
Saturday, August 28, 2010
LaBarque School, Oct. 19, 1907

Monday, August 23, 2010
Wounded

This is not the usual Three-Toed Box Turtle one sees around here; this turtle unquestionably has four toes. It does not have the brown streaks on its plastron which would firmly identify it as an Ornate Box Turtle, Terrapene ornata ornata, but in Missouri it must be either one or the other, and it is probably an Ornate. Its normal lifespan is 32 to 37 years. Every summer I see a couple of dozen turtle bodies, all sizes, littering the roads.On our narrow, steep, curving or shoulderless roads it is not always possible to swerve to avoid them. I would grieve except that I know there are many more turtles who survive in this area, where there is abundant conservation land. Whoever is responsible for that, I thank fervently.
Sunday, August 22, 2010
Old LaBarque Schoolhouse: Found!

A commentator on this blog said he has a 1906 photo of his mother at this school, so the structure must have been built before then, but my guess is that the building was rather new at that time. Also the stucco coating is recent; on a piece of wall where it is chipped away, you can see that the original building, or at least its foundation, is native stone.
Saturday, August 21, 2010
Turkeys in the Mist

Labels:
avian,
birds,
birdseed,
nature photo,
rain,
rainfall,
turkeys,
weather,
wild turkey
Friday, August 20, 2010
Le Pic-Bois
This huge wooden sculpture is strikingly accurate in every detail except the real Pic de Bois has much bigger and crustier black feet.
How wonderful that someone else a thousand miles away loves my close friends as much as I do!
Cloudburst

Wednesday, August 18, 2010
August Cornfield

The ears ripen in late summer
And come on with a conquering laughter,
Come on with a high and conquering laughter.
The long-tailed blackbirds are hoarse.
One of the smaller blackbirds chitters on a stalk
And a spot of red is on its shoulder
And I never heard its name in my life.
Some of the ears are bursting.
A white juice works inside.
Cornsilk creeps in the end and dangles in the wind.
Always—I never knew it any other way—
The wind and the corn talk things over together.
And the rain and the corn and the sun and the corn
Talk things over together.
(excerpt from "Laughing Corn," poem by Carl Sandburg.)
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