About three meters up a pine tree, its lowest branch over two meters off the ground (so not boys climbing trees), the cut-off top of a 6-liter Salus water bottle is stuck in place, presumably with its edged wedged into a piece of the bark.
This is the stump of a pine tree that was recently logged (without permission I expect), and is typical of the wood used to build the house I documented yesterday. I added my foot for scale. My shoe is about 12″/30 cm long, so this is a big tree. But: less than 20 years old.
It was one of a small grove of attractive trees, and we were sorry to see it sacrificed for a few board-feet of shitty lumber, Probably 7-8 meters of the trunk was hauled off; the top and all the smaller branches and needles left behind to rot — and fuel the next wildfire.
Perhaps we should make it a project to bend young trees so they grow crooked, with no commercial value to lumberyards?
When I was growing up, my parents had a philodendron plant in their living room. I was used to seeing it there even as I watched snow piling up outside. It still strikes me as curious when I see one like this, growing on the the side of the road. When we get a frost (always gone with the morning sun) in a month or so, I might wander down there in the morning to see if it has any on it.
Today I first noticed a volunteer squash plant, growing vigorously. Which is strange, since this is the equivalent of the middle of November in the northern hemisphere. It’s even got a tiny squash started. It gets at most two hours of sun a day.
I don’t remember when I picked up this log to split wood—three, four years ago? And all of a sudden this year it’s become home to a mushroom, for the first time.