Posts Tagged ‘roses’
Latest News Headlines
- A dig into the past
- ‘Pride means everything’
- A new giant tree found near Bolton
- Legislature passes bill for 9/11 death benefits to Adirondack officer’s widow
- Area unemployment numbers near record lows
- For the North Country's future workforce, job training starts in high school
- CVPH opens new Adult Inpatient Psychiatry Unit
- Employee shortages abound throughout the park
- Film takes a new, close look at Lake Champlain
- New B & B owners serve farm-to-table food
Latest News Headlines
- A dig into the past
- ‘Pride means everything’
- A new giant tree found near Bolton
- Legislature passes bill for 9/11 death benefits to Adirondack officer’s widow
- Area unemployment numbers near record lows
- For the North Country's future workforce, job training starts in high school
- CVPH opens new Adult Inpatient Psychiatry Unit
- Employee shortages abound throughout the park
- Film takes a new, close look at Lake Champlain
- New B & B owners serve farm-to-table food
Recent Almanack Comments
- William G Ott Jr on Hiker lost for days in Dix Range; hiker dies on Cascade
- Walter on This Summer, Visit Tourist Destinations that are Close to Home
- Boreas on Mt Jo Long Trail project enters year two with community support
- Jeanne on Recent DEC Hunting and Trapping News
- Alan G West on DEC to Continue River Otter Surveys

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The Adirondack Almanack is a public forum dedicated to promoting and discussing current events, history, arts, nature and outdoor recreation and other topics of interest to the Adirondacks and its communities
We publish commentary and opinion pieces from voluntary contributors, as well as news updates and event notices from area organizations. Contributors include veteran local writers, historians, naturalists, and outdoor enthusiasts from around the Adirondack region. The information, views and opinions expressed by these various authors are not necessarily those of the Adirondack Almanack or its publisher, the Adirondack Explorer.

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Adirondack animal babies: Nesting bluebirds, fawns, and loons
My three trumpet vine honeysuckle vines are covered with blooms, which the hummers like. I fenced in my queen of the forest today (June 12) as the doe which dropped her fawn in the driveway yesterday, was munching close to that plant at daylight this morning.
I also put a fence around my cup plant (not because the deer eat it,) but when it gets to be six feet tall, the stems of the plant will not hold it up, so the fencing keeps it upright as it blooms. The bees love this plant and when it goes to seed, the warblers and goldfinch feed on the bugs and seeds from the flowers. Two Fall seasons ago, I caught six different warbler species feeding in the plant in two days.
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