Saturday, April 2, 2011

Birds I'm Watching: Crane Creek Regional Park (April 2, 2011)

I joined a morning hike with the Madrone Audubon Society today at Crane Creek Regional Park, which is only about 25 minutes from home, but I'd never been there before. It's a beautiful park with pretty walks through rolling hills studded with oaks and along small streams with the sort of brush that attracts many birds. At this time of year, the grass is lush green. Even the new poison oak leaves were pretty. I got some good photos of a female Red-winged Blackbird (above).

The highlights for me were first-of-season sightings of: Red-breasted Sapsucker, Pacific-slope Flycatcher, Western Kingbird, Orange-crowned Warbler, Western Meadowlark, Lincoln's Sparrow (last of season, perhaps, but first of 2011), and Bullock's Oriole--this last was fabulously bright. Some of the Yellow-rumped Warblers were also in very bright, attractive plumage, as were the male American Goldfinches.

I saw 47 species: Canada Goose, Mallard, Wild Turkey, Double-crested Cormorant, Great Egret, Turkey Vulture, White-tailed Kite, Cooper's Hawk, Red-shouldered Hawk, Red-tailed Hawk, Eurasian Collared Dove, Mourning Dove, Great Horned Owl (on a nest), Anna's Hummingbird, Acorn Woodpecker, Red-breasted Sapsucker, Nuttall's Woodpecker, Northern Flicker, Pacific-Slope Flycatcher, Western Kingbird, Western Scrub Jay, Common Raven, Tree Swallow, Violet-green Swallow, Oak Titmouse, Bushtit, White-breasted Nuthatch, Bewick's Wren, Western Bluebird, American Robin, European Starling, Orange-crowned Warbler, Yellow-rumped Warbler, Spotted Towhee, California Towhee, California Quail, Song Sparrow, Lincoln's Sparrow, White-crowned Sparrow, Golden-crowned Sparrow, Red-winged Blackbird, Western Meadowlark, Brewer's Blackbird, Bullock's Oriole, House Finch, Lesser Goldfinch, and American Goldfinch.

For more about bird watching in Sonoma County, see my Website Sonoma County Bird Watching Spots.

Wines I'm Making: Racked 2010 Wines Yesterday

I finally got around to racking the 2010 wines yesterday. I transferred eight gallons of Cabernet Sauvignon/Cabernet Franc to new containers and sulfited them lightly (to 48ppm). I also racked three gallons of experimental "second run" Cabernet--wine made by adding sugar and water back into the pressings of the real wine and letting it ferment again. The real wine smells good and tastes good as well. It seems to have retained the strong Cabernet spiciness I noticed in it the first time I racked it. The second-run wine will probably prove to have been a waste of time and sugar, but we'll see. Finally, I racked all the second-run rosé I made--again, an experiment, but one that looks like it may have been worthwhile.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Plants I'm Growing--First Blooms: California Poppy (2011)

The first of the California poppies in the garden to bloom opened yesterday, March 30. The California poppy: An appropriate flower for a state that calls itself the "Golden State." Our first poppy opened on March 19 in 2009 and on March 5 in 2010, so this is comparatively late. California poppy has calculated botanical years of 351 days and 390 days.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Food I'm Eating: The Olive Project--Herbed Olives

It's been a couple of months since I tried brining olives at home for the first time. It went well and was easy enough that I was inspired to lay down more olives today--about 2,000 more. Our tree is still heavy with fruit even after today's harvest, and the original supply of finished olives is already dwindling.

The fruit is noticeably bigger now. I guess the olives are that much riper than they were back in January. In the meantime, I've been experimenting with different ways to eat the olives I've already made. Tonight I added olive oil, rosemary, raw garlic, and Meyer lemon zest to a bowl of finished olives, and they are very tasty indeed.

My original post on the subject of making olives at home is here: The Olive Project. Also see The Olive Project Continued.

Plants I'm Growing--First Blooms: Michelia Yunnanensis, Creeping Phlox, "Pink Lady" Apple, Pink Crabapple

First blooms of 2011 on a number of plants in the garden today (finally the rain has stopped). Flowers that had been holding back seem finally convinced there's a point to offering up their pollen. Flowers on Michelia yunnanensis, "Pink Lady" apple, and our pink crabapple all opened today. Some of the creeping phlox in the garden started blooming on Sunday (March 27).

Michelia yunnanensis (first photo) is a small relative of the magnolias native to Yunnan Province in China. It's finally taken off after a shaky start three years ago. It's covered with flowers this year and looks set to grow strongly. I love the deep cinnamon-colored covers to the buds and the creamy white flowers that contrast with the brown covers and the plant's deep green leaves. This plant bloomed on April 1 in 2009 and on March 22 in 2010, calculating botanical years of 355 and 373 days, which average to 364 days, or very close to a year by the sun. 

The "Pink Lady" apple bloomed on March 23 in 2009 and on March 30 in 2010, although in 2010 it bloomed a second time in October after bearing almost no fruit--odd behavior caused by the very cold summer we had last year. "Pink Lady" calculated years of 373 and 364 days, which average to 368.5 days--somewhat long, but I have only three years of data so far. My hypothesis is that over the years, all the plants in the garden (at least those native to this area) will calculate average years very close to actual years. 

The deep pink crabapple in the garden bloomed on March 26 in 2009 but on April 23 last year, almost a month later. I think 2010 was anomalous. The tree calculated years of 393 days and 340 days--both the shortest and longest years any plant have had since I started keeping track, but even these average to 366.5 days--very close to an actual year. 

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Music I'm Listening to: The San Francisco Symphony with Herbert Blomstedt and Arabella Steinbacher

Last night I attended one of three concerts the San Francisco Symphony is giving this weekend with Herbert Blomstedt as guest conductor and soloist Arabella Steinbacher. Only two pieces are on the program, the Mozart Violin Concerto No. 4 and Dvorak's New World Symphony, but the orchestra offered the Dvorak Slavonic Dance No. 1 as an encore, and Steinbacher played Fritz Kreisler's Recitativo and Scherzo as an encore piece.

The concert opened with the Mozart concerto, which was given a crisp, correct interpretation, but somehow didn't sparkle--which is not to say it wasn't enjoyable. Steinbacher is clearly a gifted violinist, although she had escaped my notice until last night. I very much liked the sound of Miss Steinbacher's violin. According to the program notes, she plays the "Booth" Stradivarius, of 1716, on loan from the Nippon Music Foundation. It has a very warm, dark sort of sound, especially rich in the lower register that I very much liked, although the Mozart didn't really showcase that. It was most interesting to listen to during the encore, and I would say the Kreisler piece was the highlight of the evening. The playing was precise but expressive--beautiful really.

At intermission I bought her recording of the two Bartok violin concertos with Marek Janowski conducting the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande (Pentatone Classics, PTC 5186 350). After listening to it in the car this morning as I drove around town doing some errands, I have to say I'm very impressed. It's a splendid recording. I'd put it right up there with my two favorite recordings of the Bartok No. 2--Kyung-wha Chung with Georg Solti and the London Philharmonic, a 1976 recording (London CS 7032 on LP in the US) and André Gertler with the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Karel Ancerl, a 1965 recording that appears to have been released originally on the Supraphon label, although I have it on a much later re-release, (still on LP), on the Quintessence label (PMC 7181). It's probably about time to try to find that one on CD, as I think it remains my very favorite. I went digging around my record and CD collection to find the Gertler disc, and I see that I own no fewer than eight recordings of the Bartok Violin Concerto No. 2 (I guess I like it). I'll probably feel compelled to listen to them all again to see if I still like these three best (Steinbacher, Chung, and Gertler). Other recordings I have include performances by Yehudi Menuhin, Midori, Anne Sophie-Mutter, and Itzhak Perlman.

But, to get back to the concert, I don't think Maestro Blomstedt got the best out of his performers. The first two movements of the New World Symphony seemed rushed, the final two movements were marred by some wobbly horn entrances (although, to be fair, that has never before happened at San Francisco in the three years I've been a subscriber), and in a number of places the conductor let the horn section overpower everything else. Still, the Dvorak was fun to watch--it was the first time I'd seen this very familiar music played live.

The encore came off rather better. The orchestra sounded relaxed and strong playing Dvorak's Slavonic Dance No. 1. The audience loved it. The concert ended with a standing ovation. So, it was an evening during which the highlights came with the encores, as sometimes happens.

Photographs of Herbert Blomstedt and Arabella Steinbacher courtesy of the San Francisco Symphony

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Rain: OK, I'm Officially Tired of It (March 26, 2011)

It just keeps coming down. We are in a lull this morning, but it's rained virtually all week. Yesterday and last night added another 3.6 inches to our total for the 2010-2011 rainy season, bringing it to 35.6 inches at my house. Other places in Santa Rosa have recorded as much as 38 inches. The historical average rainfall for Santa Rosa has been rising. It is now 31.91 inches, but we are already more than three inches above that before the end of March (the current rainy season ends June 30). The historical average for March 26 is 27.9 inches, so we are nearly eight inches above normal for this day and only 10 inches below the fifth wettest year on record, which was 45.8 inches, recorded in 1894-1895. I'm officially tired of it now. A little bit of sun, please?

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Tidbits: RIP-- Blues Great "Pinetop" Perkins

I was sorry to hear that blues pianist "Pinetop" Perkins died yesterday. He was 97, but had been performing recently, mostly in Austin, Texas. I had the privilege of sitting with him and talking backstage at a Tokyo blues festival in 1999 (photo) while doing research for the liner notes that eventually accompanied And This Is Maxwell Street, the recordings from Mike Shea's 1964 documentary film And This Is Free. Perkins played for many years with the Muddy Waters band but had also known Robert Nighthawk, the guitar wizard featured on many of the Shea Maxwell Street recordings. We wanted to talk with people that had worked with Nighthawk. Perkins was a soft-spoken, slow-moving man that gave an impression of gentleness, but, like many aging blues musicians I've met (notably Frank Frost, B. B. King, and R. L. Burnside), he dropped about 50 years as he got up on stage and began to make music. RIP

Monday, March 21, 2011

Music I'm Listening to: The Santa Rosa Symphony with Bruno Ferrandis and Elina Vähälä (March 20, 2011)

I attended a Santa Rosa Symphony concert Sunday afternoon (March 20) conducted by Bruno Ferrandis. The program included Serious Song, by contemporary composer Wolfgang Rihm, Symphony No. 4 by Brahms, and the Brahms Violin Concerto, with soloist Elina Vähälä.

Overall, an enjoyable concert, but rather uneven, I'm afraid.

I did like the Rihm Serious Song. Immediately upon entering the concert hall it was apparent that something a little unusual was about to begin; there were no violins on stage--among the strings, only the violas, cellos, and basses were present. Also unusual was the presence of four clarinets at the front of the ensemble. I would say the piece didn't seem very song-like, but it was certainly serious. Opening with quavering dissonances among the four clarinets in the low register, the piece was dark and somber throughout with all the instruments mainly being given the lower notes in their ranges. No flutes either. According to the program notes, the piece was commissioned by conductor Wolfgang Swallisch who wanted a composition explicitly evoking Brahms. Composer Rihm was particularly impressed by the Four Serious Songs by Brahms and looked also to the example of the Deutches Requiem for the orchestration without the bright-sounding violins and flutes. To many I suspect this tone poem--that's what it seemed to be--will sound too abstract, too somber, too brooding, but it appealed to me. I applaud the inclusion of something rather different from the standard fare. It was a nice counterpoint to the very familiar pieces that followed.

In the Brahms Violin Concerto Soloist Vähälä played well, but seemed to have difficulty keeping her instrument in tune. I always hesitate to say things like that (not that anyone cares very much what I say) because I never trust my ears entirely, but I thought she was out of tune for about the first third of the first movement--a little bit sharp on at least one string. She tried to retune a couple of times using the fine adjustments at the bridge but finally resorted to turning one of the tuning pegs--a very risky thing to do while in the middle of playing, given the coarse adjustment the tuning peg provides. I'm persuaded that I was not mistaken about her difficulties by the extensive tuning she did between the first and second movements. Once she got things straightened out, everything sounded better.

Her instrument had a surprisingly strident sound. As it happens, that was rather effective in some of the rapid passages of double-stopping in the concerto, but otherwise it gave a cold and at times somewhat whiny impression. She was playing a 1678 Stradivarius. I am no expert, but I do know that that would be an early violin in Stradivari's career. Perhaps that has something to do with it? The second movement was marred by repeated wobbly entrances by at least one of the horns. Having said all that, I thought the Santa Rosa Symphony musicians focused and responding much better to Maestro Ferrandis's direction than usual, which is a good thing, and it's always interesting to hear such a familiar piece live. Despite the hiccups, I enjoyed hearing the concerto and the crowd--notably younger than is usual in Santa Rosa--was very appreciative.

The Fourth Symphony by Brahms is another very familiar piece, being one of the first I was attracted to during my shift as a teenager away from rock music in favor of classical. I'm afraid the ensemble wasn't quite up to it. The focus apparent during the violin concerto was nowhere apparent here. The players simply weren't together much of the time. Still, the ensemble has come very far in the 10 years I've been a subscriber to their concerts, and I mean no ill will. I'm glad they're here and I will continue to support them. At their best, they can be very fine indeed.

Photos of Bruno Ferrandis and Elina Vähälä courtesy of the Santa Rosa Symphony

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Plants I'm Growing--First Blooms: Flowering Cherry "Snow Fountain"

First blooms on March 19 on the "Snow Fountain" weeping flowering cherry in the side garden. Only one or two flowers have opened, and even those have mostly been blasted by the heavy rains we've had, but the first flowers opened yesterday. "Snow Fountain" bloomed on March 23 in 2009 and on March 14 in 2010, calculating years of 356 days and 370 days, which average to 363 days, just short of an actual year.

Found Art: Paint on Electrical Box, Santa Rosa (March 20, 2011)

Here and there on the streets are large rectangular  metal boxes that house equipment that controls street lights or telephone systems. Ready-made canvases that attract graffiti. The graffiti gets painted over and the canvases are used again. Found art.


For more found art, see my blog Serendipitous Art.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Rain: Lots More Rain (March 16-20)

The weather forecasters were right. Lots of rain this week. Yesterday and the night before, we got another 1.95 inches of rain, which brings our total for the 2010-2011 rainy season to 28.80 inches. The historical average for Santa Rosa on March 16 is 26.80 inches, so that puts us well ahead of normal. Some locations in Santa Rosa have already reported nearly 32 inches this season, which is above the historical annual average for Santa Rosa of 31.01 inches. More rain is forecast for the coming days. It looks like we won't have a droughty summer this year.

[Update: A big storm--the biggest we've had in several years--blew through last night, the night of the 19th, and dumped another 3.2 inches of rain on Santa Rosa. As of the morning of the 20th, our total stood at 32.00 inches--already more rain than the 31.01 inches of an average year here (the official rain season runs from July 1 to June 30 of the following year). By March 20, the average accumulated rainfall in Santa Rosa has been 27.24 inches historically, so we are now almost fives inches above normal, but one site I monitor in Santa rosa has reported almost 2.5 inches more than we've had. In any case, we've had a lot of rain in the past week (and it's still drizzling)--more than enough, if you ask me. It's getting a bit tiresome, but I'm willing to put up with it if it means not having to worry about the plants as much over the long, dry summer ahead.]

Wines I'm Making: Vines Pruned (2011)

Today I finally got around to pruning the grape vines. The buds have already begun to swell and the pruning wounds are weeping a fair amount, but that's pretty typical.

A row of freshly pruned vines is always a hopeful sight. This year, I hope the summer weather is less cold. I hope the grapes ripen more fully. I hope to make very good wine in 2011. We'll see.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Miscellaneous: One Reason America's Health System Stinks


Last time I had to get a prescription for antibiotics, I had an infected cut on the middle finger of my left hand, the result of a mishap with an oyster and an oyster knife. I bought the prescription at a Kaiser Permanente pharmacy for around $31 only to find later that the same drug in generic form would have cost only $4.99 at Target.

Today a family member got a prescription for a different antibiotic, to treat an oral infection. The Kaiser pharmacy quoted a price of $28.70. Going on my previous experience, I tucked away that bit of information and smugly called Target, congratulating myself on what I expected to be a significantly lower price--but I was surprised to get a quote nearly four times higher than the Kaiser Permanente price, even asking for a generic equivalent.

I got curious. I called three other local pharmacies. The high price (at Dollar Drug) was $161.98 (nearly six times the Kaiser price), but Dollar Drug helpfully pointed out that it would be only $58 if I got the prescription in the form of 80 150mg capsules instead of 40 300mg capsules. (Oddly, Kaiser charges a few dollars more for the 150mg capsules.) Costco, however, was able to fill the prescription in generic form using 80 150mg capsules for only $21.76. The results of my inquiries are in the table below, which shows prices quoted for the prescription using 300mg and 150mg capsules where both were available.

Clindamycin HCL 

                      300mg x 40      150mg x 80

Dollar Drug     $161.98     or     $58.00
Walmart           $116.00     or     $83.00
Target              $100.99     or     $51.99
Kaiser              $28.70       or     $31.10
Costco                                          $21.76

Does this make sense? First, I wonder why Kaiser Permanente isn't offering me a lower price than Costco, considering that I send Kaiser hundreds of dollars every month in premium payments--far, far more than the annual dues I pay to get the benefits of a Costco membership (although it's worth noting that anyone can use a Costco pharmacy--Costco is required by law to fill prescriptions for members and non-membern alike). Second, I wonder why there should be a difference of greater than 300% between the least and most expensive ways to fill this prescription that don't involve being a member of Costco or paying premiums to Kaiser (the difference between $51.99 and $161.98). Most importantly, it seems to me, if Costco can fill this prescription at 13% of the highest price quoted, something is seriously wrong--but I don't suppose that's news to anyone. I don't mean to single out Dollar Drug here. I assume their prices are in line with prices at other private pharmacies--and it wouldn't surprise me if a few more phone calls turned up still-higher prices for this particular prescription. I just wonder how often insurance companies get paid for prescriptions at prices much higher than are necessary? Why can't we do something about this kind of wasted money? 

Plants I'm Growing--First Blooms: Bosc Pear, Tulipa Bakeri, Isopogon Formosus

First blooms yesterday on some of the species tulips in the garden--the Tulipa bakeri in front of the house. These are the survivors of about 300 I planted about four years ago. One summer the squirrels discovered them and ate most of the bulbs. Those that remain are very pretty. Species tulips, unlike the familiar florist's tulips are not hybrids. It is from these species tulips that what most people think of as tulips today were developed. Tulips are native to places like Turkey and the countries of the Caucasus region. This is a variety called "Lilac Wonder." Tulipa bakeri bloomed in the garden on March 5 in 2009 and on Februray 24 in 2010, calculating years of 356 days and 383 days, which average to 369.5 days.

I count yesterday also as the first day of blooms on Isopogon formosus, a strange Australian flower that has done rather well here. I never know exactly when to judge it has bloomed. The petals are like filaments. The flowers open slowly and last a long time, both on the plant or cut. Isopogon formosus bloomed on March 26 in 2009 and on March 22 in 2010, calculating years of 361 days and 357 days, which average to 359 days.

The day before, March 13, the first flowers opened on the Bosc pear on the garage side of the house. It's raining again today. I wonder if the tree will set fruit? Last year we had none, presumably because of the strange, cold summer. We'll see. The Bosc pear bloomed on March 26 in 2009 and on March 22 in 2010, calculating years of 361 days and 356 days, which average to 358.5 days. All three of these plants have bloomed more irregularly than most.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Rain: Yet More Rain (March 14, 2011)

Overnight we had yet more rain and even a little thunder and lightning, which is unusual in Santa Rosa (sometimes I miss the wall-shaking thunderstorms of the Midwest). We got 0.95 inches of rain, which brings our total for the 2010-2011 rainy season to 26.85 inches. The historical average for Santa Rosa on March 14 is 26.58 inches, so that puts us slightly ahead of normal, although some locations in Santa Rosa have already reported nearly 30 inches this season. The forecast for this entire week is...rain. Let us hope it doesn't become radioactive rain.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Music I'm listening to: Kurt Masur Conducting The San Francisco Symphony

I attended a concert by the San Francisco Symphony last night. Guest conductor Kurt Masur led the orchestra in an all-Mendelssohn program of Symphony No. 4 and the Complete Incidental Music for A Midsummer Night's Dream. Maestro Masur looked a bit frail going to and from the podium, but very much in charge while he was there, getting a very clean, precise, and persuasive performance from the players--hard really to imagine how it could have been better.

I was going to write more, but find myself much distracted by what's going on in Japan, and have to get taxes done by today...

Photo of conductor Kurt Masur courtesy of the San Francisco Symphony.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Birds I'm watching: Lake Hennessy, Lake Berryessa, Putah Creek

There are between 8,000 and 12,000 species of birds in the world, depending on whom you ask (and some people claim there are many more). A little over 900 have been recorded in North America. The count for Sonoma County, California, where I live, is about 430. There are only a handful of people in the world that have seen more than 8,000 species--or even 7,000--so my life list of 333 (as of today) is rather modest, but any day you see a new bird (a "life bird" as the birders say), is a good day. Yesterday, March 5, I got three life birds. A good day, indeed.

Among them was this handsome Lewis's Woodpecker--a bird I've been trying to see for some time. It's related to the Acorn woodpecker, but much less common, at least where I live. Having never seen one before, it was surprising to see seven of them yesterday, along Putah Creek, near and at Lake Solano County Park, not far from the conjunction of the borders of Napa, Solano, and Yolo counties. I made stops at Lake Hennessy and Lake Berryessa along the way. Lake Hennessy was notable for nearly 120 Western Grebes, many of them displaying courtship behavior, accompanied by odd cries eerie in the early morning stillness.

My other life birds for the day were White-throated Swift--not an unusual bird, but one I'd not encountered before, and California Thrasher, which is not rare either, but limited to habitat I haven't birded much.

For more information about bird watching in and around Sonoma County, see my Website Sonoma County Bird Watching Spots.

Rain: More Rain (March 5-6, 2011)

Last night and today, we had more rain--another 0.85 inches. That brings the 2010-2011 total to 25.75 inches so far--at my house anyway. Average accumulated rainfall by March 7 has historically been 25.77 inches, which means we have been very close to normal, although some Santa Rosa stations have reported as much as nearly 29 inches to date. Average annual in Santa Rosa has historically been 31.01 inches.

[Update: Subsequent drizzle has added another 0.15 inches, bringing the total as of March 11 to 25.90 inches.]

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Wines I'm Drinking: Two Finca La Linda Wines from Luigi Bosca

Yesterday I tasted two wines from Argentina from Luigi Bosca  under the Finca La Linda label. To begin with the conclusion: These are not profound wines, but they are tasty for everyday drinking and very attractively priced. From Argentina's Luján de Cuyo region, just south of the city of Mendoza. Brief tasting notes follow.

2007 Finca La Linda Unoaked Chardonnay
A pretty, pale gold color. Light floral scents. Pear blossom or hawthorne perhaps. Not a sweet smell at all, but floral in character. Although this is unoaked, something about the nose suggests wood. Scents of bread or yeast, toasted grain. Later suggestions of white peach, putting me in mind of Viognier. A bit low in acid with a generous, fruity, sweet mid-palate (sweet in the sense of ripe fruit rather than residual sugar, although the wine isn't bone dry either). Packs a punch. Plenty of alcohol--a bit too much perhaps, but offset by a persistent, peachy sweetness on the finish. Again, very reminiscent of a Viognier-based wine on the palate. I think this is likely to disappoint anyone looking for a typical new-world Chardonnay, as it doesn't have typical Chardonnay characteristics, but it's an attractive (if simple) wine quite suitable for everyday occasions. Very attractively priced at my local Grocery Outlet for only $3.99 a bottle (or $3.59 if you buy it by the case).

2006 Finca La Linda Cabernet Sauvignon
Plummy medium red--none of the bright, purple-red of a very young wine. On the nose, hints of chocolate and tobacco (especially tobacco). Not very fruity on the nose, but attractive enough. Creamy attack on the palate makes it seem soft and round at first but then it suddenly develops a tannic bite followed by some good fruit tending toward black cherries. Cocoa on a moderately long finish. Like the Chardonnay, not greatly nuanced, but an easy, tasty, everyday wine bargain priced at $3.99 a bottle ($3.59 a bottle by the case) at Santa Rosa Grocery Outlet.

Plants I'm Growing--First Blooms: Dwarf Peach, Nanking Cherry

First blooms today on the Nanking cherry by the birdbath (Prunus tomentosa), a bush cherry with very delicate pretty, ever-so-slightly pink blossoms. Yesterday we had the first blossoms--a rich, deep pink--on the dwarf peach in the back garden.

The Nanking cherry bloomed on March 2 in 2009 and on March 8 in 2010, for a year of 362 days this year and 371 days the year before, averaging to 366.5 days, close to an astronomical year. The Dwarf peach bloomed on March 2 in 2009 and February 22 in 2010, for a year of 377 days this year and 358 days in the year before, averaging to 367.5 days, also close to an actual year.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Birds I'm Watching: Palm Warbler at Sonoma County Airport (March 3, 2011)

I ventured out to the Sonoma County Airport today because someone reported there was a Palm Warbler hanging around in the trees along one of the roads adjacent to the airport, Ordinance Rd. I had little trouble finding the bird. He spent his time flying between a big oak tree and a stand of shrubs alongside one of the airport buildings where he flitted about looking for insects in the foliage and on the ground, flicking his tail like a wagtail much of the time.

What is he doing in Santa Rosa? I have no idea.  This is a warbler that normally stays east of the Rockies, but one or two do appear to stray out this way from time to time, according to the books. Anyway, I'm glad I got to see him--a finely streaked, pretty bird mostly of white and cream with a little yellow under the tail and at the throat. The white patches underneath at the tip of the tail are distinctive. That's my 204th species sighted in Sonoma County, No. 330 for my life list.

For more information about bird watching in Sonoma County, see my Website Sonoma County Bird Watching Spots.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Plants I'm Growing--First Blooms: Dwarf Nectarine

A single blossom has opened in the rain today on the dwarf nectarine behind the house. This has been a fairly slow grower, but it has done well. It's beautiful when clothed fully in pink. It's mostly an ornamental, but the nectarines it produces are delicious--very intensely flavored. Every year I look forward to the ones the raccoons don't get. The nectarine bloomed on March 5 in 2009, February 27 in 2010 (for a year of 359 days) and this year on March 2 (today, for a year of 368 days).

Found Art: Metal Van (March 2, 2011)

Parked in the driveway of a house down the hill from my own house is a large van that appears fixed to the spot. It hasn't moved for years. All the paint has been removed, exposing bare metal. I think a logo was also removed with a power sanding tool. The work (performed long ago) left a shimmering, shifting surface that looks especially interesting in early morning sun. Found art.

For more found art, see my blog Serendipitous Art.

Rain: More Rain (March 2-3, 2011)

No, this isn't a blog about rain. I've just been busy the past few days and haven't had much to write about. Rain always interests me, though. Why? I'm not sure, really. Probably because our summers are SO dry. I just like to know how much has fallen. I like to know where we stand relative to a normal year.

Overnight, we got another 0.65 inches. That brings our 2010-2011 total to 24.85 inches (but it's still raining, and rain is predicted for most of the next few days). Normal rainfall for March 2 has been about 25.2 inches, so we are pretty much in line with a typical year. I suspect we'll be ahead by the end of the week. Having just planted the vegetable garden yesterday, rain is good.

[Beautiful and clear today, the 3rd of March, but we had a sprinkle last night, adding 0.05 inches to the 2010-2011 total, which is now 24.90 inches].

Friday, February 25, 2011

Rain: Substantial Rain Last Night (Feb. 25, 2011)

Substantial rain again last night--amid talk of possible snow over the weekend. We got 1.3 inches overnight, raising the total for the current rainy season (July 2010 to end-June 2011) to 24.2 inches. That's right in line with the historical average of 24.13 inches for February 25. Average annual rainfall in Santa Rosa has been 31.01 inches historically.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Plants I'm Growing--First Blooms: Two-toned Daffodils (2011)

First blooms today on the two-toned daffodils in the garden. I don't know the name of the variety in this case, but it's distinct from any of the more common all-yellow daffodils. I was sure I noted the first blooms on these last year, but I can't find the record. I didn't post anything to the blog, it seems. I'll amend this if the data turn up. I think I planted these in late 2008. This should be their third year blooming. In any case, they're pretty. I will probably plant more. They provide a nice contrast with the yellow flowers (also blooming right now).

I took this photo of them late at night in the rain (the things I do for this blog....), which resulted in a somewhat surreal image. I used a flash. A drop of water is caught suspended in mid-air at lower left. You can even see an image of the flower within the water droplet.

[I found the information I was looking for. The two-toned daffodils bloomed on February 22 in 2010, for a year of 367 days.]

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Birds I'm Watching: Spring Lake, Santa Rosa (Feb. 23, 2011)

I took a walk around Spring Lake today for the first time in a while, trying to get a little exercise and enjoying the sunny, relatively warm weather. I didn't see anything unusual, but there were a lot of birds around--36 species (which is moderate for Spring Lake, but a lot of individual birds). There were many Pied-billed Grebes (14!) and there were Yellow-rumped Warblers everywhere (I counted 22--13 of the Myrtle type, three of the Audubon's type, and six that I didn't see well enough to tell which). There were probably more than I actually counted. After a while, it's hard not to start feeling blasé about them when there are so many--still, despite being common at this time of year, they are pretty birds.

Otherwise, I saw Crows, Turkey Vulture, two Red-shouldered Hawks (which may have been a pair; one was carrying nest material. They were hanging around the tall evergreen trees at the south end of the lake. I wonder if a nest will appear there?), many House Finches, including an orange one, Steller's Jay, Oak Titmouse, White-breasted Nuthatch, Scrub Jay, California Towhee, Spotted Towhee, Nuttall's Woodpecker, Chestnut-backed Chickadee, Anna's Hummingbird, Common Merganser, Coots, Canada Geese, my first Tree Swallows of the year, Double-crested Cormorant, Ruby-crowned Kinglet, Common Moorhen, Buffleheads, Mallards, Red-winged Blackbird, Brewer's Blackbird, Lesser Goldfinch, Golden-crowned Sparrow, White-crowned Sparrow, my first Green Heron of the year, Black Phoebe, Robin, Flicker, Ring-billed Gull, Hermit Thrush, and Ruddy Duck. A fair number of usually present birds escaped me today--notably juncos and egrets. The Mallard hen in the photo posed rather obligingly.

For more information about Spring Lake and bird watching in Sonoma County generally, see my Website Sonoma County Bird Watching Spots.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Books I'm Reading: Bruce Catton's Civil War Trilogy

Perhaps I was dimly aware that 2010 marked the 150th anniversary of the start of the US Civil War, but it wasn't really on my mind when recently I turned to reading Bruce Catton's three-volume history of the conflict (Phoenix Press, 2001, but, originally published 1961-1965, to mark the Civil War centennial). I received the set as a birthday gift years ago. I just happened to get around to the books at what has turned out to be an appropriate time.

Totaling 1,430 pages, the trilogy (The Coming Fury, Terrible Swift Sword, and Never Call Retreat) is considered by many to be the definitive treatment of the conflict between the North and the South, but I think first of Shelby Foote's trilogy (Vintage, 1986; Fort Sumter to Perryville, Fredericksburg to Meridian, and Red River to Appomattox), simply because I read it first--probably 15 years  ago now, in the mid-1990s. Speaking in the broadest terms, the two authors have done much the same thing--painted a comprehensive picture of the causes of the war, looked at the struggle itself, and then considered the state the Union was in when fighting ended and after Lincoln's assassination. The story, constrained as it is by fact, is the same. However, the flavor of the two sets of books is rather different.

I must admit, I preferred the Shelby Foote books. When I read them, I thought it difficult to imagine anyone doing better. I still feel that way, but the Catton trilogy is well written, enjoyable, and recommendable.

The main differences, it seems to me, are in how the writers feel about whether the South could have won the war and in the way the two use anecdote. Foote suggests that indeed the South might have won and that the victory of Federal forces over the South was not inevitable. If I remember correctly, I was well into volume two before I began to relax--that is, before I began to feel reassured that the story would end the way I knew it had to end, with the utter defeat of the South. Catton concedes that the Southern soldier was a determined fighter, that the South won many important battles, and that northern generals were oddly ineffective early in the war, but at every turn he takes pains to suggest that it didn't matter, that the rebels never really had a chance--mainly because of inadequate resources. Both men are right, of course, but Foote somehow gets better mileage out of the drama.

Foote is a master of the anecdote. His narrative is deftly interwoven with vivid sketches of people and particular events that stick in the mind. I can recall many of them even fifteen years later--even if at this remove I'd have to go back to the books, search the stories out one by one, and reread them before I could with confidence recount any one of them in detail. Whose death was it that was supposedly heralded by a pair of Mourning Doves? Which confederate general was in danger of being hacked to death by a lone Union cavalryman that happened upon him when he was unescorted? Who brought in carpenters to extend Lincoln's too-short berth on the boat that brought him to see Grant at the front? What was the story about Jefferson Davis and confederate gold? As I say, I'd have to re-read the three books, but the flavor of the writing created by Foote's liberal use of the particular has remained etched in my mind and the books were riveting at the time. I remember the pleasure of reading the details more than the details themselves, but the books were indeed a great pleasure to savor. Catton's style, although fluid and clear, is comparatively unadorned with this kind of color.

One particular effect of Foote's style was that he left me with a much greater sense of the horror of battle in the 1860s. Essentially the Civil War was a war fought with modern weapons (repeating rifles) but still in many instances using the tactics of the past (with men, inexplicably, still consenting to stand in rows and shoot each other to death at close range). Beyond such subjects as the effects of bullets and artillery on infantry and the realities of amputations and other battlefield medicine, Foote discusses defensive works and armaments in more depth than Catton, he talks about paroles, prisoner exchanges, and prison camps, and he goes into greater detail and into a greater number of battles than Catton (for example, covering the Red River Campaign, which Catton mentions only in passing). Foote left me feeling as if I'd been there from Sumter to Appomattox. In short, Foote's account was more vivid and colorful and it was farther-ranging.

Comparing the two and arguing about which is better seems to be a much-played game. I amused myself last night for an hour or so reading posts on various Websites by partisans on both sides of the argument. Those that prefer Catton seem to fault Foote mainly for a comparative lack of footnotes, casting aspersions on his sources by implication, although nobody seems to have specific lapses to point to; the critics claim a general uneasiness and favor Catton for being an historian rather than a storyteller. I, for one, am willing to take it on faith that Foote wasn't making things up as he went along, and telling a good story seems no fault to me.

Some that prefer Catton suggest Foote's account is tainted by Southern sympathies, Foote being a southerner himself. I felt he struck a rather good balance, and I say that as a Northerner (if anything--it's not really part of my self-image); I lived a short spell in St. Louis, but I was born in New York, lived a long time in Ohio, and my Civil War ancestors were Ohio volunteers, mustered out of Holmes or Stark County. One fought at Chattanooga, Lookout Mountain, and Missionary Ridge, and was wounded at Chicamauga (my mother has the bullet he was shot with). He was among the many German immigrants granted US citizenship in exchange for a three-year stint in the blue uniform of the Union. He left the service at Marietta, Georgia close to the end of the fighting. Another ancestor was captured at Gettysburg and died in Andersonville Prison.

What no one seems to disagree about is that these trilogies are the finest two overviews of the Civil War we have. Perhaps the best approach is to read them both, Catton, then Foote. Follow that with Jay Winik's excellent April 1865: The Month that Saved America (Perennial, 2002; first published in hardcover by HarperCollins, 2001)--a superb book focused on the very end of the war, Lincoln's assassination, and the nation's halting new beginning after the war--and you're likely to come away with a very well-rounded appreciation of the meaning of the US Civil War and its aftermath.

[Update: Not long after reading this, I read Doris Kearns Goodwin's Team of Rivals (Simon & Schuster, 2005)--another excellent Civil War book.]
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