Showing posts with label Tarbell Hills. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tarbell Hills. Show all posts

Saturday, November 30, 2019

My eye rested with pleasure on the white pines.


A cold afternoon
windy with some snow not yet
melted on the ground.
My eye wanders as
I sit on an oak stump by
an old cellar-hole.
Methinks that in my 
mood I am asking Nature 
to give me a sign.
Transient gladness.
I do not know what it is –
something that I see.
This recognition
from white pines now reflecting
a silvery light.
Where is my home? 
It is as indistinct as 
an old cellar-hole. 
And  by the old site
I sit on the stump of an
oak which once grew here.

November 30, 2016

Sunday. 

A rather cold and windy afternoon, with some snow not yet melted on the ground. 

Under the south side of the hill between Brown's and Tarbell's, in a warm nook, disturbed three large gray squirrels and some partridges, who had all sought out this bare and warm place. While the squirrels hid themselves in the tree-tops, I sat on an oak stump by an old cellar-hole and mused. 

This squirrel is always an unexpectedly large animal to see frisking about. 

My eye wanders across the valley to the pine woods which fringe the opposite side, and in their aspect my eye finds something which addresses itself to my nature. 

Methinks that in my mood I was asking Nature to give me a sign. 

I do not know exactly what it was that attracted my eye. I experienced a transient gladness, at any rate, at something which I saw. 

I am sure that my eye rested with pleasure on the white pines, now reflecting a silvery light, the infinite stories of their boughs, tier above tier, a sort of basaltic structure, a crumbling precipice of pine horizontally stratified. Each pine is like a great green feather stuck in the ground. A myriad white pine boughs extend themselves horizontally, one above and behind another, each bearing its burden of silvery sunlight, with darker seams between them, as if it were a great crumbling piny precipice thus stratified. 

On this my eyes pastured, while the squirrels were up the trees behind me. That, at any rate, it was that I got by my afternoon walk, a certain recognition from the pine, some congratulation. 

Where is my home? It is indistinct as an old cellar-hole, now a faint indentation merely in a farmer's field, which he has plowed into and rounded off its edges years ago, and I sit by the old site on the stump of an oak which once grew there. 

Such is the nature where we have lived. 

Thick birch groves stand here and there, dark brown (?) now with white lines more or less distinct. 

The Lygodium palmatum is quite abundant on that side of the swamp, twining round the goldenrods, etc., etc.

H. D. Thoreau, Journal, November 30, 1851

My eye rested with pleasure on the white pines, now reflecting a silvery light. See November 11, 1851 ("There is a cold, silvery light on the white pines as I go through J.P. Brown's field near Jenny Dugan’s.”); December 21. 1851(“Sunlight on pine-needles is the phenomenon of a winter day.”); February 4, 1852 ("Now the white pine are a misty blue; anon a lively, silvery light plays on them, and they seem to erect themselves unusually. . . The sun loves to nestle in the boughs of the pine and pass rays through them."); February 5, 1852 ("The boughs, feathery boughs, of the white pines, tier above tier, reflect a silvery light against the darkness of the grove, as if both the silvery-lighted and greenish bough and the shadowy intervals of the shade behind belong to one tree.”); December 8, 1855 ("Yet it is cheering to walk there while the sun is reflected from far through the aisles with a silvery light from the needles of the pine.”); December 3, 1856 (“Tthe pine forest's edge seen against the winter horizon. . . .The silvery needles of the pine straining the light.”).

The Lygodium palmatum twining round the goldenrods. CLIMBING FERN, or Hartford Fern (Lygodium palmatum) . A species of fern found, rarely, from Massachusetts to Kentucky and southward, remarkable for climbing or twining around weeds and shrubs ~ Wikisource. See October 2, 1859 (“The climbing fern is perfectly fresh, — and apparently therefore an evergreen, — the more easily found amid the withered cinnamon and flowering ferns.”); May 1, 1859 ("The climbing fern is persistent, i. e. retains its greenness still, though now partly brown and withered.")

https://tinyurl.com/HDT511130

Sunday, July 14, 2019

The averge depth of the Concord River

July 14

July 14, 2014

P. M. — Sounded river from Ball's Hill (i. e. off Squaw [?] Harbor) to Atkins's boat-house corner. 

The river, in all the above distance, nowhere washes the base of an isolated (i. e. to except long, lowish hill- banks like Clamshell, etc.) steep hill, without a greater depth off it. The average depth between Sudbury Causeway and Atkins's boat-house bend at wall, or for fifteen miles two hundred and eighty-two rods, is eight and one eighth feet. 

There extends from Tarbell Hill to Skelton Bend what I will call the Straight Reach, a mile and a third long and quite straight. This is the finest water view, making the greatest impression of size, of any that I know on the river. It is very broad, deep, and clear of weeds. Average depth 11+ feet (and at highest water some 19 feet). The bottom is almost everywhere muddy. No weeds in the middle. 

Measuring on the plan by Baldwin, it is three to four hundred feet wide. The depth is also very uniform, varying but little (in the thread) from the average 11 + (except a deep hole and channel at the commencement off Tarbell Hill).

H. D. Thoreau, Journal, July 14, 1859

Monday, July 11, 2016

The meadow is so broad and level that you see shadows of clouds on it as on the sea.

July 11
July 11

A. M. — To Tarbell Swamp Hill all day with W. E. C.

Landed at path end, Great Meadows. No haying there yet. 

In the now isolated ditches, etc., there thousands of little pouts about one inch long, more or less. The water is muddy, and I see no old ones. They are rather difficult to catch (like minnows generally, but less so), but I got two and have them in spirit. 

I scare up several apparent snipes (?), which go off with a crack. They are rather heavy-looking, like woodcocks, but have gray breasts. Are probing the meadow. Quite numerous there. 

The Ludwigia sphoerocarpa, which had been out apparently a week on the 6th of August, 1855, shows hardly a sign of a flower yet. So it will hardly open before August 1st. 

The grass on the islets in those pools is much flattened in many places by the turtles, which lie out sunning on it. They tumble in before me, and by the sound and marks of one I suspect it a snap- turtle. They are commonly E. picta

Bathe and lunch under the oak at Tarbell's first shore. It is about as cool a place as you can find, where you get the southwest breeze from over the broad meadow, for it draws through the valley behind. 

While sitting there, see, some twenty-five rods up-stream, amid the pads on the south side, where we had passed, several apparently young ducks, which soon disappear again in the meadow-grass. Saw them hereabouts August 6th last year. They regularly breed hereabouts, and the broad meadow affords lurking-places. 

The meadow is so broad and level that you see shadows of clouds on it as on the sea. 

A great snap-turtle floats by us with his head out, in midstream, reconnoitring us. Rambles over the hill at angle. 

Allium out some time on the shore. I have only seen it here, methinks, and on the Assabet shores. 

Hear now the link of bobolinks, and see quite a flock of red-wing blackbirds and young (?). 

The water milkweed, or Asclepias pulchra.

H. D. Thoreau, Journal, July 11, 1856

Hear now the link of bobolinks, and see quite a flock of red-wing blackbirds and young.July 13, 1856 (“See quite a large flock of chattering red-wings, the flight of first broods.”);   July 15, 1854 ("We seem to be passing, or to have passed, a dividing line between spring and autumn, and begin to descend the long slope toward winter. . . . Many birds begin to fly in small flocks like grown-up broods"); July 19, 1855 ("Young bobolinks; one of the first autumnalish notes.");  July 22, 1855 ("See small flocks of red-wings, young and old, now, over the willows.") See also A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau, the BobolinkA Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, Young Birds

The water milkweed, or Asclepias pulchra. See July 11, 1851 (" I pluck the blossom of the milkweed in the twilight and find how sweet it smells"); See also   July 5, 1852 ("The Asclepias Cornuti (Syriaca) and the A. incarnata (pulchra) (this hardly out)");  July 7, 1853 ("The Asclepias incarnata, or water asclepias now");  July 15, 1854  ("There are many butterflies, yellow and red, about the Asclepias incarnata now."); July 16, 1851 ("I see the yellow butterflies now gathered in fleets in the road, and on the flowers of the milkweed (Asclepias pulchra) by the roadside, a really handsome flower");  July 21, 1853 ("The Asclepias incarnata is well named water silkweed, for it grows here amid the button- bushes and willows in the wettest places along the river. "); August 24, 1851 ("The pods of the Asclepias pulchra stand up pointedly like slender vases on a salver, an open salver truly! Those of the Asclepias Syriaca hang down. ") and A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, Milkweed


July 11. See A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, July 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 © 2009-2021

Friday, August 7, 2015

A-berrying.

August 7, 2014
August 7. 

To Tarbell Hill again with the Emersons, a-berrying. Very few berries this year.



H. D. Thoreau, Journal, August 7, 1855



See August 7, 1856 ("With a berry party, ride to Conantum.")

Thursday, August 6, 2015

Botonizing the meadows


August 6, 2015
August 6

Down river to Tarbell Hill with C. 

Saw a Sternotherus odoratus, caught by the neck and hung in the fork between a twig and main trunk of a black willow, about two feet above water, — apparently a month or two, being nearly dry. Probably in its haste to get down had fallen and was caught. I have noticed the same thing once or twice before. 

Hear the autumnal crickets. 

At Ball’s Hill see five summer ducks, a brood now grown, feeding amid the pads on the opposite side of the river, with a whitish ring, perhaps nearly around neck. A rather shrill squeaking quack when they go off. 

It is remarkable how much more game you will see if you are in the habit of sitting in the fields and woods. As you pass along with a noise it hides itself, but presently comes forth again. 

The Ludwigia spharocarpa out maybe a week. I was obliged to wade to it all the way from the shore, the meadow-grass cutting my feet above and making them smart. You must wear boots here.

The lespedeza with short heads, how long? These great meadows through which I wade have a great abundance of hedge-hyssop now in bloom in the water. Small St. John’s-worts and elodeas, lanceolate loosestrife, arrow heads, small climbing bellflower, also horse-mint on the drier clods. These all over the meadow. 

I see seven or eight nighthawks together; dull-buff breasts, with tails short and black beneath. 

The mole cricket creaks along the shore. 

Meadow-haying on all hands.

H. D. Thoreau, Journal, August 6, 1855


Hear the autumnal crickets . . . 
The mole cricket creaks along the shore. See  August 6, 1854 (“.This anticipation of the fall, — coolness and cloud, and the crickets steadily chirping in mid-afternoon.”);  see also August 4, 1851 ("I hear the note of a cricket, and am penetrated with the sense of autumn."); August 18, 1856 “I hear the steady (not intermittent) shrilling of apparently the alder cricket, clear, loud, and autumnal, a season sound.”) and A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau, the Cricket in August

The Ludwigia spharocarpa out maybe a week.  See August 1, 1856 ("Ludwigia sphaerocarpa apparently a week out, a foot and a half to two feet high.") See also Gobotany — round-pod water-primrose
 
Small St. John’s-worts and elodeas, lanceolate loosestrife, arrow heads, small climbing bellflower, also horse-mint . . . all over the meadow. See August 13, 1856 (“Is there not now a prevalence of aromatic herbs in prime? — The polygala roots, blue-curls, wormwood, pennyroyal, Solidago odora, rough sunflowers, horse-mint, etc., etc. Does not the season require this tonic? ”) See also A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, St. Johns-wort (Hypericum)

I see seven or eight nighthawks together
See . August 2, 1854 ("The nighthawk flies low , skimming over the ground now "): see also A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau,, the Nighthawk


Meadow-haying on all hands. See August 6, 1858 ("We pass haymakers in every meadow,");   August 7, 1854 ("A great part of the farmers of Concord are now in the meadows, and toward night great loads of hay are seen rolling slowly along the river’s bank,"); See also A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau, Haymaking

August 6. See A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, August 6
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 © 2009-2025

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

A vein of coolness in the wind

August 6. 

To Tarbell Hills by boat. 

August 6, 2017

Rather cool with a strong wind, before which we glide. The rippled surface of the water and the light under sides of the white maples in rounded masses bordering the stream, and also the silvery tops of the swamp white oaks, give a pleasing breezy aspect to the shores. The sun is quite hot to-day, but the wind is cool and I question if my thin coat will be sufficient. Methinks that after this date there is commonly a vein of coolness in the wind. 

The Great Meadows are for the most part shorn. 

Small light-green sensitive ferns are springing up full of light on the bank. 

I see some smaller white maples turned a dull red, — crimsonish, — a slight blush on them. 

Grape-vines, are methinks more conspicuous now at a distance along the edge of the meadow, where they round and mass the trees and bushes, here and there marked with the white, downy under sides of the leaves. 

The wind is very unsteady and flirts our sail about to this side and that. We prefer to sail to-day (Sunday) because there are no haymakers in the meadow.

Land at Tarbell's Hills.  

It is at length cloudy, and still behind the hills, and very grateful is this anticipation of the fall, — coolness and cloud, and the crickets steadily chirping in mid-afternoon. 

As I look westward up the stream, the oak, etc., on Ponkawtasset are of a very dark green, almost black, which, methinks, they have worn only since midsummer. 

We row back with two big stones in the stern. 

H. D. Thoreau, Journal, August 6, 1854


Methinks that after this date there is commonly a vein of coolness in the wind.
See August 7, 1854 ("It is the glistening autumnal side of summer. I feel a cool vein in the breeze, which braces my thought.")

The Great Meadows are for the most part shorn. See August 5, 1854 ("A platoon of haymakers has just attacked the meadow-grass . . . We are now i
n the midst of the meadow-haying season.") See also A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, Haymaking

Small light-green sensitive ferns are springing up full of light on the bank. See August 19, 1854 ("The very light yellowish-green of the sensitive fern which the mowers have left."); September 6, 1856 ("The sensitiveness of the sensitive fern. If you take a tender plant by the stem, the warmth of your hand will cause the leaves to curl.")

This anticipation of the fall, — coolness and cloud, and the crickets steadily chirping in mid-afternoon. See July 28, 1854 ("Last evening it was much cooler, and I heard a decided fall sound of crickets."); July 30 1852 (After midsummer we . . . are forward to see in each sight and hear in each sound some presage of the fall,"; August 4, 1851 ("I hear the note of a cricket, and am penetrated with the sense of autumn."); August 6, 1852 ("Has not the year grown old ? . . . It is the signs of the fall that affect us most. "); August 6, 1855 ("Hear the autumnal crickets. "); August 7, 1854 ("The cool nocturnal creak of the crickets is heard in the mid-afternoon.") See also A Book of the Seasons by Henry Thoreau, the Cricket in August and A Book of the Seasons by Henry Thoreau, Midsummer midlife blues.

The oak, etc . . . are of a very dark green, almost black, which, methinks, they have worn only since midsummer.
  See August 8, 1854 ("The foliage of most trees is now not only most dense, but a very dark green.")

August 6. See A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, August 6

Coolness and cloud and  
crickets steadily chirping 
in mid-afternoon –
we row back with two
big stones in the stern.

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 © 2009-2024

tinyurl.com/hdt-540806 




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