Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Thinning followed by snow

The thinning in the birch grove promised three posts ago took place on Sunday. Black cherry was the primary casualty. Here's a picture of the bigger stuff in a pile this morning, with a fresh coating of "Still Wintah" snow.
Our little bit of snow today is falling in a fierce wind with temps allowing the wet flakes to stick on trees. Here's a shot from the eastern portion of the thinned grove. This shows the variety of color in Hardwood Hermitage bark.
Paper birch is whiter than normal thanks to the snow. Here's the grove's biggest example of the state tree.

Monday, March 21, 2016

Technically it is Spring, but in reality it is still Wintah!!!!

We started Spring off with 40kwh of solar production -- marking the first time we have had 40kwhs 2 days in a row! This makes us net-zero for the preceeding 5 weeks!!! ROCK OUT!!! The first day of Spring also marked the first day of chain saw work -- cut down a bending yellow birch, a small (ugly) black spruce, and cut up another black spruce tree that we'd cut down last year. This "cleans up" the terrace a bit. Our "river" is waffling between being liquid and ice --
Ice crystals still remained early Sunday on a little patch behind the wood shed on the south hill:
Two weeks ago, this creature and several of its pals stopped by for a quick snack. One was within a few feet of the screened in porch.

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Of rocks and birches

The balmy wintah continues. A trace of snow yesterday led to discovery of what seems undoubtedly to be bear tracks. No pics of the bear (yet), but there's always birches. The first shows the panorama of a birch grove that will benefit from cutting in a few weeks.
Black cherry, which is a fine tree, will be cut out of the grove. Note the dark young trunks of the appropriately named tree. The species grows best farther south, so birches get the benefits when cherry is thinned up here. A quaking aspen and a few other less desirable trees are also doomed in this area.
A typical hardwood forest in northern New Hampshire. Note the red oak on the right, bigger paper birch, and yellow birch in the middle. Visible somewhat in the distance is a towering red maple.
Rocks and birches go so well together, don't they?