All Hallows

The neighborhood’s most startling Halloween tableau this year occasioned me genuine alarm.  Walking the dog, one foggy morning this week, I saw ahead of us a car where it didn’t belong:  partly in the street and partly angled up over the curb on the lawn extension.  I hurried to see if anyone needed help.  When… Continue reading All Hallows

Proud Bones

Last month, Tanya and I went to a talk on barns, at which the presenter mentioned that a barn would be taken down on the twenty-fourth of October.  He told us the barn in question was at Parker and Spies (pronounced speez) Roads.  And this Monday, the date in question, my husband agreed to go… Continue reading Proud Bones

Light

Georgetown Boulevard in the fall is a contender for most gorgeous street in town, like Awixa in the spring.  I was riding up Georgetown with my friend Cindy this week, and she was so much in the thrall of the maples that line the street that she missed our turn.  That was on a rainy… Continue reading Light

Autumn Glow

As we were walking toward the parking lot after dinner at Zukey Lake, I spotted a bald eagle on the wing.  It was easy to see, in an otherwise empty blue sky, and flying toward us, distinctive white head to the fore.  There were other people near us, making their way to or from the… Continue reading Autumn Glow

Mosaics

Reading about an artist who makes mosaics led me to seeing the scenery here differently.  The trees are starting to look like mosaics.  In some cases, the artist has, so far, added only a few brightly colored pieces to the existing greens of the leaves.  In others, the artist has indulged a fantasy, using liberal… Continue reading Mosaics

Barns

Tanya and I spent hours last night sitting in a dark, cold barn.  It was great.  We went to hear a talk about the Salem Area Historical Society’s preservation of a barn.  The event was advertised as taking place in a school.  The school was next door.  The meeting was in the barn in question. … Continue reading Barns

Send-Offs and Welcomes

     Yesterday afternoon, Anne and I went to the University of Michigan’s music school for a recital by incoming voice students.  Twenty students sang, from those working on doctorates all the way to freshmen.  The pacing of the concert was excellent, with exiting performers scarcely off the stage before the next performers entered.  One accompanist… Continue reading Send-Offs and Welcomes

Observer Events

     The Ann Arbor Observer comes out once a month and is beloved by Ann Arborites.  It arrives for free on our doorsteps, and I daresay most of us start poring over it immediately.  It tells us what’s changed around town since the last time it appeared, carries interesting feature stories—this month’s is about Ann… Continue reading Observer Events

September

When August turns to September, the weather in Michigan does a sort of pivot.  The days get cooler.  I’ve left footprints in frost heavy enough to hold them at the beginning of September, although that was some years back and four hours north.  We’d been swimming there earlier that week.  The nights get cooler, too,… Continue reading September

Pond and Pull

While the dog and I were walking around Thurston Pond a couple days ago, we came across a blond squirrel.  It seemed to be a healthy, regulation fox squirrel, except for the color of its fur.  Given how visible that color made it, even in the dappled light of the woods, the blondness may well… Continue reading Pond and Pull