.
I woke up yesterday morning to fog in our neighbor’s field….
.

.
And the distinct sound of rumbling…. which at this time of year could only mean one thing.
.

.
Fall in the country means bush hogging and as the sun started to break through, the hog was hard at work.
.

.
Our neighbor hires a local man every autumn to knock down the growth in her fields. This is necessary if you want to keep fields from becoming forests and since he’s right next door…. we piggyback on the opportunity and have him do our little parcel of back field as well.
.

.
And as I looked out on our backyard pre hogging, I was pleased to see the maple trees we planted this spring had survived the awful summer drought and were beginning to turn color like their larger neighbors.
.

.
It was touch and go for a while. Maine was hot and dry for months and we’re on a well. I had to stop dragging my 300 feet of hose out there to water them and I feared our nearly $1,000 investment would shrivel up and die. But they seem to have hung on and for that I’m grateful.
.

.
Later on in the day it was our turn.
.

.
And those trees sure do make a dramatic background for hogging.
🙂
.
Hey, yay for those maple trees. I know you were working hard to keep them alive!🍁
LikeLiked by 1 person
They didn’t grow much, but they’re not dead so that’s a win in my book.
LikeLiked by 1 person
We did not lose our Amur maple, but we planted it in 2008, not knowing that 16 inches below the surface was an at least 4 ft. layer of clay, which I discovered about 8 years later. The maple lived, but it grew so slowly, maybe an inch a year, we wondered what was happening with it. When I discovered the clay layer in the mid teens, I knew, but by then it was too late to try digging it out and digging a hole under it, then replanting it. We had to let it sink or swim on its own. I guess the main root broke through the clay, in about 2019 or 2020 because now it is a tree, growing a foot or more a year. Maybe in 5 more years it will be a shade tree. Maples seem to have a strong will to survive.
LikeLiked by 2 people
The area where my husband planted is clay as well. I tried to talk him into a different location… but no.
LikeLike
If I had known that layer of clay was there, I would have tried to dig through it, as I did when I found out it was there, or I would have moved it to another spot. Weirdly, after digging through the clay and filling the hole with soil, the tree I planted there died in a long cruel winter, while the maple has survived the last 13 winters. I have not tried to plant anything else in the soil hole since.
LikeLiked by 1 person
My husband keeps planting in these areas and they keep dying. You’d think he’d learn…
LikeLike
He’s a marine. Attack! Attack! Attack!
LikeLiked by 1 person
They are stubborn creatures..
LikeLike
Ok so glad your maple trees survived. Here’s hoping they make it from here on out to grow into some mighty maples 🤞🍀🙏
LikeLiked by 1 person
The first few years are always the hardest. If they make it through the winter, I’ll feel better.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Soooo pretty!
LikeLiked by 1 person
The foliage color has been brighter than I expected this this year.
LikeLike
I have to look hard to see colors changes here. They’re few and far between. But on Fri I noticed a jacaranda in full bloom (pretty sure it’s the wrong season) and the thorny tree down the street is full of big pink flowers.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I hope blooming at this time of year does not affect the tree. When I was living just north of Rg one year there was a freak warm spell in December, and all the trees started leafing, a few even flowered. But when winter returned with a vengeance, the temperatures falling well below freezing, many of the trees died, and none of the ones that leafed early grew new leaves that year. It was a very strange year. Coming from the prairies, where nothing like that ever happens, I had no idea what to expect.
LikeLike
Our weather is pretty consistent year round so the trees will be fine overall. I’m sure they flowered due to us finally getting some rain!
Worldwide, climate change has caused ots of plants to flowering twice a year, causing their lifespans to shorten. I first heard about it happening in Brazil. My grapefruit tree is dying but still has fruit year round.
LikeLike
I have never knowingly known anyone with a grapefruit tree. How does it taste fresh off the tree?
LikeLike
The grapefruit were fantastic – very swwet by grapefruit standards. Lots of people would pick them – I used to get abput 500 fruits, twice a year.
Fruit trees must have been a planned thing way back when… I had grapefruit, neighbor on one side had lemons, the other has oranges, and avocados across the street.
LikeLiked by 1 person
That sounds heavenly. 500 grapefruit a year? Bring on the Palomas!🍹
LikeLike
What’s a Paloma? I drank Greyhounds for awhile.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Tequila and grapefruit juice … sometimes with fresh lime juice and champagne.
LikeLike
Ahh… that’s why I didn’t know it, tquila and I are not friends. But with the extras, it sounds good!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sounds like a community affair. Would that even be possinle in today’s society?
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yep… people were taking them up till 2yrs ago, when the tree hot sick. About 10yrs ago, a community food group came and picked a couple hundred.
When I went fruit picking, I’d usually pick a ton extra and leave them.out in boxes. It was a great way to meet people!
LikeLike
May I ask where you live. I think I knew, but I have forgotten.
LikeLike
Long Beach, Calif
LikeLike
Guess you don’t want to live where our high on Saturday was 2°C, or about 36°F.
LikeLike
To me, that’s subzero. I consider 64 tobe snow weather.
But I’d love to visit!!
LikeLike
We should be having our first snowfall this weekend, according to the eeatherperson. But it diesn’t sound like it will be pretty. They are predicting up to 10″ and if that happens we will have sjow from now until May!
If you come to visit, do not come the last week of January. Traditionally that week is the coldest week of the year, with temperatures below 40°, C or F, diesn’t matter.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Ugh. I like snow but am not ready for it yet. Parts of Michigan and Wisconsin got some here as well.
LikeLike
I like when the first snowfall is light and fluffy,no shovelling, it melts as fast as it falls. Everything looks so pure and serene.
If the weatherperson is correct, we will be stuck inside for days because neither of us can shovel much anymore: my heart and her knees. Luckily our freezer is full. We can ride it out, if it happens.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Shoveling wet snow is a nightmare. I can’t say my knee is looking forward to it either.
LikeLike
I hope you do ‘t have to. But I doubt that is possible.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Big fat NOPE!!!
I knew it gets cold there, but not THAT cold!
Sometime last spring, the temp diff between me and a blogger in Canada was 139°F. I still insist that shouldn’tbe possible on the planet, let alone just a couple thousand miles apart!!
LikeLike
Very possible, and happens yearly. It is why we say Canadians can live in any climate and thrive.
LikeLike
I love the fragrance of grapefruit. I’ve recently added some to my non-toxic cleaning solution, i.e. Peel the zest off a grapefruit and put into a large bottle of white vinegar. Let it sit for a few weeks and then have a whiff – vinegar never smelt so good.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I wish I had the energy to make grapefruit marmalade and/or candied grapefruit peel.
LikeLiked by 2 people
That sounds amazing.
LikeLike
Love this idea.
LikeLike
That tree’s going to be a stunner when it’s all grown up. She’s even a beaut now.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I hope the whole line of them survives. It would be glorious.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Bush hogging? And here I thought Tara’s “hooky-bobbing” was an odd term. You country folk and your rustic lingo!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Is bush hogging odd? That’s what we call it up here…
https://bushhog.com/
Though I have no earthly idea what hooky bobbing is.
LikeLike
Maybe not, but I’ve never heard of it. Looks like a fancy space age lawn mower.
Hooky bobbing has something to do with hanging onto a rope being pulled by a car through the snow. I think.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Hmm. From the sounds of it I have never been hookied…. or bobbed for that matter.
LikeLike
Trump has a field day almost every day trying to hog the news, but the fall of Donald Trump exposing feet of clay is the dramatic news of him I await.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I’m glad the trees survived. The hog driver must have fun.
LikeLiked by 1 person
He seems to enjoy it.
😉
LikeLiked by 1 person