Tag-Archive for » photo «

From 365 Days of Photos 2010

Only about an inch long, and has the whole plant to itself.

Bookmark and Share
From 365 Days of Photos 2010
Bookmark and Share

I needed a model for a halter. Trillium was clearly not impressed with the assignment.

From 365 Days of Photos 2010

What?

From Runners Up for 365 Project

Hmmmph…

From Runners Up for 365 Project

I did manage to get one good photo, which will appear on the About.com Horses website on February 24, 2010.

Bookmark and Share
From 365 Days of Photos 2010

With energy for little else this morning (did I mention I have a cold?), I sat and did some planning.  If you’ve never heard of ‘Getting Things Done’ it’s a planning system that is really worth checking out.

One of the most important elements of the system is the weekly review. So I sat and decided what I wanted to accomplish this week, planned the ‘next-actions’. It’s only February, but I’m already planning the gardening for next summer. The gardens here are quite a mess, so there is a lot to do. I sat and planned exactly what I wanted to include in the vegetable garden. Then I figured out what I needed to sew two blinds for the rec room windows. So for  a low energy morning, I was able to accomplish quite a bit.

Bookmark and Share
From 365 Days of Photos 2010
Bookmark and Share
From 365 Days of Photos 2010
Bookmark and Share

If you drive through the countryside in Clearview Township, you’ll probably see a few tobacco kilns still standing. Tobacco was an important industry in this area from the mid 1940s to the early 1970s, although one farm continued to operate into the late 1990s. The soil was ideal for tobacco, but the climate was not. Later spring frosts and earlier fall frosts shortened the growing season, compared with tobacco growing areas further south along the shores of Lake Erie.

This particular kiln is probably twice as long as those you’re likely to see. But the red or green tar paper cover and wooden ‘window’ covers are a common feature. The tobacco hung on rafters above propane burners that cured the leaves, brought green from the fields. I can remember the hiss of the burners with their blue flames, and helping pick up leaves that had fallen onto the sandy floor.

From 365 Days of Photos 2010
Bookmark and Share
Picasa Content
From 365 Days of Photos 2010
Bookmark and Share

A Snow Caterpillar. Rare. Certainly endangered.

Bookmark and Share

The last remaining barn of the dairy barns just west of New Lowell.

Photo 2010 K. Blocksdorf  From 365 Days of Photos

Earlier in the last century, this large dairy farm was one of many in Southern Ontario that supplied milk to the Toronto Dairies Co-operative. To many locals it was known as the ‘city dairy’. The house presently on the property was not the ‘main house’. The main house was across the road, a frame building that was torn down about fifteen years ago. The house on the current property was where the hired help lived. There were three other barns, one wood like the one pictured and two (if I remember correctly) of red brick. The farm became the Sunnidale Tobacco Plantation in the late 1940s. Since then the barns have gradually fallen into disrepair, with only the remaining one being maintained by the current owners.

Bookmark and Share