June 30, 1777

Posted by sydney on Jun 30th, 1777

The pair of martins that began their nest near the stair-case window on June the 21: finished the shell this day.

June 27, 1777

Posted by sydney on Jun 27th, 1777

Boys bring me female wasps, & hornets.  Ophrys nidus avis.

June 26, 1777

Posted by sydney on Jun 26th, 1777

Began to cut my st foin; large and much lodged, & full of wild grasses.  The tenth crop.

June 24, 1777

Posted by sydney on Jun 24th, 1777

Kidney-beans look miserably.   A poor cold solstice for tender plants.  Wheat looks yellow.  My bees when swarming settle every year on the boughs of the Balm of Gilead fir.  Yesterday they settled at first in two swarms, which soon coalesced into one.  To a thinking mind few phenomena  are more striking than the clustering of bees on some bough where they remain in order, as it were, to be ready for hiving:

…”arbore summa

Confluere, & lentis uvam demittere ramis.”

June 22, 1777

Posted by sydney on Jun 22nd, 1777

Swallows are hawking after food for their young ’til near nine o’ the clock.  They take true pains to support their family.

June 21, 1777

Posted by sydney on Jun 21st, 1777

Wheat begins to come into ear.  A pair of martins began a nest this day over the garden-door.  The brick-burner has received great damage among his ware that was drying by the continual rains.

June 20, 1777

Posted by sydney on Jun 20th, 1777

Tremella nostoc abounds in the field-walks; a sign that the earth is drenched with water.

June 17, 1777

Posted by sydney on Jun 17th, 1777

My building is interrupted by the rain.

June 11, 1777

Posted by sydney on Jun 11th, 1777

From the egg-shells flung-out it appears that young martins are hatched in a nest built last year.  The curcumstance of the ready-built nest makes the brood so much the forwarder.

June 10, 1777

Posted by sydney on Jun 10th, 1777

The ground chops & bakes very hard.

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