nichepoetryandprose

poetry and prose about place

Posts Tagged ‘art

Eastern Teaberry (Gautheria procumbens L.)

with 2 comments

When the wind is chill and fingers are cold, what better remedy exists than a cup of tea?  After years of attending meetings where there is a box of fancy teas to choose from, I now have my own wooden ‘tea box’.  I replenish it from time to time with a new blend, but I find the old standbys are my favourites:  Red Rose, Earl Grey, and Chamomile.

When my son was little, we used to have fun making ‘tea-berry tea’.  I still go out occasionally to my patch of Gaultheria procumbens, also known as Eastern Teaberry or American Wintergreen.   A few leaves, crushed and steeped in boiling water, make a lovely, fragrant tea with a delicate green color.   In French, Eastern teaberry is le petit thé du bois (the little tea of the woods).

The leaves contain oil of wintergreen; the chemical in this oil is methyl salicylate, known for its anti-inflammatory properties and closely related to aspirin.  For this reason, use caution and only drink ‘tea-berry tea’ occasionally and if you are not sensitive to aspirin. Methyl salicylate is also found in twigs of yellow birch and it also makes a fragrant tea.  Methyl salicylate will build up an electrical charge when dried with sugar and rubbed… you can try this yourself with wintergreen-flavoured hard candies.

Warning:
1. never eat any plant if you are not absolutely certain of the identification;
2. never eat any plant if you have personal sensitivities, including allergies, to certain plants or their derivatives;
3. never eat any plant unless you have checked several sources to verify the edibility of the plant.
 

The leaves of Eastern teaberry are thick and evergreen, so they can be found this time of year.  The flowers are white, waxy, nodding, and bell-shaped.  The bright red berries are also waxy and sometimes still found in November.

Wintergreen 

                 Gaultheria procumbens L.

~

small leaves gathered, crushed

oils weep into water, pale

green tea, pink aroma

sugar and midnight sparks

sweet steam and aspirin make

undelicate my heart

~

~

Warning:
1. never eat any plant if you are not absolutely certain of the identification;
2. never eat any plant if you have personal sensitivities, including allergies, to certain plants or their derivatives;
3. never eat any plant unless you have checked several sources to verify the edibility of the plant.
 

©  Jane Tims   2012

© Jane Tims  2011

Written by jane tims

November 16, 2011 at 6:50 am

the ideal property

with 4 comments

A few years ago, my younger brother lived in New Brunswick for a while and we were able to see him and my sister-in-law quite often.  We had some great times, camping one weekend on Grand Manan, watching Survivor together, seeing their terrific Christmas decorations, and just visiting.

One of the weekends I remember well was our drive to see their new property along the St. John River.  Although they eventually sold the property, it remains one of the best plots of land I have ever seen.  My poem will tell you why!

~

~

Land For Sale

~

waterfront

two acres

one of cleared field

one of woods

silver maple, curly fern, rocky shore

transparent water and wobbling waves

an island over there

(conservation land)

(no buildings to intercept

the view)

~

plans manifest

the house here

the driveway    a garden    a gate

a path through the maples

to the shore and a dock

two good-natured chairs

turned toward one another

skating in January     bonfires in July

promising neighbours

reasonable price

~

and the clincher?

the deal maker?

the heart breaker?

a crooked bush

with five fat blueberries

ready to pick

~

Warning:
1. never eat any plant if you are not absolutely certain of the identification;
2. never eat any plant if you have personal sensitivities, including allergies, to certain plants or their derivatives;
3. never eat any plant unless you have checked several sources to verify the edibility of the plant.

 

©  Jane Tims 2011

Written by jane tims

November 14, 2011 at 6:27 am

plans for a rocky road

with 9 comments

This fall, we have begun a new landscaping project, using rocks to embellish a length of road on our property. 

On our travels this summer, we were impressed by the many ways home landscapers use stone as a signature element.  Some of these ventures were as simple as a stone wall snaking through the woods.  Some had elaborate stone benches, stone sculptures, or carefully-built piles of stones. 

We have an offshoot to our driveway, intended some day to form half of a circular road.  Over the years, we have added some stone embellishments to this road and its associated path, so it seems to me to be the perfect place to develop our own rock project.  

To date, we have the following features in place, some in an advanced state of disrepair:

  • two stone pillars, about three feet in diameter – each is a page-wire cage filled with rock
  • an ‘old-fashioned’ rock wall constructed of granite stones, each about the size of a large honeydew melon
  • a lopsided (fallen-down) sundial built of small angular rocks in the shape of a cone 
  • a chunk of black basalt, a five-sided, columnar volcanic feature, harvested from the shore where my ancestors came to Canada via shipwreck
  • a stone ‘stream’ built years ago before we purchased more property and Fern Gully Brook entered our lives – this stream is a one foot wide course of small stones screened from a pile of pit-run gravel.  It ‘runs’ from a small artificial pond and is now completely overflowing with dry leaves.
existing rock and stone features on the road and path

Over the next months, we want to add some features to the road:

  • rebuild our formerly wonderful granite fire pit in a new location along the road
  • create two new lengths of stone wall to match the existing wall
  • build a stone statue or monument 
  • lay out a circle of stones to mark the one area where we can see the Milky Way from our property (star-gazing is difficult since we have so many trees) 
  • build a stone embankment-with-moss feature to emulate a lovely roadway we saw at my brother’s wedding last year.
rock and stone features we plan to add

Over the next year, it is my intention to report back on the progress made on our Rock Project.  If you never hear another word about this project, remember – I like to plan.

 

Copyright   Jane Tims 2011

Written by jane tims

November 13, 2011 at 7:27 am

Twinflower (Linnaea borealis L.)

with 10 comments

As we enter the winter months, I like to remember the woodland plants now waiting under the layers of fallen leaves to flower again next spring.

Twin-flower (Linnaea borealis L. var. americana (Forbes) Rehd.) is a low-growing, creeping evergreen, found blooming in late June in wooded swamps, coniferous bogs and clearings. 

Each slender stalk bears a set of two delicate, nodding, fragrant flowers, white in color and tinged with pink.  Other names for the plant are pink bells and, in French, linnée boréale.  The specific name is from the Latin borealis, meaning northern. 

The European variety was a special favorite of Linnaeus, the founder of the present system of naming flowers. 

 

Twinflower

            Linnaea borealis L.

 ~

                                    conifer cathedral

                        slanting light

            Linnaea carpets

stains the forest floor

            to the edge

                        near the forest door

                                    a woodland pool

                                    ~

                                    on slender stem

                        mirrored

                in the pool

       and in the air

twinflower rings

pink boreal bells

            at vespers

                    in whispers

                        a whisper

                                    the rule

                                   ~

                                    creeps under roots

                        and fallen leaves

            Linnaea trails

over rude beams fallen

            from fences built

                        when woods

                                    were pasture

                                     ~                                      

                                     twin flowers

                                     settle back to back

                                     nodding heads

                                     they cease to ring

                                     and sleep 

                                     ~

© Jane Tims  1992

Written by jane tims

November 12, 2011 at 7:47 am

mood of the lake

with 9 comments

One of the very enjoyable experiences of having a property near the lake is listening to the loons.  There is a least one pair of loons on our lake and we see them often.  Usually they call a few times at mid-day or in the evening.  Their cries are varied, ranging from a laughing tremolo to distinctive and melancholy wails, hoots, and yodels.   

We have always been interested in loons and the protection of their habitat.  Loons are especially vulnerable to quickly changing water levels and wave action because they build their nests just at water level.  `Watch Your Wake` programs help boaters protect loon habitat.

In 1994, we participated briefly in the North American Loon Project.  Today there is a similar program, the Canadian Lakes Loon Survey, sponsored by Bird Studies Canada.  This is a long term study, using data from volunteers, to assess the health of Canada’s loon population.   

We had little time in those days to participate fully, but we did visit Peltoma Lake in southern New Brunswick, to look at the loons living there.  My journal entry for our visit to Peltoma Lake reads:

May 1, 1994  Sunday

Trip to Peltoma Lake to see if there are any loons.  We are preparing to canoe the lake

about three times this year to make observations.  Disappointed at first

as the lake is lined with cottages and we could see no loons. 

Then we stopped near a small bay and there they were

– nine black and white beauties!     They left the cove as soon as they saw us.

 

I also wrote a poem about the lake – the mood of the poem suggests it must have been a damp and miserable day.

Last Sunday, we drove out to Peltoma Lake to take some photographs.   The loons and most of the people are gone this time of year.   Although it was cold, the lake sparkled in the sunlight and was anything but dreary.

 

Peltoma Lake– Sunbury County

~

Peltoma in rain

is a faded black and white photo

layers of misery, thick and still

the lake, the shore, the mist

the thin chill drizzle

~

in the coves

the cedar and birch swoon above the water

moved to tears at reflection

the lake broods

over her loons

and the cell-thick pall of algae

smoothed to the shore

~

cottages hug the lake

like campers huddle a fire

cheerless and smoky

pines on the esker reach

blank windows keep watch

for sparkle on waves 

back flips from the dock

paddles flashing sun

the day is bleak without answer

~

a muskrat tows a line on the shallows

loons quit the cove

diminish to mist

~

Peltoma is scowling

~

© Jane Tims  1994

 

Written by jane tims

November 11, 2011 at 8:02 am

making friends with the ferns #1

with 8 comments

November is an odd time to think about identifying ferns, I admit.  But identification of the evergreen ferns is still possible, as they hang on to their identity in the frosty air and even beneath the snow.  Also, ferns are so beautiful, it is fun just to look over the field guides and reminisce about the days of summer.

a pressed Long Beech Fern in my copy of Boughton Cobb’s ‘Field Guide to the Ferns’

Ferns belong to the group of vascular plants known as the Pteridophytes.  They have stems, roots and leaves but no seeds.  Instead, they reproduce by spores and have complicated life cycles.

Ferns grow in many habitats.  In our area they are found in moist and shaded woodlands.  They are also inhabitants of fields, cliffs, wetlands and cityscapes.   I have even seen ferns growing deep within the Howe Caverns of New York State where they have taken advantage of the scant habitat provided by artificial lighting.

The uniform ‘greenness’ of ferns and their highly patterned leaves make them popular as a motif, especially for home decorating and at Christmastime.

In New Brunswick, fiddleheads, the tightly coiled new leaves of the Ostrich fern (Matteuccia Struthiopteris (L.) Todaro), are collected for food every spring along the banks of rivers and their tributaries.

~

waking from a dream

                        Ostrich Fern (Matteuccia Struthiopteris(L.) Todaro)

~

bottom-land thicket

naked in spring

a rumpled bed

the throws of hibernation

~

new growth cocooned

in dry leaves, bent skeletons

of last summer’s fern

~

sun surge

an insult

between curtains

~

green fiddlehead

uncoils

head down

fist thrust

between pillows and down

fingers stretched

filigreed shadow

new blocking of sun

~

brown coverlet

kicked

~

new green bedspread

new green canopy

green shade

~

© Jane Tims 2011

Written by jane tims

November 9, 2011 at 6:48 am

Winterberry Holly (Ilex verticillata (L.) Gray)

with 2 comments

In contrast to October, November is a colorless month.  The exception – November’s red berries.

They punctuate the roads and ditches – Highbush-cranberry, Staghorn Sumach, American Mountain-ash, Hawthhorn and Rose.  Eventually the birds claim every one for food, but through most of early winter, the berries remain to cheer us.

Highbush Cranberry in November

Last November, my husband and I took a walk in the thicket of saplings above the lake.  As we came around the edge of a clump of alder, we were surprised to see a sturdy bush of Winterberry Holly.  It glowed with orange-red berries, set off by sprays of bronze-coloured leaves, not yet fallen.  We are used to seeing Winterberry along the lake, but in the grey and white thicket, the little bush was a gift.  We went there again this past Saturday, and there it was, glowing in the morning sun.

our bush of Winterberry Holly

Winterberry Holly (Ilex verticillata (L.) Gray)  is also known as Canadian Holly, Swamp Holly, Inkberry, Black Alder and Feverbush.    The shrub is usually found in wet areas, including wetlands, damp thickets, moist woods and along waterways.  The leaves turn a brassy purple-brown before they fall.  The fruit is a small, hard orange-red berry, remaining on the bush until January.       

In my poem, the words ‘lexicon’ and ‘exile’ are included as imperfect anagrams for Ilex (ilex)

 

Canadian Holly 

          (Ilex verticillata (L.) Gray)

~

drab November

            and lexicon

            expires

umber leaves

grey verticals

dull stubble

~

winterberries

astound the wetland

            red ink on page

            and words explode

            from exile

~

fever flush and holly

above December snow

icicles vermillion

~

 

© Jane Tims  2011

Written by jane tims

November 7, 2011 at 7:27 am