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3 revisions | Judy Warnement at Dec 15, 2022 06:37 PM | |
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54Trip to Concord, Mass. 1911 woods by Davis’ Hill where its fine oaks are We feasted on grapes. There are a great The apple trees were bearing, owing to Abundant deer tracks all over the area At 4.30 P.M. we bade Will goodbye, and Bidens connata Muhl. | 54Trip to Concord, Mass. 1911 woods by Davis’ Hill where its fine oaks are going past and being cut down. We saw the tall White Pine, over 100 ft. high. Will showed us a Red-shouldered Hawk’s nest. The birds breed there regularly every other year and yet the place is never molested. That is strange. Birds were very scarce. We saw or heard there Partridges, a flock of Blackpolls, one of White-throats, a Jay crying like a Red-shouldered Hawk. We visited the Red Pines a nice grove of them near the Farm House. We feasted on grapes. There are a great many Concord and they were delicious. There was a vine of white sweet grapes and one of small Delaware all very good. The apple trees were bearing, owing to successful grafting and spraying, in a most prolific manner. I never saw such dense clusters of apples before. At 4.30 P.M. we bade Will goodbye, and Mr. James drove us through Concord to the Fitchburg Station where we took the 5.02 train for Porters Sta. & home by electrics. The evening was spent in talk. Panicum columbianum Scribn. (Dupl. sent Mrs. A. Chase) Shady rather dry woods slope of & near Ball’s Hill, Concord |