
This is Belmont Estate, once home to artist Gari Melchers. Below is a garden building which overlooks the Rappahannock River.

Civil War Tent Display at White Oak Museum near Falmouth, VA.

This is Belmont Estate, once home to artist Gari Melchers. Below is a garden building which overlooks the Rappahannock River.

A winter storm watch made yesterday a busy day. At the library lecture in the morning, we talked to the neighbors whom we had invited over for a visit this afternoon. Because of the forecast of snow, sleet and rain, we changed our plans to a visit yesterday evening. Our house needed cleaning and we had errands to run, so we hurried to the main library to return the movie screen, grabbed a burger in Woodstock, and bought a few groceries in Wal-Mart. (I was out of goat's milk and Wal-Mart is the only place in the valley that carries it.) Then we drove home and dove into housecleaning for a few hours. The visit with our friends was pleasant, although the house smelled slightly like floor cleaner, no doubt with whiffs of dogginess.
I am still working on the digital pictures from our California trip in January. It takes a few minutes to process each image:
Above is a sunset seen from the plane just before we landed in Long Beach. And to the right is another view of the mausoleum at the Huntington Museum. The picture below was taken nearby.
A year ago I wrote about my dog having to take medication for seizures. At the time he had experienced a number of episodes which the vet thought were seizures, during which he frantically grazed on the carpet, licking up lint and sometimes foreign objects. When he swallowed a tiny battery and a piece of cloth he wound up in the animal hospital. Recently, Simpson tells me, after she was still feeling not quite right, an allergist delivered news that would chill the heart of anyone reared on Texan cuisine: She's allergic to cheese. And wheat. Oh, and tomatoes, hot peppers, coffee, corn, and chocolate.

Contrails only form at very high altitudes (usually above 8 km) where the air is extremely cold (less than -40 degrees C).
Frank purchased this angel at a hardware store a few years ago because, he said, she looked like me!
The blue jays have been fairly shy so I was delighted when this one landed on the rail of the deck and visited our feeder.
I may be jaded about some things, but I've got to admit: I just love the view from our house!
After staying home yesterday to avoid the sleet, we drove out to the post office this afternoon. We took Frank's car which he had left parked on the road - our long steep driveway was still covered in a couple of inches of ice over a couple inches of snow. However, when we returned home, the good folks from Macanie Trucking were clearing our driveway. We have a snow-clearing contract with them, and well worth it. Even walking the dogs is easier after the driveway has been cleared.

Birds flocked to our feeders today. Snow seems to make them go food shopping like it does to us.
About an inch an a half of snow fell this morning, followed by sleet this afternoon. It was pretty to look at, slippery to walk on.
This little guy was so excited to find a pine cone smeared with peanut butter and seed that he ventured within a few inches of our sliding glass door - and my camera.

Yesterday we woke up to find about 4 inches of snow on the ground. The sun was out and the snow glistened.Daily Photo
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