Because
it is a day of daunting responsibilities, I take leave of the dishes waiting in
the sink, to go sit outside, and harvest the patiently waiting Skullcap, a
remarkable herb for the nervous system. I sit in the warm sun, as my dear old
friend the Aster comes to it's fruition, no energy to stake their 6' stalks up
this year, so the branches are laying low across the ground, some breaking
under the weight of the ripening. Still, there is an enormous community of bees
of all kinds, happily and y feeding, the noise so loud.
Up on the shed, within the Sassafras tree, and up on the house, there are the conversational groups of this year's Sparrow , young ones, all puffy and babyish. They all are having interchanges about their tiny birdhouses, which I cleaned and replaced dry grasses in, and then pushed stalks of bamboo into, so that there is perching room for more, come the cold winds of winter. I'll find time to stick something over the ventilation hole that are of no need in cold weather. Of course, it has taken them a full week of discussion and disturbed sense of place, to finally find the courage to bob in and out of their reconfigured homes, and begin to feel comfortable.
As
all the chipmunks in the land chip chip chip away in protest.
It is a beautiful warm fall day, full of the sudden turning of leaves all across the hills, the mycelium bursting forth all across the forest, the earth moving right along in it's orbit, as we adapt and adapt once again.
It is a beautiful warm fall day, full of the sudden turning of leaves all across the hills, the mycelium bursting forth all across the forest, the earth moving right along in it's orbit, as we adapt and adapt once again.
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