Showing posts with label wood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wood. Show all posts

Friday, August 01, 2008

Festival of the Tress 26 Now Online at Fox Haven Journal


I am pleased to announce that the Festival of the Trees issue 26 is now available online at Beau’s Fox Haven Journal. Beau has created an excellent collection of posts which help us all see the world with fresh eyes and from fresh perspectives. Take some time this weekend to explore the woods!

The Festival of the Trees (FotT) is a monthly blog carnival which has been published for over two years featuring posts about trees, forests, wood, conservation, and environment. FotT is always seeking submissions and blog hosts. Visit the Festival of the Trees coordinating blog for submission information or to volunteer to host a future festival.

During Arboreality’s recent hiatus we missed announcements for the following issues of the Festival of the Trees:


FotT Issue 22 – Árvores Vivas em Nossas Vidas by Juliana

FotT Issue 23 – 10,000 Birds by Mike

FotT Issue 24 – Wrenaissance Reflections by Wren

FotT Issue 25 – Earth, Wind, and Water by Tai Haku


That should keep you busy! This weekend I’ll be reading my copy of Nalini Nadkarni’s Between Earth and Sky: Our Intimate Connections to Trees. Stay tuned for the book review and author interview coming up this August.

Monday, July 28, 2008

New Book Release by Dr. Nalini Nadkarni, Between Earth and Sky: Our Intimate Connections to Trees


At long last, Dr. Nalini Nadkarni’s book Between Earth and Sky: Our Intimate Connections to Trees (UC Press, July 2008) is now available for purchase. I had the unique pleasure of assisting Dr. Nadkarni in the preparation of this book, and I look forward to sharing more about her work here at Arboreality.

First up, I’ll be reviewing her book, and following that I hope to take a few minutes of Nalini’s time for a brief interview. There’s no need to wait for me however: I can tell you right now that this is an outstanding book derived from Nalini’s own willingness to ask new questions, and search for answers in both the obvious and the obscure. Grab a copy and give it a read!

Want to see more about Nalini Nadkarni's recent work? Check out the video special "Green Prison Reform" from KCTS9.

Monday, February 25, 2008

Goose Snag


Today’s image is from a recent hike at Ridley Creek State Park. This “goose snag” caught our eye from way up the trail, and was too cool not to share. Perhaps we should name her “Snaggle Goose.”

There is more to share from the park: coming up next I’ll share pictures of winter hardwoods, fungi, and lovely evergreen holly.

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Winter Woodshed




This winter we built a woodshed under the pine trees at our cottage in Chester County, Pennsylvania. Our design includes two segments of 8 feet square each: one for wood, and the other for the splitter.

When practical, we like to find opportunities to cut trees and split our own firewood from the rounds. This year we purchased our wood from the local Bradley Tree Experts as usual, and now we have someplace dry to keep it (rather than tarping the wood on the driveway).

The great thing about using wood heat for your home is that it warms you several times over. You warm yourself up stoking the fire. You warm yourself up every time you haul in a load of wood. You warm yourself up sawing, rolling, loading, unloading, splitting, hauling, and stacking wood. Managing the fire is part of how I keep active in the winter with the garden sleeping under snow.

Inside the fire is cozy, and with the cost of oil these days it’s actually a more affordable way to heat the home.

Outside, my guess is that the squirrels have all put down payments on the prime real estate, and are having an excellent weekend moving in to the coziest corners of the shed. I’ve already discovered walnuts in the stack!

Saturday, December 01, 2007

The Festival of the Trees 18 is Sprouting at Riverside Rambles

Larry Ayers of Riverside Rambles has spared no small effort in composing this month’s Festival of the Trees 18 - November Arborea. Watch it grow! There’s plenty to play with already online, and Larry is composing (composting?) the rest as we speak.

The Festival of the Trees is a monthly blog carnival featuring posts about trees and forests from blogs across the Internet. Check out the Festival of the Trees coordinating blog to learn how to share your own submissions, or volunteer to host a future festival at your blog!


Saturday, June 09, 2007

Monday, April 02, 2007

Festival of the Trees 10 Now Online at Words and Pictures


Come one, come all to the monthly Festival of the Trees! Issue 10 of the Festival of the Trees is now online at Words and Pictures, courtesy of Roger Butterfield. You don’t want to miss this – he’s put together one amazing collection of tree, forest, and wood related posts!

If you would like to participate in future Festivals of the Trees, or would like to be a festival host, please check out the Festival of the Trees coordinating blog for more information.


PS - Is the header loading better now? I went back to Zoto, so I hope the load time is faster.

Thursday, March 01, 2007

Festival of the Trees 9 now online at Riverside Rambles


Larry of Riverside Rambles has done an excellent job of collecting a wide diversity of tree, forest, and wood related posts for this month’s Festival of the Trees 9. Be sure to hop over with a cup of tea in hand – you’re going to be there a while!


The Festival of the Trees runs on the first of every month. If you would like to submit to next month’s festival of the trees, or volunteer to be a host, check out the Festival of the Trees coordinating blog for more information.

Thursday, February 22, 2007

Frosty Fungus

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Red Squirrel and Butternuts









Today’s story begins last winter, when we first arrived in Pennsylvania. Eastern Pennsylvania winters have a different kind of cold from Western Washington winters, and one of the first things we did was go about securing some wood for the fireplace.

The friendly folks at Bradley Tree Experts were happy to deliver us cords of pre-split wood (since our stash of wood was back in WA keeping the neighbors warm). We dumped the wood loads next to the house under the pines, and then covered our piles with tarps to keep the rain, snow, and ice out.

After our righteous snow storm in February, things started to warm up, and we found ourselves with a tiny little pile of wood left from our last load that never made it on the fire. I think that for a while, we suspected we’d use it up, until that day came (as it does every spring) when you realize there will be no more fires until next season. Camouflaged as it was under a snuggly brown tarp (yeah, like we couldn’t see it), the little pile of leftovers remained cozy and dry.

Over the summer, I began to notice a lot of activity around the little pile, and the dogs were always excited to investigate. The grey squirrels loved to use it as a launching pad to the nearest pine trunk, and various birds and bunnies took refuge there from time to time. But in recent months, a new creature arrived on the scene: the red squirrel. Until this little guy showed up, we’d seen nothing but grey squirrels everywhere!


When the red headed stranger set up shop in the yard, he went straight for easy street, and commandeered the tarp-covered wood “pilette.” How this little red squirrel managed to push out the big grey squirrels, I’ll never know – but it may have something to do with its major attitude and bossy, boastful nittering.

Here is a little about the red squirrel from the PA Game Commission site. It seems to describe our friend perfectly:

Wildlife Notes: Squirrels By Chuck Fergus

"The red squirrel is sometimes called a chickaree or a pine squirrel, reflecting its preference for nesting in conifers. Behavior, feeding habits and denning practices are generally similar to those of gray and fox squirrels, although reds sometimes nest in holes at the base of trees. They enjoy eating the immature, green cones of white pine. Unlike fox and gray squirrels, reds do not bury nuts singly, preferring a large cache -- often in a hollow log -- for storing food."

Late July, I began to hear a strange noise on the driveway by the mystery tree. It took me a few days to learn that it was the sound of the mystery tree nuts thwapping the top of the truck, and the gravel driveway. All day long there’s be a constant music of nutty percussions, and I began to notice that the squirrels were actually pulling the nuts off and throwing them down. The nuts would cover the driveway in the morning, and then disappear in the afternoon.

It wasn’t until a couple weeks ago that I learned where they were all going: the red squirrel’s winter stash. I haven’t removed the tarp to see just how many s/he has, but I get the impression that this squirrel has about 50%+ of the tree’s produce tucked away like so many Easter eggs in, around, and under the tarp over the remains of last year’s firewood. He's even tucked a few in the pines' armpits, "just in case."

S/he’s been working so hard at this over the last couple months, that now I don’t have the heart to uproot it! All day long the red squirrel guards the nut pile. I’ve tried to get clear images for you, but as soon as I come close, up the tree it goes.


A few days ago, I found a freshly-fallen nut on the driveway. Carefully I placed it on the very top of the tarp, and went inside. About twenty minutes later, I heard the squirrel crying out! I watched it while it stared and barked at the nut for two days, before it finally was accepted into the horde with the others. (In fact, I think the nut was eaten owing to the husk fragments all over the top of the tarp today).

Looks like we’ll be needing a new tarp.

Epilogue: As for the mystery tree nuts, I think we now have a proper identification. I believe we have a Butternut (Juglans cinerea), sometimes called a white walnut. I’m basing my educated guess on the data I can find online and in my books when compared with leaves, bark, fuzziness, and fruits. The fruits matured into heavy, round, fuzzy-husked nuts.

Now if I could just get one of them open, I could tell you what they taste like! Of course... I'd have to pry one away from the red squirrel first.

Saturday, March 18, 2006

Fungus for Ducklover



As requested, here is one of the first shelf fungus I could find around the farm to share with you, along with some other pretty orange fungus. These are dedicated to Ducklover.

I wish I could tell you more about who they are or what they like, but all I can tell you for certain is that like many other beautiful fungus, these are happily growing on a pile of old, rotting firewood in the brush.

I’ll be certain to keep my eyes open for more fungus as I explore the area. At home in Seabeck, Washington, Spring and Autumn were some of the greatest seasons to find new fungus of all colors. Perhaps the same is true around Pennsylvania?


Next up: more springtime wonders! C'est magnifique!

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

Frilly fungus



I just love fungus, don’t you? There are so many gorgeous varieties of all shapes, sizes, and colors, and they serve such an important role in the forest! Fungi are the decomposers – they take complex molecules and break them down into molecules which are more readily assimilated by creatures such as trees (and many others). Without fungi, there would be no forests!

Here we see them dutifully assisting with the decomposition of a few logs. I'd love to provide you with more detailed images, but that will have to wait. My folks gave me a shiny new camera for Christmas which should capture close-ups without defocusing... Alas, it is lost in a box!