Thursday, October 20, 2022

A Book of the Seasons: October 20 (Novemberish and cool, looking westward, migrating crows, fall flowers, winter birds, fresh fallen leaves, yellow butterflies)

 





The year is but a succession of days,
and I see that I could assign some office to each day
which, summed up, would be the history of the year.
Henry Thoreau, August 24, 1852



Beautiful they go 
painted of a thousand hues – 
oak maple and birch. 

Merrily they go 
scampering over the earth
selecting their graves. 
October 20, 1853 

Agreeable to me 
the scent of the withered leaves–
the year, passing away.
October 20, 1855

Sunrise looking west –
conical mountain shadow
rapidly contracts.

Gray twigs and brown leaves,
the river-banks now assume 
their November aspect. 

The coldest day yet,
finger-cold as I come home,
hands find their pocket.

A straggling flock of 
migrating crows contends with 
the strong northwest wind.

Think not your journey
to the mountantop is lost
that you have no glass.
October 20, 1852



October 20, 2015

There is a very strong northwest wind, Novemberish and cool, raising waves on the river and admonishing to prepare for winter.  October 20, 1857

Picking chestnuts on Pine Hill. A rather cold and wind, somewhat wintry afternoon, the heavens overcast. October 20, 1852

The clouds have lifted in the northwest.  I see the mountains in sunshine, all the more attractive from the cold I feel here, with a tinge of purple on them. October 20, 1852

A cold but memorable and glorious outline. This is an advantage of mountains in the horizon: they show you fair weather from the midst of foul. October 20, 1852

Many a man, when I tell him that I have been on to a mountain, asks if I took a glass with me. No doubt, I could have . . . counted more meeting-houses; but this has nothing to do with the peculiar beauty and grandeur of the view which an elevated position affords. October 20, 1852

See the sun rise from the mountain-top. October 20, 1854

This is the time to look westward. October 20, 1854

All the villages, steeples, and houses on that side were revealed; but on the east all the landscape was a misty and gilded obscurity.October 20, 1854

 A little white fog marked the site of many a lake and the course of the Nashua, and in the east horizon the great pond had its own fog mark in a long, low bank of cloud. October 20, 1854

Soon after sunrise I saw the pyramidal shadow of the mountain reaching quite across the State. October 20, 1854

It rapidly contracted, and its apex approached the mountain itself, and when about three miles distant the whole conical shadow was very distinct. October 20, 1854

At the public house, the mountain-house, they keep a glass to let, and think the journey to the mountaintop is lost, that you have got but half the view, if you have not taken a glass with you. October 20, 1852

I see a large and very straggling flock of crows fly southwest from over the hill behind Bull's and contending with the strong and cold northwest wind. This is the annual phenomenon. They are on their migrations. October 20, 1859

This is the coldest day as yet; wind from the northwest. It is finger-cold as I come home, and my hands find their way to my pocket. October 20, 1859

I learn the next day that snow fell to-day in northern New York and New Hampshire, and that accounts for it. October 20, 1859

We feel the cold of it here as soon as the telegraph can inform us.
 October 20, 1859

Land at Hemlocks, in the eddy there, where the white bits of sawdust keep boiling up and down and whirling round as in a pot. October 20, 1856

Amid the young pitch pines in the pasture behind I notice, as elsewhere of late, a great many brownish-yellow (and some pink) election-cake fungi, eaten by crickets; about three inches in diameter. October 20, 1856

I see the yellowish election-cake fungi. October 20, 1857

Owing to the great height of the river, there has been no Bidens Beckii . . . this year.  October 20, 1856 

Canada snapdragon, tansy, white goldenrod, blue-stemmed goldenrod. Aster undulatus, autumnal dandelion, tall buttercup, yarrow, mayweed.   October 20, 1852 

A very little Solidago nemoralis in one place from the axil.  October 20, 1856

I examine Ebby Hubbard's old oak and pine wood. The trees may be a hundred years old.  October 20, 1860

The very oldest evidences of a tree are a hollow three or four feet across, - the grave of an oak that was cut or died eighty or a hundred years ago there.  October 20, 1860

The barberry bushes are now alive with, I should say, thousands of robins feeding on them. They must make a principal part of their food now. October 20, 1857

Warren Brown, who owns the Easterbrooks place, the west side the road, is picking barberries. Allows that the soil thereabouts is excellent for fruit, but it is so rocky that he has not patience to plow it. That is the reason this tract is not cultivated . . . There was Melvin, too, a-barberrying and nutting. He had got two baskets, one in each hand, and his game-bag, which hung from his neck, all full of nuts and barberries, and his mouth full of tobacco. Trust him to find where the nuts and berries grow. He is hunting all the year and he marks the bushes and the trees which are fullest, and when the time comes, for once leaves his gun, though not his dog, at home, and takes his baskets to the spot . . . What a wild and rich domain that Easterbrooks Country!  Not a cultivated, hardly a cultivatable field in it, and yet it delights all natural persons, and feeds more still. Such great rocky and moist tracts, which daunt the farmer, are reckoned as unimproved land, and therefore worth but little; but think of the miles of huckleberries, and of barberries, and of wild apples, so fair, both in flower and fruit, resorted to by men and beasts; Clark, Brown, Melvin, and the robins, these, at least, were attracted thither this afternoon. There are barberry bushes or clumps there, behind which I could actually pick two bushels of berries with out being seen by you on the other side. And they are not a quarter picked at last, by all creatures to gether. I walk for two or three miles, and still the clumps of barberries, great sheaves with their wreaths of scarlet fruit, show themselves before me and on every side.  October 20, 1857

The small red Solomon's-seal berries spot the ground here and there amid the dry leaves. The witch-hazel is bare of all but flowers. October 20, 1852

Some small red maples still stand yellow within the woods . . . Red maple is either scarlet or yellow. October 20, 1858

The yellow birches are generally bare. October 20, 1857

The beach plum is nearly bare, and so is the woodbine on the brick house. October 20, 1859

The wild red cherry by A. Brooks's Hollow is completely fallen; how long? October 20, 1859

The sand cherry in my field path is almost entirely bare. October 20, 1859

Some chinquapin is half fallen. October 20, 1859

The pin-weeds are now bare, and their stem and fruit turned a dark brown.  October 20, 1856

The thorns on the hill are all bare.  October 20, 1856

The button-bushes are nearly bare.  October 20, 1856

How pleasant to walk over beds of these fresh, crisp, and rustling fallen leaves . . . clean, crisp, and wholesome! October 20, 1853

How they are mixed up, all species, — oak and maple and chestnut and birch! October 20, 1853

How beautiful they go to their graves ! how gently lay themselves down and turn to mould ! — painted of a thousand hues . October 20, 1853

They are about to add a leaf's breadth to the depth of the soil. 

Merrily they go scampering over the earth, selecting their graves, whispering all through the woods about it.  October 20, 1853

So they troop to their graves, light and frisky. October 20, 1853

They that waved so loftily, how contentedly they return to dust again and . . . afford nourishment to new generations of their kind, as well as to flutter on high! October 20, 1853

We are all the richer for their decay. October 20, 1853

Agreeable to me is the scent of the withered and decaying leaves and pads, pontederias, on each side as I paddle up the river this still cloudy day, with the faint twittering or chirping of a sparrow still amid the bare button-bushes., October 20, 1855

It is the scent of the year, passing away. October 20, 1855

At Beck Stow's surveying, thinking to step upon a leafy shore from a rail, I get into water more than a foot deep.  October 20, 1853

While wringing my wet stockings, I hear a rush of wings, look up, and see three dusky ducks swiftly circling over the small water.  October 20, 1853

Scare up a yellow-legs, apparently the larger, on the shore of Walden. It goes off with a sharp phe phe, phe phe. October 20, 1859

Think I hear the very faint gnah of a nuthatch. Thus, of late, when the season is declining, many birds have departed, and our thoughts are turned towards winter (began to have a fire, more or less, say ten days or a fortnight ago), we hear the jay again more frequently, and the chickadees are more numerous and lively and familiar and utter their phebe note, and the nuthatch is heard again, and the small woodpecker seen amid the bare twigs. October 20, 1856

I hear from my chamber the note of myrtle-birds [white-throat sparrow] mingled with sparrows, in the yard , especially in the morning, quite like a clear, sweet squeaking wheel barrow.  October 20, 1856 

A white-throated sparrow. October 20, 1858

I see on the dead top of a hickory, twittering very much like swallows, eighteen and more bluebirds, perhaps preparing to migrate. October 20, 1855

I had gone but little way on the old Carlisle road when I saw Brooks Clark, who is now about eighty and bent like a bow, hastening along the road, barefooted, as usual, with an axe in his hand; was in haste perhaps on account of the cold wind on his bare feet. It is he who took the Centinel so long. When he got up to me, I saw that besides the axe in one hand, he had his shoes in the other, filled with knurly apples and a dead robin. He stopped and talked with me a few moments; said that we had had a noble autumn and might now expect some cold weather. I asked if he had found the robin dead.  No, he said, he found it with its wing broken and killed it. October 20, 1857

P. M. — To Hill, to look for ground squirrel nests.I dig into two or three squirrel-holes under a black oak, and in a rotten stump trace them a foot or more and lose them, or else they come to an end? Though I saw a squirrel enter the ground, I dug and lost it. They are apparently very busy now laying up their stores. I see a gray one making haste with waving tail across the field from the nut trees to the woods. October 20, 1856

I see where squirrels, apparently, have gnawed the apples left in the road. October 20, 1857

Apples are gathered; only the ladders here and there, left leaning against the trees.  October 20, 1857

There are fewer turtles, now and for some time, out sunning.  October 20, 1856

The river-banks have now assumed almost their November aspect.  October 20, 1856
Another remarkably warm and pleasant day, if not too hot for walking; 74° at 2 P. M.  October 20, 1858

The water is smooth, the sun warm, and the reflections particularly fine and distinct; but there are reflected now, for the most part, only gray twigs and a few sere and curled brown leaves, wool-grass, etc.  October 20, 1856

I keep along the old Carlisle road. The leaves having mostly fallen, the country now seems deserted, and you feel further from home and more lonely. October 20, 1857

Several yellow butterflies in the meadow. October 20, 1853

I see yellow butterflies chasing one another, taking no thought for the morrow, but confiding in the sunny day as if it were to be perpetual. October 20, 1858

"The facts of science, in comparison with poetry, are wont to be as vulgar as looking from the mountain with a telescope. It is a counting of meeting-houses.  October 20, 1852

I enjoy more drinking water at a clear spring than out of a goblet at a gentleman’s table. I like best the bread which I have baked, the garment which I have made, the shelter which I have constructed, the fuel which I have gathered.  October 20, 1855

There is one advantage in walking eastward these afternoons, at least, that in returning you may have the western sky before you.  October 20, 1858



October 20, 2015



A Book of the Seasonsby Henry Thoreau, The Horizon
A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau, Reflections
A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau, October Moods
A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau, the Western Sky







October 20, 2018

March 5, 1854 ("And crows, as I think, migrating northeasterly. They come in loose, straggling flocks, about twenty to each, commonly silent, a quarter to a half a mile apart, till four flocks have passed, perhaps more. Methinks I see them going southwest in the fall.")
May 24, 1860 (“ This is one of the values of mountains in the horizon, that they indicate the state of the atmosphere.”)
June 3, 1858 ("It was still hazy, and we did not see the shadow of the mountain until it was comparatively short.")
September 14, 1854 ("A flock of thirteen tell tales, great yellow-legs, start up with their shrill whistle from the midst of the great Sudbury meadow, and away they sail in a flock. . .to alight in a more distant place.”); 
September 19, 1856 ("Observed an Aster undulatus behind oak at foot of hill on Assabet ")
September 26, 1859 ("Hearing a sharp phe-phe and again phe-phe-phe, I look round and see two (probably larger) yellow-legs, like pigeons, standing in the water by the bare, flat ammannia shore, their whole forms reflected in the water. They allow me to paddle past them, though on the alert.")
October 1, 1853 ("Robins and bluebirds collect and flit about.")
October 2, 1859  ("The A. undulatus looks fairer than ever, now that flowers are more scarce.")
October 4, 1853 ("Bumblebees are on the Aster undulatus")
October 5, 1857 (“I see in most orchards the apples in heaps under the trees, and ladders slanted against their twiggy masses.”)
October 6, 1858 ("The Aster undulatus is now very fair and interesting. Generally a tall and slender plant with a very long panicle of middle-sized lilac or paler purple flowers, bent over to one side the path.")
Finger-cold to-day – 
your hands find their way 
to your pockets. 
October 14, 1856
October 16, 1856 ("I notice these flowers on the way by the roadside, which survive the frost . . . mayweed, tall crowfoot, autumnal dandelion, yarrow”)
October 17, 1857 (" How beautifully they die, making cheerfully their annual contribution to the soil! ")
October 18, 1856 ("A-chestnutting down Turnpike and across to Britton's, thinking that the rain now added to the frosts would relax the burs which were open and let the nuts drop")
October 19, 1856 ("The A. undulatus is, perhaps, the only [aster]of which you can find a respectable specimen. I see one so fresh that there is a bumblebee on it.")
October 19, 1857 ("Mr. Sanborn tells me that he looked off from Wachusett last night, and that he saw the shadow of the mountain gradually extend itself eastward not only over the earth but finally on to the sky in the horizon")



October 22, 1853 (" Consider what a vast crop is thus annually shed upon the earth. . . .This annual decay and death, this dying by inches, before the whole tree at last lies down and turns to soil. . . .They teach us how to die. How many flutterings before they rest quietly in their graves! . . .By what subtle chemistry they will mount up again, climbing by the sap in the trees. The ground is all parti-colored with them. For beautiful variety can any crop be compared with them?"); 
October 22, 1857("Chestnut trees are almost bare. Now is just the time for chestnuts."); October 23, 1855 ("Now is the time for chestnuts. A stone cast against the trees shakes them down in showers upon one’s head and shoulders.");
October 25, 1858 ("The Aster undulatus is now a dark purple (its leaves), with brighter purple or crimson under sides.");
November 1, 1853 ("As I return, I notice crows flying southwesterly in a very long straggling flock, of which I see probably neither end.”)
November 2, 1860 ("Ebby Hubbard's [wood]was never cut off but only cut out of.") November 3, 1852  ("At Andromeda Pond, started nine black (?) ducks just at sunset, as usual they circling far round to look at me")
November 7, 1858 ("Aster undulatus and several goldenrods, at least, may be found yet.")
November 26, 1860 ("I hear the faint note of a nuthatch . . .a phenomenon of the late fall or early winter; for we do not hear them in summer that I remember. ...”)
January 22, 1852 ("I love to look at Ebby Hubbard's oaks and pines on the hillside from Brister's Hill. Am thankful that there is one old miser who will not sell nor cut his woods.”)




October 20, 2021
October 20, 2021
October 20, 2018
October 20,  2013

 If you make the least correct
observation of nature this year,
 you will have occasion to repeat it
 with illustrations the next, 
and the season and life itself is prolonged.

October 19 <<<<<<<<<  October 20 >>>>>>>>  October 21

A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau,  October 20
A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau
"A book, each page written in its own season,
out-of-doors, in its own locality.”
~edited, assembled and rewritten by zphx © 2009-2022

https://tinyurl.com/HDT20Oct

Wednesday, October 19, 2022

A Book of the Seasons: October 19 (witch hazel and fringed gentian, bees, fallen pine needles, nuts and seeds, Wachusett, October light)





The year is but a succession of days,
and I see that I could assign some office to each day
which, summed up, would be the history of the year.
Henry Thoreau, August 24, 1852

 October 19


From this rounded rock 
covered with fresh pine-needles
I see Wachusett



October 19, 2019

C. says that he saw a loon at Walden the 15th. October 19, 1859

The fall, now and for some weeks, is the time for flocks of sparrows of various kinds flitting from bush to bush and tree to tree — and both bushes and trees are thinly leaved or bare — and from one seared meadow to another. They are mingled together, and their notes, even, being faint, are, as well as their colors and motions, much alike. The sparrow youth are on the wing. October 19, 1856 

See quite a flock of myrtle-birds, — which I might carelessly have mistaken for slate-colored snowbirds, — flitting about on the rocky hillside under Conantum Cliff. They show about three white or light-colored spots when they fly, commonly no bright yellow, though some are pretty bright. October 19, 1856 

It is a very pleasant afternoon, quite still and cloudless, with a thick haze concealing the distant hills. Does not this haze mark the Indian summer? October 19, 1855

Paddling up the river the other day, those (probably canoe) birches on Mt. Misery on the edge of the hill a mile in front looked like little dark clouds, for I could not distinguish their white trunks against the sky.  October 19, 1859

The woods about the pond are now a perfect October picture.  October 19, 1855

Yet there have been no very bright tints this fall. The young white and the shrub oak leaves were withered before the frosts came, perhaps by the late drought after the wet spring. October 19, 1855

Both the white and black ash are quite bare, and some of the elms there. October 19, 1856

The bass has lost, apparently, more than half its leaves. October 19, 1856 

The leaves have fallen so plentifully that they quite conceal the water along the shore, and rustle pleasantly when the wave which the boat creates strikes them. October 19, 1853

I measure the depth of the needles under the pitch pines east of the railroad (behind the old shanties), which, as I remember, are about thirty years old. In one place it is three quarters of an inch in all to the soil, in another one and a quarter, and in a hollow under a larger pine about four inches. I think the thickness of the needles, old and new, is not more than one inch there on an average. Journal, October 19, 1855

The rich sunny yellow of the old pitch pine needles, just ready to fall, contrasting with the new and unmixed masses above, makes a very pleasing impression, as I look down into the hollows this side of Lee's Cliff. October 19, 1856

I return by the west side of Lee's Cliff hill, and sit on a rounded rock there, covered with fresh-fallen pine-needles, amid the woods, whence I see Wachusett.  October 19, 1856

Wachusett from Fair Haven Hill, August 2, 1852

How little unevenness and elevation is required for Nature's effects.  October 19, 1856

To Westminster by cars; thence on foot to Wachusett Mountain, four miles to Foster’s, and two miles thence to mountain-top by road. October 19, 1854 

With a glass you can see vessels in Boston Harbor from the summit. October 19, 1854

Mr. Sanborn tells me that he looked off from Wachusett last night, and that he saw the shadow of the mountain gradually extend itself eastward not only over the earth but finally on to the sky in the horizon. October 19, 1857
 
Wachusett Mountain. The prevailing tree on this mountain, top and all, is apparently the red oak, which toward and on the top is very low and spreading. On the sides, beside red oak, are rock maple, yellow birch, lever-wood, beech, chestnut, shagbark, hemlock, striped maple, witch-hazel, etc., etc.  October 19, 1854

Witch-hazel is in prime, or probably a little past, though some buds are not yet open. Their leaves are all gone. They form large clumps on the hillside there, even thirty to fifty stems from one to two or three inches in diameter and the highest twelve feet high, falling over on every side. The now imbrowned ferns around indicate the moist soil which they like. October 19, 1856

Many witch-hazel nuts are not yet open. The bushes just bare. October 19, 1859

I see at last a few white pine cones open on the trees, but almost all appear to have fallen. October 19, 1855

The chestnuts are scarce and small and apparently have but just begun to open their burs. October 19, 1855

The Asclepias Cornuti pods are now apparently in the midst of discounting. They point at various I angles with the stem like a flourish. The pretty brown fishes have loosened and lifted their scales somewhat, are bristling a little. Or, further advanced, the outer part of the down of the upper seeds is blown loose, while they are still retained by the ends  of the middle portion in loops  attached to the core. These white tufts, ready to burst and take to flight on the least jar, show afar as big as your fist. There they dangle and flutter, till they are quite dry and the wind rises. Others again are open and empty, except of the brown core, and you see what a delicate smooth white (slightly cream-colored) lining this casket has.  October 19, 1856 

The hypericums — the whole plant — have now generally been killed by the frost.  October 19, 1856 

Lycopodium dendroideum (not variety) is just shedding pollen near this cedar. October 19, 1859

The most prominent of the few lingering solidagos which I have noticed since the 8th is the S. caesia, though that is very scarce indeed now, hardly survives at all. October 19, 1856 

Of the asters which I have noticed since [the 8th], the A.undulatus is, perhaps, the only one of which you can find a respectable specimen. I see one so fresh that there is a bumblebee on it. October 19, 1856

At 5 p. m. I found the fringed gentian now somewhat stale and touched by frost, being in the meadow toward Peter's . . . It may have been in bloom a month. It has been cut off by the mower, and apparently has put out in consequence a mass of short branches full of flowers. This may make it later. I doubt if I can find one naturally grown. October 19, 1852 

At this hour the blossoms are tightly rolled and twisted, and I see that the bees have gnawed round holes in their sides to come at the nectar. They have found them, though I had not. October 19, 1852 

It is too remarkable a flower not to be sought out and admired each year, however rare. It is one of the errands of the walker, as well as of the bees, for it yields him a more celestial nectar still. It is a very singular and agreeable surprise to come upon this conspicuous and handsome and withal blue flower at this season, when flowers have passed out of our minds and memories.  October 19, 1852 

It is remarkable how tightly the gentians roll and twist up at night, as if that were their constant state. Probably those bees were working late that found it necessary to perforate the flower.  October 19, 1852 

When, returning at 5 o'clock, I pass the pond in the road, I see the sun, which is about entering the grosser hazy atmosphere above the western horizon, brilliantly reflected in the pond, –– a dazzling sheen, a bright golden shimmer. October 19, 1855

Standing on Hunt’s Bridge at 5 o’clock, the sun just ready to set, I notice that its light on my note-book is quite rosy or purple, though the sun itself and its halo are merely yellow, and there is no purple in the western sky. October 19, 1858

I noticed, two or three days ago, after one of those frosty mornings, half an hour before sunset of a clear and pleasant day, a swarm, — were they not of winter gnats ? — between me and the sun like so many motes . . . Each insect was acting its part in a ceaseless dance, rising and falling a few inches while the swarm kept its place. Is not this a forerunner of winter? October 19, 1856 

To the northern voyager who does not see the sun for three months, night is expanded into winter, and day into summer.  October 19, 1851



witch hazel in bloom
October 19, 2018

A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau, Bees
A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau, The Lycopodiums
 A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau, The Witch-Hazel
A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau, October Moods
A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau, October


October 19, 2019
 
October 4, 1853 ("Bumblebees are on the Aster undulatus, and gnats are dancing in the air.")
October 6, 1858 (“The Aster undulatus is now very fair and interesting. Generally a tall and slender plant with a very long panicle of middle-sized lilac or paler purple flowers, bent over to one side the path.")
October 8, 1852 ("As I was paddling along the north shore, after having looked in vain over the pond for a loon, suddenly a loon, sailing toward the middle, a few rods in front, set up his wild laugh")
October 12, 1855 ("The leaves fallen last night now lie thick on the water next the shore, concealing it,")
October 12, 1856  ("It is interesting to see how some of the few flowers which still linger are frequented by bees and other insects. ")
October 13, 1860 ("Now, as soon as the frost strips the maples, and their leaves strew the swamp floor and conceal the pools, the note of the chickadee sounds cheerfully winteryish.")
October 15, 1855 ("Go to look for white pine cones, but see none.")
October 15, 1856 ("Large fleets of maple and other leaves are floating on its surface as I go up the Assabet.")
October 17, 1856 ("Countless leafy skiffs are floating on pools and lakes and rivers and in the swamps and meadows, often concealing the water quite from foot and eye.")
 October 17, 1857 ("The swamp floor is covered with red maple leaves, many yellow with bright-scarlet spots or streaks. Small brooks are almost concealed by them.")
 October 17, 1858 ("They remind me of ditches in swamps, whose surfaces are often quite concealed by leaves now. The waves made by my boat cause them to rustle'")
October 18, 1857 ("The fringed gentian closes every night and opens every morning in my pitcher.")
October 18, 1858 ("By the brook, witch-hazel, as an underwood, is in the height of its change, but elsewhere exposed large bushes are bare")

Sun ready to set --
the light on my note-book is
rosy or purple

October 20, 1854 ("Soon after sunrise I saw the pyramidal shadow of the mountain reaching quite across the State")
October 20, 1858 (“Another remarkably warm and pleasant day, if not too hot for walking; 74° at 2 P. M. . . .There is a haze between me and the nearest woods, as thick as the thickest in summer.”)
October 21, 1857 ("I see many myrtle-birds now about the house this forenoon, on the advent of cooler weather. They keep flying up against the house and the window and fluttering there, as if they would come in, or alight on the wood-pile or pump. They would commonly be mistaken for sparrows, but show more white when they fly, beside the yellow on the rump and sides of breast seen near to and two white bars on the wings.")
November 2, 1853 ("The pollen  of the Lycopodium dendroideum falls in showers or in clouds when my foot strikes it. How long? ")

October 19, 2015

 If you make the least correct
observation of nature this year,
 you will have occasion to repeat it
 with illustrations the next, 
and the season and life itself is prolonged.


A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau,  October 19
A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau
"A book, each page written in its own season,
out-of-doors, in its own locality.”
~edited, assembled and rewritten by zphx © 2009-2022

tinyurl.com/HDT19Oct

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