September 1, 1792
Grass grows on the walks very fast. Garden beans at an end.
Grass grows on the walks very fast. Garden beans at an end.
Men make wheat-ricks. Mr Hale’s rick fell. Vivid rain-bow.
A fern-owl this evening showed-off in a very unusual, & entertaining manner, by hawking round, & round the circumference of my great spreading oak for twenty times following, keeping mostly close to the grass but occasionally glancing up amidst the boughs of the tree. This amusing bird was then in pursuit of a brood of some particular phalaena belonging to the oak, of which there are several sorts; & exhibited on the occasion a command of wing superior, I think, to that of the swallow itself. Fern-owls have attachment to oaks, no doubt on account of food: for the next evening we saw one again several times among the boughs of the same tree; but it did not skim round it’s stem over the grass, as on the evening before. In May these birds find the Scarabaeus melolontha on the oak; & the Scarabaeus solstitialis at Midsummer. These peculiar birds can only be watched & observed for two hours in the twenty-four, & then in dubious twilight, an hour after sun-set & an hour before sun-rise.
A fly-catcher brings out a brood of young: & yet they will all withdraw & leave us by the 10th of next month.
John Berriman’s hops at the end of the Foredown very fine.
Some wheat bound; & some gleaning. I have not seen one wasp.
The seeds of the lime begins to fall. Some wheat under hedges begins to grow.
My large American Juniper, probably Juniperus Virginiana, has produced this summer a few few small blossoms of a strong flavour like that of the juniper-berries: but I could not distinguish whether the flowers were male, or female; so consequently could not determine the sex of the tree, which is dioecious. The order is dioecia monadelphia.
Thomas, in mowing the walks, finds that the grass begins to grow weak, & to yield before the scythe. This is an indication of the decline of heat. Yucca filamentosa, silk grass, glows with a fine large white flower. It thrives abroad in a warm aspect. Habitat in Virginia.
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