Wednesday, September 27, 2023

A Book of the Seasons: September 27 (red maples, chipping sparrow, asters and goldenrods , blue mountains, white light, crickets)

 


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


Single red maple –
a blaze of red reflected 
from troubled water.

I see the colors 
of trees and shrubs putting on 
their October dress.
 September 27, 1856

A little dipper
in middle of the river –
I sit down and watch.


September 27, 2014


Yesterday I traced the note of what I have falsely thought the Rana palustrisor cricket frog, to its true source . . .  a mole cricket (Gryllotalpa brevipennis). September 27, 1855

 What are those little birds in flocks in the garden and on the peach trees these mornings, about size of chip-birds, without distinct chestnut crowns?  September 27, 1858 

The maples by the riverside look very green yet, have not begun to blush, nor are the leaves touched by frost. September 27, 1851

Some single red maples now fairly make a show along the meadow. I see a blaze of red reflected from the troubled water. September 27, 1855 

At last, its labors for the year being consummated and every leaf ripened to its full, it flashes out conspicuous to the eye of the most casual observer, with all the virtue and beauty of a maple, – Acer rubrum.  September 27, 1857 

Red maples now fairly glow along the shore . . . It is the first blush which is the purest.   September 27, 1858

It is a day for fishermen. September 27, 1851

The farmers are gathering in their corn. September 27, 1851

The farmers digging potatoes on shore pause a moment to watch my sail and bending mast. September 27, 1858

See men raking cranberries now, or far away squatting in the meadows, where they are picking them.  September 27, 1858

Start up a snipe in the meadow. September 27, 1856

Rambled over the hills toward Tarbell's. The huckleberry bushes appear to be unusually red this fall, reddening these hills.  September 27, 1851

Huckleberries are still abundant and quite plump on Conantum, though they have a somewhat dried taste.  September 27, 1857

The medeola berries are common now, and the large red berries of the panicled Solomon's-seal.  September 27, 1852

The arum berries are now in perfection, cone-shaped spikes an inch and a half long, of scarlet or vermilion- colored, irregular, somewhat pear-shaped berries springing from a purplish core. September 27, 1852

At Saw Mill Brook many finely cut and flat ferns are faded whitish and very handsome, as if pressed, — very delicate.  September 27, 1852

The large common ferns (either cinnamon or interrupted) are yellowish, and also many as rich a deep brown now as ever. September 27, 1857

Some tall, many-flowered, bluish-white asters are still abundant by the brook-sides. September 27, 1851

The Aster multiflorus may easily be confounded with the A. Tradescanti. Like it, it whitens the roadside in some places. It has purplish disks, but a less straggling top than the Tradescanti. September 27, 1856

Solidago nemoralis nearly done. September 27, 1857

Solidago speciosa not quite out!!   September 27, 1856

Witch-hazel two thirds yellowed. September 27, 1857

White birches have fairly begun to yellow, and blackberry vines here and there in sunny places look like a streak of blood on the grass.  September 27, 1857

Green lice are still on the birches. September 27, 1852

Bass, too, fairly begun to yellow. September 27, 1857

From the mountains we do not discern our native hills; but from our native hills we look out easily to the far blue mountains.  September 27, 1852

What is it but a faint blue cloud, a mist that may vanish?  September 27, 1852

But now that I look across the globe in an instant to the dim Monadnock peak . . . I cannot realize that on the tops of those cool blue ridges are in abundance berries still, bluer than themselves, as if they borrowed their blueness from their locality. September 27, 1852

Who can believe that the mountain peak which he beholds fifty miles off in the horizon, rising far and faintly blue above an intermediate range, while he stands on his trivial native hills . . . can be the same with that which he looked up at once near at hand from a gorge in the midst of primitive woods? September 27, 1852

It is a very fine afternoon to be on the water, somewhat Indian-summer-like. September 27, 1857

The flashing clearness of the atmosphere. More light appears to be reflected from the earth, less absorbed. September 27, 1852

Now the sun in the west is coming out and lights up the river a mile off, so that it shines with a white light like a burnished silver mirror.  September 27, 1851

I do not know what constitutes the peculiarity and charm of this weather; the broad water so smooth, notwithstanding the slight wind . . . There is a slight coolness in the air, yet the sun is occasionally very warm. September 27, 1857

As I sit there I see the shadow of a hawk flying above and behind me. I think I see more hawks nowadays. September 27, 1857

I see some black circling mote beating along, circling along the meadow's edge, now lost for a moment as it turns edgewise in a peculiar light, now reappearing further or nearer. September 27, 1857

Looking up, I see a little dipper in the middle of the river . . . I sit down and watch. September 27, 1860

I see the colors of trees and shrubs beginning to put on their October dress, and the creak of the mole cricket sounds late along the shore. September 27, 1856

*****

September 27, 2020

March 28, 1858 ("turning my glass toward the mountains, I can see the sun reflected from the rocks on Monadnock, and I know that it would be pleasant to be there too to-day as well as here")
March 31, 1853 ("It is affecting to see a distant mountain-top,. . . still as blue and ethereal to your eyes as is your memory of it.')
May 17, 1858 ("I doubt if in the landscape there can be anything finer than a distant mountain-range. They are a constant elevating influence.")
August 2, 1852 ("In many moods it is cheering to look across hence to that blue rim of the earth, . . .  and be reminded how many brave and contented lives are lived between me and the horizon. . . . These hills extend our plot of earth; they make our native valley or indentation in the earth so much the larger.")  
August 5, 1852 (" From Smith's Hill beyond, there is as good a view of the mountains as from any place in our neighbor hood, because you look across the broad valley in which Concord lies first of all. The foreground is on a larger scale and more proportionate. The Peterboro Hills are to us as good as mountains. Hence, too, I see that fair river-reach, in the north.")
 August 11, 1854 ("Green lice on birches.")
August 13, 1852 ("There are green lice now on the birches, but I notice no cotton on them.")
September 2, 1853 ("The medeola berries are now dull glossy and almost blue-black; about three, on slender threads one inch long, arising in the midst of the cup formed by the purple bases of the whorl of three upper leaves.")
September 9, 1858 ("Watched a little dipper some ten rods off with my glass . . . Who knows how many little dippers are sailing and sedulously diving now along the edge of the pickerel-weed and the button-bushes on our river, unsuspected by most? . . [O]rdinary eyes might range up and down the river all day and never detect its small black head above the water.")
September 9, 1853 ("I find myself covered with green and winged lice from the birches")
September 10, 1853 ("The Aster Tradescanti, now in its prime, sugars the banks all along the riverside with a profusion of small white blossoms resounding with the hum of bees.")
September 12, 1851 ("It is worth the while to see the mountains in the horizon once a day")
September 13, 1856 ("The Aster Tradescanti now sugars the banks densely, since I left, a week ago. Nature improves this her last opportunity to empty her lap of flowers.")
September 14, 1856 ("Now for the Aster Tradescanti along low roads, like the Turnpike, swarming with butterflies and bees. Some of them are pink.")
September 16, 1854 (" I see little flocks of chip-birds along the roadside and on the apple trees, showing their light under sides when they rise.")
September 21, 1854 ("A fine-grained air, seething or shimmering as I look over the fields, reminds me of the Indian summer that is to come.")
September 24, 1853 ("Witch-hazel well out. ")
September 25, 1852 ("The river is getting to be too cold for bathing.")
September 25, 1857 ("The red maple has fairly begun to blush in some places by the river . . . A single tree becomes the crowning beauty of some meadowy vale and attracts the attention of the traveller from afar.")
September 26 1854 (" Took my last bath the 24th . Probably shall not bathe again this year. It was chilling cold.")
September 26, 1854 ("Some single red maples are very splendid now, the whole tree bright-scarlet against the cold green pines; now, when very few trees are changed, a most remarkable object in the landscape; seen a mile off")
September 26, 1857("I see a large black cricket on the river, a rod from shore, and a fish is leaping at it.")

This fine afternoon
the creak of the cricket sounds
late along the shore.
September 27, 1856

September 29, 1853 ("The witch-hazel at Lee's Cliff, in a fair situation, has but begun to blossom; has not been long out, so that I think it must be later than the gentian. Its leaves are yellowed.")
September 29, 1858 ("Take perhaps our last bath in White Pond for the year.")
September 30, 1858 (" I see undoubtedly the little dipper by the edge of the pads this afternoon, and I think I have not seen it before this season.  ")
October 3, 1858 ("Some particular maple among a hundred will be of a peculiarly bright and pure scarlet, and, by its difference of tint and intenser color, attract our eyes even at a distance in the midst of the crowd")
 October 4, 1858 ("The bass is in the prime of its change, a mass of yellow.")
October 4, 1859  ("This is a fine and warm afternoon, Indian-summer like, but we have not had cold enough before it.")
October 5, 1858 ("I still see large flocks, apparently of chip birds, on the weeds and ground in the yard; without very distinct chestnut crowns, and they are divided by a light line.")
October 7, 1860 ("Now and for a week the chip-birds in flocks; the withered grass and weeds, etc., alive with them")
November 1, 1858 ("A man dwells in his native valley like a corolla in its calyx, like an acorn in its cup. Here, of course, is all that you love, all that you expect, all that you are.")
.November 5, 1857 ("Start up a snipe feeding in a wet part of the Dam Meadows")
November 11, 1851 ("The horizon has one kind of beauty and attraction to him who has never explored the hills and mountains in it, and another ... to him who has.")
December 8, 1854 ("Why do the mountains never look so fair as from my native fields?")


September 27, 2019

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, September 27
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 © 2009-2023

Sunday, September 24, 2023

Saw Ktaadn from a hill.

September 24

Saturday. 

Saw Ktaadn from a hill about two miles northwest of Bangor on the road to Pushaw. It is about eighty miles from Bangor. This was the nearest point from which we made out to see it. 

In the afternoon, walked up the Kenduskieg. 

White golden-rod, fall dandelion, hog peanut, Solidago arguta and altissima, Aster macrophyllus (?), and red maple (?). 

Witch-hazel well out. 

Epilobium coloratum, Solidago squarrosa, S. latifolia, Aster cordifolius (?). 

H. D. Thoreau, Journal, September 24, 1853

Saw Ktaadn from a hill about two miles northwest of Bangor See September 21, 1853 ("Rained all day, which prevented the view of Ktaadn, otherwise to be seen in very many places . . . Reached Bangor at dark.")

The Kenduskeag Stream flows from the northwest into the Penobscot at Bangor.

White golden-rod . . . Solidago arguta and altissima . . . Solidago squarrosa, S. latifolia. See September 24, 1854 ("Solidago nemorosa . . . generally withered or dim"); September 24, 1856 ("Early S. stricta, done some time. . . S. altissima, much past prime . . . S. bicolor . . . in prime . . S. lalifolia, in prime..") See also  July 31, 1857 ("The commonest solidago on the East Branch, Solidago squarrosa."): August 12, 1852 ("Solidago bicolor, white goldenrod, apparently in good season"); August 21, 1856 ("The prevailing solidagos now are, lst, stricta. . .; 2d, the three-ribbed, of apparently several varieties, which I have called arguta or gigantea (apparently truly the last); 3d, altissima, though commonly only a part of its panicles; 4th, nemoralis, just beginning generally to bloom. Then there is the odora, 5th, out some time, but not common; and, 6th, the bicolor, just begun in some places"); August 24, 1853 ("The altissima . . . is just beginning to be abundant. Its tops a foot or more broad, with numerous recurved racemes on every side, with yellow and yellowing triangular points. It is the most conspicuous of all . . . Solidago latifolia not yet."); August 31, 1853 (" The Solidago altissima is now the prevailing . . . goldenrod, in low grounds where the swamp has been cleared. It occupies acres, densely rising as high as your head"); September 1, 1856 ("Solidago stricta, still very abundant, though probably a little past prime. S. gigantea, say in prime. S. nemoralis, not quite in prime, but very abundant. S. altissima, perhaps in prime. S. odora, in prime, or maybe a little past. . . .S. bicolor, not quite in prime, but common . . .S. latifolia, not yet at all.");  September 6, 1856 ("Solidago arguta very common, apparently in prime"); September 15, 1856 ("Early Solidago stricta (that is, arguta) done "); September 12, 1859 ("The golden-rod on the top and the slope of the hill are the Solidago nemoralis, at the base the taller S. altissima. ); September 16, 1857 ("Solidago latifolia in prime at Botrychium Swamp.");  September 21, 1856 ("Solidago altissima past prime . . .[On top of Cliff, behind the big stump] is a great place for white goldenrod, now in its prime and swarming with honey-bees.");  October 2, 1856 ("Solidago bicolor considerably past prime"); October 6, 1858 ("Solidago latifolia in bloom still, but always sparingly."); October 8, 1856 ("S. latifolia, far gone."); October 11, 1856 ("The white goldenrod is still common here, and covered with bees."); October 20, 1852 ("Tansy, white goldenrod, blue-stemmed goldenrod. Aster undulatus, autumnal dandelion, tall buttercup, yarrow, mayweed. ");September 19, 1857("Solidago arguta variety done, say a week or more.") [Solidago arguta in old usage, or (misapplied) solidago stricta, is solidago juncea (early goldenrod) ~Vascular Flora of Concord, Massachusetts; see September 11, 1857 ("My old S. stricta (early form) must be S. Arguta var. juncea.")]

Saturday, September 23, 2023

Over the highest hill behind Bangor.

September 23

Friday. Walked down the riverside this forenoon to the hill where they were using a steamshovel at the new railroad cut, and thence to a hill three quarters of a mile further. 

Saw Aster undulatus, Solidago nemoralis, fragrant everlasting, silvery cinquefoil, small white birch, Lobelia inflata, both kinds of primrose, low cudweed, lactuca, Polygonum cilinode (apparently out of bloom), yellow oxalis.

I returned across the fields behind the town, and over the highest hill behind Bangor, and up the Kenduskieg, from which I saw the Ebeeme Mountains in the northwest and hills we had come by. 

The arbor-vitæ is the prevailing shrub.


H. D. Thoreau, Journal, September 23, 1853

Friday. Walked down the riverside. See September 21, 1853 ("Reached Bangor at dark."); September 22, 1853 ("Behind one house, an Indian had nearly finished one canoe and was just beginning another, outdoors")

Aster undulatus. See September 20, 1852 ("Aster undulatus, or variable aster, with a large head of middle-sized blue flowers."); 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 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 25, 1858 ("The Aster undulatus is now a dark purple (its leaves), with brighter purple or crimson under sides.");November 7, 1858 ("Aster undulatus and several goldenrods, at least, may be found yet.")

Solidago nemoralis. See note to September 12, 1859 ("One dense mass of the bright golden recurved wands of the Solidago nemoralis, waving in the wind and turning upward to the light hundreds, if not a thousand, flowerets each.")

Fragrant everlasting, See August 11, 1858 (“I smell the fragrant everlasting concealed in the higher grass and weeds there, some distance off.”); September 19, 1852 ("The fall dandelion and the fragrant everlasting abound")

I saw the Ebeeme Mountains in the northwest and hills we had come by. See Book for the Children of Maine, 19 (1831)   ("The Ebeeme mountains nearly south of Ktaadn, are about four thousand feet high.")

Tuesday, September 19, 2023

To see what was primitive about our Concord River.



September 19   

Monday. [The Maine Woods]

I looked very narrowly at the vegetation as we glided along close to the shore, and now and then made Joe turn aside for me to pluck a plant, that I might see what was primitive about our Concord River.

H. D Thoreau, Journal, September 19, 1853 

See September 21, 1856 ("I have within a week found in Concord two of the new plants I found up-country. Such is the advantage of going abroad, — to enable to detect your own plants. I detected them first abroad, because there I was looking for the strange.") See also August 30, 1856 ("I shall never find in the wilds of Labrador any greater wildness than in some recess in Concord"); September 2, 1856  ("It commonly chances that I make my most interesting botanical discoveries when I am in a thrilled and expectant mood, . . .  prepared for strange things."); July 31, 1857 ("A new plant, the halenia or spurred gentian, which I observed afterward on the carries all the way down to near the mouth of the East Branch,"); November 20, 1857 ("We only need travel enough to give our intellects an airing."); November 23, 1860 ("I sail the unexplored sea of Concord")

Monday, September 11, 2023

A Book of the Seasons: September 11 (How much fresher some flowers, the month of wild-looking berries)


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 


This cold white twilight
and bright starlight makes us think
of wood for winter.


September 11, 2021


For a week or so the evenings have been sensibly longer, and I am beginning to throw off my summer idleness.  September 11, 1854

Cool weather. Sit with windows shut, and many by fires. A great change since the 6th, when the heat was so oppressive.   September 11, 1853

Cranberries are being raked for fear of frosts.  September 11, 1852

Signs of frost last night in M. Miles's cleared swamp. Potato vines black. September 11, 1853

These fall rains are a peculiarity of the season.  September 11, 1852

This being a cloudy and somewhat rainy day, the autumnal dandelion is open in the afternoon. September 11, 1859

How much fresher some flowers look in rainy weather! When I thought they were about done, they appear to revive, and moreover their beauty is enhanced, as if by the contrast of the louring atmosphere with their bright colors. Such are the purple gerardia and the Bidens cernuaSeptember 11, 1852

Bidens cernua, or nodding burr marigold, like a small sunflower (with rays) in Heywood Brook, i. e. beggar- tick. September 11, 1851

Bidens connata (?), without rays, in Hubbard's Meadow. September 11, 1851

Blue-eyed grass still. September 11, 1851

The purple gerardia and blue-curls are interesting for their petals strewn about, beaten down by the rain. September 11, 1852

Many a brook I look into is strewn with the purple petals of the gerardia, whose stalk is not obvious in the bank.  September 11, 1852

Solidago puberula apparently in prime, with the S. stricta, near gerardia oaks. September 11, 1857  

My old S. stricta (early form) must be S. arguta var. juncea. It is now done.  September 11, 1857

To my surprise I find, by the black oaks at the sand hole east of Clamshell, the Solidago rigida, apparently in prime or a little past.  September 11, 1857  

Two-leaved Solomon Seal berries
(Canada mayflower)
September 11, 2023

September is the month when various small, and commonly inedible, berries in cymes and clusters hang over the roadsides and along the walls and fences, or spot the forest floor. September 11, 1859

The prinos berries are now seen, red (or scarlet), clustered along the stems, amid the as yet green leaves. A cool red. September 11, 1859

The Rhus Toxicodendron berries are now ripe and greenish-yellow, and some already shrivelled, over bare rocks. September 11, 1859

By the pool in Hubbard's Grove, I see tall tupelos, all dotted with the now ripe (apparently in prime) small oval purple berries, two or three together on the end of slender peduncles, amid the reddening leaves.  September 11, 1859

The white-red-purple-berried bush in Hubbard's Meadow, whose berries were fairest a fortnight ago, appears to be the Viburnum nudum, or withe-rod. September 11, 1851

Red choke-berry ripe; how long?   September 11, 1857

The clusters of the Viburnum Lentago berries, now in their prime, are exceedingly and peculiarly handsome, and edible withal. These are drooping, like the Cornus sericea cymes. Each berry in the cyme is now a fine, clear red on the exposed side and a distinct and clear green on the opposite side. Many are already purple, and they turn in your hat, but they are handsomest when thus red and green.  September 11, 1859

The wax-like fruit of Cornus paniculata still holds on abundantly.  September 11, 1859

Our cornel (the common) with berries blue one side, whitish the other, appears to be either the Cornus sericea or Cstolonifera of Gray, i. e. the silky, or the red-osier cornel (osier rouge).  September 11, 1851

The large clusters of the Smilacina racemosa berries, four or five inches long, of whitish berries a little smaller than a pea, finely marked and dotted with vermilion or bright red, are very conspicuous. I do not chance to see any ripe. September 11, 1859

No fruit is handsomer than the acorn. I see but few fallen yet, and they are all wormy. Very pretty, especially, are the white oak acorns, three raying from one centre.  September 11, 1859

We have had no rain for a week, and yet the pitcher-plants have water in them . . . Are they not replenished by the dews always, and, being shaded by the grass, saved from evaporation? What wells for the birds!   September 11, 1851

Loudly the mole cricket creaks by mid-afternoon. September 11, 1855 

I see some yellow butterflies and others occasionally and singly only. September 11, 1851

Muskrat-houses begun.  September 11, 1855 

This is a cold evening with a white twilight, and threatens frost, the first in these respects decidedly autumnal evening.  It makes us think of wood for the winter.  September 11, 1854

This twilight is succeeded by a brighter starlight than heretofore.    September 11, 1854

This and the last four or five nights have been perhaps the most sultry in the year thus far. September 11, 1851


*****

August 18, 1854 ("We can walk across the Great Meadows now in any direction. They are quite dry. Even the pitcher-plant leaves are empty.")
August 21, 1854 ("In Hubbard's meadow, between the two woods, I can not find a pitcher-plant with any water in it.")
August 22, 1854 ("I find at length a pitcher-plant with a spoonful of water in it. It must be last night's dew.")
August 25, 1852 ("One of those serious and normal storms ~ not a shower which you can see through, not a transient cloud that drops rain ~ something regular, a fall rain, coincident with a different mood or season of the mind.")
August 26, 1859 ("The first fall rain is a memorable occasion, when the river is raised and cooled, and the first crop of sere and yellow leaves falls. The air is cleared; the dog-days are over; sun-sparkles are seen on water; crickets sound more distinct")
August 27, 1856 ("There are many wild-looking berries about now.")
August 28, 1853 ("A cool, white, autumnal evening.")
August 30, 1853 ("Viburnum Lentago berries are now common and handsome")
September 1, 1854 ("The Cornus sericea berries are now in prime, of different shades of blue, lighter or darker, and bluish white.")
September 1, 1854 ("The Viburnum Lentago
are just fairly begun to have purple cheeks.")
September 1, 1856 ("Cohush berries appear now to be in their prime, and arum berries, and red choke-berries, which last further up in this swamp, with their peculiar glossy red and squarish form, are really very handsome. A few medeola berries ripe.")
September 1, 1856 ("Red choke-berries, which last further up in this swamp, with their peculiar glossy red and squarish form, are really very handsome.")
September 2, 1853 ("The dense oval bunches of arum berries now startle the walker in swamps. They are a brilliant vermilion on a rich ground . . . The medeola berries are now dull glossy and almost blue-black; about three, on slender threads one inch long, arising in the midst of the cup formed by the purple bases of the whorl of three upper leaves.")
September 3, 1853 ("Now is the season for those comparatively rare but beautiful wild berries which are not food for man.. . .Berries which are as beautiful as flowers, but far less known, the fruit of the flower.")
September 3, 1856 (A singular and pleasing contrast, also, do the different kinds of viburnum and cornel berries present when compared with each other. ")
September 4, 1859 (See a very large mass of spikenard berries fairly ripening, eighteen inches long")
September 3, 1853 ("Now is the season for those comparatively rare but beautiful wild berries which are not food for man.. . .Berries which are as beautiful as flowers, but far less known, the fruit of the flower.")
September 3, 1856 (“The white berries of the panicled cornel, soon and apparently prematurely dropping from its pretty fingers, are very bitter. So also are those of the C. sericea.”)
September 3, 1856 ("Gather four or five quarts of Viburnum nudum berries, now in their prime, attracted more by the beauty of the cymes than the flavor of the fruit. The berries, which are of various sizes and forms, — elliptical, oblong, or globular, — are in different stages of maturity on the same cyme, and so of different colors, — green or white, rose-colored, and dark purple or black, — i. e. three or four very distinct and marked colors, side by side. If gathered when rose-colored, they soon turn dark purple and are soft and edible, though before bitter. They add a new and variegated wildness to the swampy sprout-lands. Remarkable for passing through so many stages of color before they arrive at maturity.")
September 4, 1857 ("Cornus sericea berries begin to ripen")
September 4, 1859 ("The Cornus sericea and C. paniculata are rather peculiar for turning to a dull purple on the advent of cooler weather and frosts,")
September 6, 1854 ("I think I may say that large Solomon’s-seal berries have begun to be red.")
September 6, 1856 ("Solidago arguta very common, apparently in prime, with sharp-toothed, more or less elliptic leaves and slender terminal drooping racemes; size of S. stricta.")
September 7, 1856 ("Apparently Cornus stolonifera (?) by brook . . . with the sericea.")
September 7, 1857 ("Our first slight frost in some places this morning. Northwest wind to-day and cool weather; such weather as we have not had for a long time, a new experience, which arouses a corresponding breeze in us.")
September 10, 1858 ("A musquash-house begun.")
September 10, 1860 ("There was a frost this morning.")




September 12, 1851 ("Bidens cernua, nodding burr-marigold, with five petals")
September 12, 1859 ("The four kinds of bidens (frondosa, connata, cernua, and chrysanthemoides) abound now . . . the third and fourth are conspicuous and interesting, expressing by their brilliant yellow the ripeness of the low grounds")
September 13, 1852("The great bidens in the sun in brooks affects me as the rose of the fall. They are low suns in the brook.")
September 12, 1853 ("The Smilacina racemosa berries are well red now")
September 13, 1856 ("The Viburnum Lentago, which I left not half turned red when I went up-country a week ago, are now quite black-purple and shrivelled like raisins on my table, and sweet to taste, though chiefly seed.")
September 13, 1858 ("Many yellow butterflies in road and fields all the country over.")
September 14, 1852 ("This morning the first frost")
September 14, 1854 ("The great bidens, the flower and ornament of the riversides at present, and now in its glory,. . . Full of the sun. It needs a name.")
September 15, 1856 ("Early Solidago stricta (that is, arguta) done ")
September 15, 1856 ("What I must call Bidens cernua, like a small chrysanthemoides, is bristly hairy, somewhat connate and apparently regularly toothed")
September 19, 1851 ("Large-flowered bidens, or beggar-ticks,or bur-marigold, now abundant by riverside.")
September 20, 1857 ("This is our first fall rain, and makes a dividing line between the summer and fall.")
September 26, 1857 ("Solidago rigida, just done, within a rod southwest of the oak")
September 27, 1856 ("The creak of the mole cricket sounds late along the shore.")
October 15, 1851 ("The muskrat-houses appear now for the most part to be finished. ")
November 16, 1852 ("At Holden's Spruce Swamp. The water is frozen in the pitcher-plant leaf.")
February 11, 1858 ("The water in the pitcher-plant leaves is frozen.")

*****

See also A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau:


September 11, 2022

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,  September 11 
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/HDT11SEPT 





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