But just look closer and this is what you might find:
Friday, April 30, 2010
More Wildflowers: Joe's Run
But just look closer and this is what you might find:
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Jordan Run and Knobley Road
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Singing at the BrazenHead Inn
Saturday night, however, Three Degrees of Hair was on stage. This diverse group from Beckley plays a wide range of music and we enjoyed all of it. They also did something pretty nice: they let some of us sing.
I was first, before even the band took to the stage. Since the tragedy at the Big Branch mine three weeks ago, the song by Jean Ritchie called West Virginia Mine Disaster was on my mind, and that is what I sang. It's powerful and moving, and I sang it in tribute to those miners and their families.

An hour or so later, we convinced Cassidy, Jon and Jennifer's daughter, to take the stage and sing one of her favorite songs, Free Falling. You can listen to her performance here thanks to cousin Emily's forethought to record Cassidy. Thank you, Emily!
Amy sang later on, a lovely ballad of love and longing.
What a group of guys, to allow us to be part of the evening's music. Special thanks to the Three Degrees of Hair for sharing the stage with us. 
The relaxed atmosphere and camaraderie made it feel like we were at home instead of 150 miles away in a log cabin tucked into a valley in the Randolph county mountains. That's what true mountain hospitality is, and it's what Will and Jill give to their customers in plenty.
(Do you see that orb floating over Amy's head? If I believed in such things, I might almost be convinced that Jon was there listening to the fun. Actually, I am convinced that he was with us in spirit, for an evening in which his name was much spoken and his life remembered with love. It doesn't take an orb to tell me so.)
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
The Triathlon
The runners were lined up for the take-off. Aaron gave us a wave as he prepared for the first leg of the trip, a 3 mile run.
Poke, and Redbud Jelly; or, How to Make Use of a Cold, Rainy Evening
Last week on the way home I spotted a beautiful sight--a big patch of pokeweed growing just off the road on the site where a house trailer once was located. I meant to stop and pick some but every evening on the way home from work I'd forget until I was too far past the patch to go back.
It was raining and cold on my way home and I remembered! My shoes got muddy, my pants got streaked with mud, but I have two quart bags of poke in the freezer. A person needs to be careful when preparing poke and I'm not going to give instructions here. It can be poisonous of not properly prepared. If you want to learn to cook poke, consult a reliable wild foods cookbook. There is some good advice on cooking poke on this website.
I had another project on hold and it was a good night to finish it too. Remember the redbud jelly I wanted to make? Time ran out on me the weekend we collected the flowers. I completed the steeping process, then strained and froze the resulting liquid. Now I had time to make the jelly.
I had a little more than two cups of the deep purple liquid from the flowers. After looking online for a recipe, I made mine this way: I added two tablespoons of lemon juice to the purple liquid along with one box of pectin. Then I brought the resulting mix to a boil, added 2 1/2 cups of sugar and brought to a full rolling boil for about 2 minutes. I removed the jelly from the stove and stirred and skimmed the whitish foam off the top for about 5 minutes. Then I poured the jelly into jars, and that it was done.
The jelly is beautiful! How does it taste? Very good actually. I believe it would taste even better made immediately into jelly after steeping the blossoms, but this jelly has a superb sweet-sour tang similar to red currant jelly. I think I will be making more of it next year because it's very good.
Monday, April 26, 2010
Wildwood Flowers
Trout lilies, golden ragwort not yet in bloom, tiny violets and a white flower I have not yet found a name for mingled in the mountain meadow to create a picture worthy of Monet.
Trout lily is what I call this shy yellow flower, but I have also saw one website refer to it as dogtooth violet. Its leaves are speckled and more lily-like than they are like those of violets to my mind.
Along a rocky roadside by a stream, much further down the mountain, I noticed this blue-green fern. I not only took a photo but also dug my fingers into the loose soil and took a couple home. I think they're bleeding heart, but I'm not sure. Do you think I just transplanted a pernicious weed? It's lovely and I hope it's something worth keeping in my garden.
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Home again
Saturday, April 24, 2010
Marker
Friday, April 23, 2010
Weekend with the Family: Run, Run!
The race includes three legs: kayak, biking and running. the weather calls for cool and cloudy with possible showers and thunderstorms. We've packed umbrellas, boots, warm clothes and coats because Pocahontas county is pretty high in the West Virginia mountains and a lot cooler than our home county.
We'll be staying at the Brazen Head Inn in Mingo, WV, where we stayed last October. The hospitality of owners Will and Jill makes the Brazen Head as welcoming as a family home. Several other family members will be there too, including Jon's wife and three of his daughters. We were disappointed that his daughter Jordan and her daughter Cadyn could not join us to celebrate Cadyn's first birthday. We had the party all planned! But such is life.
Jon had planned to be part of this race too. But George will be riding Jon's bike, so in some way I think Jon will be with us.
Wish the ones competing luck tomorrow! I will have pictures to post when we return home.
Gardens, and that Frantic Feeling
*potatoes are up! We planted around March 10 and they just poked their little sprouts up last week. They're coming on strong, though, so that's encouraging.
*lettuce and radishes have been eating size for the past two weeks, but the green onions have been less that fantastic. I think the white onion sets I bought from Green's Feed in Charleston must have had too much sprout inhibitor or whatever it is they do to seeds and sets to keep them from sprouting too soon, because the white onions are doing poorly while the yellow onions forge ahead.
*beans are up! We usually plant a row really early, and if they come up, we sell them and make a nice amount on them. These are half-runners, not my favorite but certainly on top of most local people's lists. So we plant them. Larry also planted a row of my top bean, the Royal Burgundy bush bean that has luscious purple beans that turn green when cooked. This year I bought a pack of Rattlesnake beans just to try them. The beans are supposedly very long and twisted. These are pole beans, and I don't usually have much luck with them, but it's worth another try. I might plant them in the new ground Larry plowed this week. What is new ground, you ask? It's a patch of ground not used previously for a garden or crop. This patch was used about 20 years ago so technically it's not "new" but new enough. New ground is usually nutrient, root and rock rich, making it a challenge to grow in, but worth the effort.
*the new strawberry plants are coming along and the old ones survived better than we anticipated so the bed is slowly filling in.
*the asparagus continues to insist that it likes growing in the gravel beside my parking place, and we've had several meals already to prove that the asparagus might just be right. I think it's the lime from the gravel that is making this a good spot for the asparagus; whatever the reason, I'm grateful. I continue to watch the place
*one row of corn is planted, the Early Sunglow. Again, we aim early and if it gets frosted, we just replant.
*in the greenhouse, everything is looking good. Except I'm way overcrowded and thinking about adding another greenhouse next year. Some tomato plants are about two weeks away from planting size, and the broccoli and cabbage might go out next week.
*Larry has the electric fence working around the garden I consider my "spring" garden so it is fairly safe from the beasties that like my young plants.
*I'm mulching, mulching, mulching in the flower beds. About 40% complete.
*the new herb garden is dug and seedlings await the tilling and soil prep. I'm not in a hurry since the soil could be warmer for herbs.
*the fruit trees dodged the frost bullet this week. Whew! It was a close one but the frost here on the ridge was spotty and burned off before the sun came up so our blossoms were safe. I'm not sure people in the deeper, colder hollows fared as well. We should have a good apple crop this year and I'm looking forward to making cider and apple butter again. Last year was a bust for apples.
Now, about that frantic feeling: do any of you get that feeling when the days pass too quickly and there is too much to get done before summer is here? That's how I'm feeling. I know that the next few weekends are going to be busy and I'll have little time for my gardens--at the exact time they need so much attention. Will I be able to keep up? Will gill-over-the-ground succeed in its attempt to take over my little world? Will tomatoes, peppers, beans, corn, squash, etc etc all get planted on time and will they survive if I can't be here to water them? Will it ever rain again?
The questions are endless, and only time can answer them. And all I can do is to keep plodding onward, doing what I can to keep the rampant greenness under control.