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WILD VINES AND TREES

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More than a foot of rain in three July weeks!

We set a rain record for this county this month. Thirteen inches — 33 centimeters — of rain in the first three weeks of July. It was supposed to be dry today, yet they had to call the game in Boston due to rain. All that rain has changed our foliage.

Wild grape vines overwhelming the trees!

The wild grape vines have grown so huge they have overwhelmed large oak trees. Bitterroot is choking everything, though the birds like the berries and it makes a very pretty — and lovely scented — flower. But it’s an invader and no matter how many times we uproot it, it comes back.

Look at the size of those vines!

I don’t even recognize some of the vines. The grape vines are familiar. They invaded the woods at my house in New York where I grew up, but they were never dominant up here.

Climate change has done some strange things. Many of our most hardy plants are rotting at the roots and there is fungus on our Holly tree. The wild roses bloomed, though I barely saw them because they bloomed in the rain and now they are all wilted. And some kind of disease has attacked many of our larger birds. I haven’t seen any sick birds, but I also haven’t seen any of the birds who are likely to be sick. From having dozens of Blue Jays, I haven’t seen a single one — or a Starling — in weeks. It is worrying and it’s probably because of all the rain.

Where did July go? Up in flames in the west and into floods everywhere else!


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