Saturday, July 31, 2021

Going Bananas!

 When Hurricane Dorian hit the island in 2019, every living plant around our house was destroyed.  We had to finally get down to the bare dirt and start planting everything all over again.

One of the things we decided to try was bananas!  We ordered one plant each of four different varieties.  We chose the varieties that were listed as most hardy as we do sometimes get an edge of freezing weather in the winter.

When the plants came, they were like dead sticks with a small bundle of roots at one end.  Trish and I set them out in April and waited.  Six weeks passed and they continued to look like dead sticks.  I even called the nursery from which we had ordered them and told them I thought the plants were dead.  The lady I spoke with told me to scrape the side of the “stick” and see if there was any green down under the brown.  If so, she said, just wait and watch!

By the end of May we had the first emerging green leaf!





All through last summer the plants grew…at a surprisingly rapid rate; about one new leaf every ten days or so.  By exactly this day last summer, the plants were almost as tall as I was.


Winter arrived.  In February we had a couple of nights when the temperature dropped to the edge of freezing.  As spring arrived, we saw that most of the banana leaves had turned brown and were falling off. But, new growth was starting!  Soon there was no doubt that the trees were alive and well.

Through this summer the growth has been amazingly fast!  About a new leaf every week, and new babies coming up from the original plant roots.  Now the plants have totally outgrown me!


Will we have bananas?  The answer will depend on the coming winter. We are told that it takes about 16 plus or minus months for the bloom to appear.  Then it takes more months for the fruit to appear, grow, and ripen.  If we have a mild winter, all of this could happen!  We will let you know if it does.  In the meantime, this certainly is lots of fun!


Sunday, July 18, 2021

Church on the ‘Hooch.

 We have been in LaGrange, Georgia, for the week for the Azalea Storytelling Workshop.

On Sunday we got to go with our hosts, Joyce Morgan and Bill Young in their boat on West Point Lake to “Church on the ‘Hooch.”  The Chattahoochee River is a major feeder of the lake and First United Methodist Church in LaGrange each summer holds a lakeside worship service for people who are spending their summer weekends on the lake.  


The service is held on the lakeside grounds of the Boy Scout camp.  We had about a dozen boats filled with people gathered as well as another couple of dozen people in chairs on the lakeside.


The real treat was that the speaker for this Sunday was Storyteller Carol Cain, both a good friend and a member of the Workshop Week.



We had music and a sermon on prayer and even had the offering taken by teenage boys in kayaks reaching out with small nets on sticks.  

It was a relaxing and inspiring way to worship on a summer Sunday morning.

Thursday, July 15, 2021

At the Zoo

 The State of North Carolina has a wonderful natural habitat State Zoological Park in the center of the state near Asheboro, NC.  I had not been there for many years and Trish had never been there when we decided to stop by on a trip last week.

I was amazed at how much the zoo has grown since my last visit and how beautifully the animals lived in their environments. 

Otters play in North America.


There are two large divisions: North America and Africa.  We went to Africa first.  You walk along paths in the woods and visit the large natural habitat areas where elephants, rhinos, and other large animals have their homes.

The elephants covered themselves with so much dust that they turned pale brown.


Then we went to North America and saw everything from bears to bison…we bypassed the snakes!

We spent about three hours at the zoo because it was a very hot day.  The walkways are very shady, though, and make it much more comfortable than open space would be.

Beautiful black bears at feeding time.





Monday, July 5, 2021

The Fourth on the Island.

 Here on Ocracoke the Fourth of July celebrations started with an island wide adult scavenger hunt on July third.  Then on the evening of the third, we have our fireworks here and an outdoor kick-off celebration down by the harbor.  It was discovered that by having our fireworks on the third we could cut the cost in half and afford a much better show!


We went down to the Preservation Museum about eight-thirty and got our choice seats for the nine-fifteen show.  It was beautiful as the  rockets went up above the waters of Pamlico Sound.






The Fourth itself started off with the sand sculpture contest on the beach.  The day went on with the island parade at four in the afternoon.  This year there was no classic car show as many of the old cars from years past were destroyed in Hurricane Dorian.  We are sad for that.

Watching the parade pass a block from our house.

After the parade, I told stories on the stage beside Books to be Red and then there was an evening fire on the beach.  The Fourth here is always a lovely day!


Thursday, July 1, 2021

Time With Friends

 I met Put and Nannie Brown in 1982 at the North Atlantic Storytelling Festival in Rockport, Maine.  From that day until now we have been great friends.  We have visited each other’s homes and traveled together several times.

This year, Put and Nannie came to be participants in our Ocracoke Storytelling Week workshop.  When the week was over, they stayed on with us for the first good visit we had had in some time and so that they might get to know Trish better than there had been a chance to do before COVID.



 We had a wonderful time playing around the island, eating together, getting rest, and best of all, just visiting.

Time together on the porch.

We deeply realize that this kind of time is probably the thing that COVID forced us to miss most and we are delighted that their visit is the beginning of seeing in person many many people whom we treasure and love.



It’s Coming!

 Spring is now really on its way! We just ate our first lettuce from our little salad garden.  Trish also had an early radish!  The lettuces...