Showing posts with label Madison County Public Library. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Madison County Public Library. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 14, 2023

More Native Plantings


This week Josie is doing a nature day camp at a nearby location, so I am taking her in the morning (9 am) and picking her up in the afternoon (2:45 pm.) As it happened, I also had a physical therapy appointment at 10 to work on my wonky right knee and impaired balance. So what to do with the morsel of time between 9 and 10?


The library was the obvious answer. Not for books but to take advantage of the morning light and the wonderful native plantings. Like the Milkweed above. (We have a lot of milkweed in our pastures but not always as accessible as this.)


I nelieve this yellow flower is Hypericum.

And I feel I should know the name of this purple beauty--I've had in my garden in the past. Is it Centaurea?(is it a native?)


Beautiful blooming yucca.


The Purple Coneflowers one of my favorites--but my picture is disappointing--trying to capture the butterfly -- a Spangled Fritillary?


And a lovely Flame Azalea (below.) We have a few wild ones that survive in our woods but the half dozen I've planted over the years have all perished, alas.

It was a pleasant way to spend a half an hour before submitting to the PT session and the very young woman who was quite inventive (and a little merciless) in finding ways to stretch and otherwise challenge my right leg.

I'll let Josie tell a bit about the camp in a later post.


 

Wednesday, April 28, 2021

The First In-Person CROWS Event!


What joy! I spoke to the Marshall Library Book Club--outside and all of them masked-- about CROWS and they asked the best questions! They really seemed to understand what it was I was trying to accomplish.

I've done some Zoom events but in the beginning my old computer was a bit wonky and the conditions just weren't ideal. What a pleasure to be in person!

I even managed to ask them to post reviews. It seems so tacky to be doing that but it really helps the book to get more notice. And there's some kind of algorithm on Amazon that kicks in when a book reaches 100 ratings--CROWS is at 82, which is more than any of my other books, due, I suspect, to my periodical nagging.

Many thanks to the folks at the library and the readers who made this event possible. It felt like old times. Except for the masks.