I wondered if they were edible.
Sites differ on that point. This one (Ohio Perennial and Biennial Weed Guide) states that the plant and unripe fruit are toxic. Yikes. Let me quote them directly:
Leaves and unripe fruits of groundcherries are poisonous and even fatal if ingested by humans. However, ripe fruits are not as toxic and can be made into jellies, jams, and sauces.
Now, would you eat something that was described as "not as toxic?"
Pfft.
Me neither.
I'll settle for admiring their beauty. Don't miss the church, behind...
Ooh, ahh.
I'm going to try one next time I find them. Ain't skeert.
Speaking of not being skeert, I found an unfortunate animal. Do you recognize this foot?
Yes, that is an (almost) opposable thumb. But this animal has not developed an alphabet,
nor learnt to grow grain.
Still, it is a marvelous foot.
We have not many truly scaly animal tails. By now, you have guessed whose foot that is, no?
If you are easily grossed out, you may want to put your hand over this next photo. I will tell you that this is what a turkey vulture does when it processes a Virginia opossum. Or a raccoon, or a cat or a groundhog. It turns it completely inside out, leaving only a head and the skin, the spine everted, and all the tasty bits gone.
Which, if you're a Science chimp, you love, even as you gag a little.
Ready?
here it comes
So now you (gag) know. I took the color saturation down a bit.
It helped.
Requiem: Didelphis
and there were long tables of wine and cheese and some helter-skelter jazz trio playing, would skinny young people in heavy horn-rimmed glasses and long black coats assume they were missing some Greek literary reference they really ought to know, gather around and speak in low tones of the immense loft of my artistry?
Then I trot on
behind my little black dog
who remembers where we parked.
Just below the tiny community hall where he inspected the privacy booths, and we'd voted, first thing that November morning.
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Sunday, January 18, 2015
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