Monthly Archives: August 2025

Thursday Poem – ‘Three Songs for the End of Summer’ by Jane Kenyon

‘The Crows’ by Anselm Kiefer

Well, Readers, it might not be the end of summer quite yet, but it’s difficult to ignore the ‘back-to-school’ signs in the shops, the lengthening days, the goldening of the leaves. I absolutely love this poem/poems….see what you think. Read slowly, and let the pictures form in your head…

Three Songs at the End of Summer

By Jane Kenyon

A second crop of hay lies cut
and turned. Five gleaming crows
search and peck between the rows.
They make a low, companionable squawk,
and like midwives and undertakers
possess a weird authority.

Crickets leap from the stubble,
parting before me like the Red Sea.
The garden sprawls and spoils.

Across the lake the campers have learned
to water ski. They have, or they haven’t.
Sounds of the instructor’s megaphone
suffuse the hazy air. “Relax! Relax!”

Cloud shadows rush over drying hay,
fences, dusty lane, and railroad ravine.
The first yellowing fronds of goldenrod
brighten the margins of the woods.

Schoolbooks, carpools, pleated skirts;
water, silver-still, and a vee of geese.

*

The cicada’s dry monotony breaks
over me. The days are bright
and free, bright and free.

Then why did I cry today
for an hour, with my whole
body, the way babies cry?

*

A white, indifferent morning sky,
and a crow, hectoring from its nest
high in the hemlock, a nest as big
as a laundry basket …
In my childhood
I stood under a dripping oak,
while autumnal fog eddied around my feet,
waiting for the school bus
with a dread that took my breath away.

The damp dirt road gave off
this same complex organic scent.

I had the new books—words, numbers,
and operations with numbers I did not
comprehend—and crayons, unspoiled
by use, in a blue canvas satchel
with red leather straps.

Spruce, inadequate, and alien
I stood at the side of the road.
It was the only life I had.

Wednesday Weed – The Golden Rain Tree

Golden Rain Tree ( Koelreuteria paniculata) at Chelsea Physic Garden

Dear Readers, one of the joys of this blog has been the amazing people that I’ve met, not just in East Finchley, but all over the world. On Monday I went on an expedition to Chelsea Physic Garden with my friend JD – I haven’t been there for probably thirty years. What a wonderful place it is! And, in full glory at the moment, is the Golden Rain tree.

What you can’t see until you get close up is that the ‘fruits’ of the tree are tiny bladders or lanterns, making this a very unusual tree. It is becoming increasingly popular as a street tree, as not only does it have these ‘pods’, but it has yellow flowers in spring, impressive early foliage, and the pods darken to shades of deep orange in the autumn. Plus, it’s a relatively small tree, so could fit in any large-ish garden (though I suspect that the pollinators would prefer it if you planted a crab apple or cherry. Or even a hawthorn)

You might think, from looking at the tree, that it’s a member of the bean family, but no! It belongs to the ‘soap-berry’ family, the Sapindaceae, which includes trees such as the horse chestnut, the maples, and the lychee tree. Why soap-berry, though? One thought is that it relates to the milky sap of some of the plants in this family, but I remain a little sceptical.

Golden Rain tree flowers (Photo By Didier Descouens – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=119770021)

The tree comes originally from China, Mongolia and South Korea, which makes one of its other names, ‘Pride of India’, a little confusing. Still, it is a tree that’s travelled widely – it arrived in Japan as long ago as 1200, and can be found all over Europe and North America. In his book ‘London’s Street Trees’, Paul Wood describes how the tree can tolerate pollution, exposure, hard surfaces and most things that a city can throw at it – anything, in fact, except shade.

Sitting under a Golden Rain Tree is supposed to make you fall in love with whoever you’re sitting with, allegedly – a 1957 film starring Elizabeth Taylor, Montgomery Clift, and DeForest Kelley (yes, that DeForest Kelley – ‘I’m a doctor, not a bricklayer, Jim’) was a tale of a Professor in Civil War Indiana falling in lurve inconveniently, mediated by the tree.

In Japan, the tree is associated with scholars, and is often grown close to their tombs. As the tree was mainly used medicinally to treat eye complaints, you can see how somebody studying texts for hours at a time, often in failing light, would have appreciated the plant, and how the connection with those who study might have grown.

Is this tree edible? Well, apparently the young shoots can be boiled and eaten like spinach, but the seeds are acidic, and the plant contains cyanide, so you might want to give it a miss. On the other hand, the flowers produce a yellow dye, and the mature leaves produce a black dye, so that might be a fun thing to try if you’ve some cloth or wool that you’re fed up with.

And here’s a poem, by Sylvia Plath no less. I found it sensual, but confusing. And my botanist self frequently had to pause and scratch her head. See what you think.

The Beekeeper’s Daughter by Sylvia Plath

A garden of mouthings. Purple, scarlet-speckled, black
The great corollas dilate, peeling back their silks.
Their musk encroaches, circle after circle,
A well of scents almost too dense to breathe in.
Hieratical in your frock coat, maestro of the bees,
You move among the many-breasted hives,

My heart under your foot, sister of a stone.

Trumpet-throats open to the beaks of birds.
The Golden Rain Tree drips its powders down.
In these little boudoirs streaked with orange and red
The anthers nod their heads, potent as kings
To father dynasties. The air is rich.
Here is a queenship no mother can contest —

A fruit that’s death to taste: dark flesh, dark parings.

In burrows narrow as a finger, solitary bees
Keep house among the grasses. Kneeling down
I set my eyes to a hole-mouth and meet an eye
Round, green, disconsolate as a tear.
Father, bridegroom, in this Easter egg
Under the coronal of sugar roses

The queen bee marries the winter of your year.

A Sting in the Tail

Dear Readers, this post could also be called ‘no good deed goes unpunished’. On Saturday, I noticed that my neighbour’s green wheelie bin was in the middle of the pavement, and I knew that they would be away until mid-week, so I decided to put it away in their front garden. As I dragged it back, I brushed against my buddleia. Suddenly there was not only a sharp pain on the back of my neck, but a very distinct sound of angry buzzing coming from inside my shirt.

Well, this was not a happy situation, but fortunately my shirt was of the oversized variety (much more comfortable in this hot weather) and so, by a process of wriggling and dangling upside down I managed to liberate the angry insect before further harm was done, and lo and behold, a very cross bumblebee fell onto the pavement.

Now, I have only once been stung before, and that was when I accidentally stepped on a bee while wafting barefoot across a lawn as a teenager. And that was excruciatingly painful, whereas this was merely disconcerting. Which got me to thinking about the way that bumblebees sting.

I had always believed that bumblebee stingers were barbed, so if they stung someone  they would die. But actually, it’s honeybees which have a barbed sting – bumblebees can sting multiple times if necessary, so I’m very glad that ‘my’ bee decided to only sting once, probably out of the shock of suddenly being in an enclosed space. I also had such a mild reaction that it now seems clear that I didn’t inherit my mother’s extreme allergy to insect venom – a wasp sting on her neck caused very alarming swelling and pain, and Mum was told that another sting might be enough to kill her. However, I do note that it’s been discovered that different species of bees and wasps can have very different venom, so maybe I shouldn’t be too complacent.

Below is a photo of the bee sting 24 hours after it happened – and before any of you lovely people ask,  I have had the mole checked out and it’s fine.

Venom has evolved lots of times in different members of the animal kingdom, but is largely used for two reasons: for predation (i.e, a snake subduing its prey) or defence (i.e. a bumblebee stinging me on the neck). Defensive venom is usually a much simpler chemical, which causes immediate pain, as opposed to predatory venom which may act instead as a neurotoxin, paralysing an animal so that it can be eaten. Furthermore, one very interesting study has found that venom can even change within a single species, according to how likely the animal is to be predated, and how harsh the environment is. Venom is usually ‘expensive’ for the animal to produce, and so if the animal is less likely to be attacked, we would expect the composition of the venom to change to a ‘cheaper’ variety. This was observed in a study of bumblebees in the Swiss Alps, where the composition of the venom changed as the altitude increased – there are less predators at high altitude, and also life is harder, so the bumblebee uses its metabolic resources for other things, such as keeping warm and being able to fly. It still has venom, but less of it, and the chemical make up of the venom is different.

You can read this fascinating study here.

So, all in all being stung on the neck was an interesting experience, and one that’s raised all sorts of questions for me about the complexity of the natural world, and how varied things are. What a teacher a bee sting can be!

 

An Invitation

Dear Readers, in a couple of months I will be sneaking off for a very special holiday to somewhere that I’ve always dreamed of visiting. I’ll be gone for a couple of weeks, and it’s very doubtful that I’ll have either the time or energy (or indeed wi-fi) to post every day to the blog while I’m gone.

So, I had an idea.

I know that many of you have blogs of one kind or another, so I’m inviting anyone who would like to to submit something to be posted as a guest blog on Bug Woman. You won’t need to write anything new (unless you’d like to), but it would be a way of engaging with a different audience from your usual one, and it might be fun! I would do all the practical stuff around transferring your work and of course you’d receive full credit.

I would only ask that your piece has some connection, however vague, with the natural world.

If you don’t have a blog but would like to submit some writing/photos, that would be good too!

Leave me a note in the comments, and I’ll get in touch with you to discuss.

Love is in the Air

Dear Readers, one of the things about sitting on the bench in the garden is that I start to notice things, and yesterday it was the way that the collared doves are chasing one another around. You might think that breeding season is over, and so it is for most birds, but doves and pigeons can breed all year round, provided they have enough food themselves to make ‘crop milk’ for their nestlings.  I always thought that this protein and fat-rich secretion was limited to just the pigeon family, but apparently both flamingoes and male emperor penguins can also produce it. At any rate, love was definitely in the air yesterday – one male collared dove chased what I assume was a female from roof to roof, and then another male briefly joined in. The female flew away on every occasion – this might be an unconscious test of the male’s persistence and flying ability, it may be that the female isn’t ready to breed, or it may be a combination of both.

For those who haven’t heard it, the male collared dove’s ‘breeding call’ always reminds me of a tin trumpet.

The male was also ‘dancing’ around the female – it was difficult to see exactly what he was doing due to the angle of the roof, but it definitely involved bobbing up and down and inflating the throat, while making a very assertive three-note call. In the clip below, you can hear a duet, which happens between a bonded male and female, and also the sound of wingbeats – there’s a distinct whistling sound when collared doves fly.

Male collared doves also perform a display flight – I watched this male flying up, nearly vertically, before ‘gliding’ back down. What a shame the female wasn’t impressed!

Also, I’m just noticing the vertical habitat of mosses and lichens above the gutter on our flat roof. I’m very impressed.

In other bench-related news, I looked up at the leaves on our whitebeam, which are coming back after our November pollarding, and they look just like lace….

I have no idea who is eating them, but I shall send a photo off to the Royal Horticultural Society and see if anyone has any idea (chip in if you have any thoughts!) The leaves will be falling soon-ish (though the whitebeam is the last tree to shed its foliage) so I’m not worried for this year, and I’m sure the stress of the pollarding/drought/cold spring/hot summer won’t have helped, so fingers crossed that the tree is happier next year.

Some Excitement!

Dear Readers, you might remember that, a few years ago, I was a cat fosterer for first Cats’ Protection, and then the RSPCA – I did a post about it here. And then one of my fostered cats, Willow, turned into a permanent cat, and so that was that. She died last year, and I was heartbroken, but this year I’ve finally decided to start fostering again, for the RSPCA, and yesterday I heard that my first two foster cats will be arriving on Tuesday.

Above is a photo of what I think of as the Biscuit Kittens, as we are getting two boys, and their names are McVitie and Jaffa. I don’t know which out of the four they are, but will be sharing photos further down the line. The photo was taken in April, and the cats have been in the animal hospital at Finsbury Park ever since – between them they’ve had cat flu, diarrhoea, and mouth lesions (could be something called calici virus, but I’m not sure). Anyhow, they’ve had a rough start, poor little things, so some TLC and a home environment will probably be just the ticket.

I am imagining quiet chaos for the next few weeks – kittens are usually full of energy (though they also conk out as if a switch has been turned off). They are curious with no sense of danger at all, and a knack for getting into places where you don’t want them to get. All in all, we are about to be livened up and stressed.

I can’t wait. I’ll keep you all posted.

The Bench

Dear Readers, I don’t know why it’s taken me 15 years, but I’ve finally gotten myself a bench for the garden, so I can sit and watch the pond and the rest of the garden, and see what’s going on. I think the catalyst was getting a teeny tiny bit of wildflower turf to make a soft edge for part of the pond – it makes it feel more accessible somehow. I’m half tempted to sit on it and pop my feet in the water for the tadpoles to bite.

We have been lovingly tending the turf – it needs regular watering so that it can root itself properly, but to my untutored eye it seems to be doing very well.

In fact everything is in full growth at the moment – it’s funny how a garden goes from a bit bare to under control to aaargh in the space of what feels like five minutes…

But the garden is abuzz with honeybees and lots of common carder bumblebees – these are about the last of the bumblebees to fly, and are little ginger critters (though at this time of year a lot of them may look a lot paler and more worn). Interestingly, the honeybees are on the hemp agrimony, while the bumblebees prefer the great willow herb.

Blurred common carder bumblebee on great willowherb! You’re welcome!

I used the Merlin app (highly recommended) to see what birds were about – in the space of five minutes I got blue, great and coal tits, magpies, woodpigeons, collared doves and, joy of joys, a goldcrest – I could hear it, but I didn’t see it this time. How lovely to know that they’re about, though!

And a little flock of starlings were watching from next door’s TV aerial – they always seem very restless to me at this time of year.

And, when I left the bench to take some bee photographs, they took advantage and came down to feed – it’s almost as if they either didn’t know I was there, or knew that I meant them no harm. It’s interesting to see the way that this year’s youngsters are at different stages of adult plumage….

And so I have made a promise to myself, to sit on the bench for ten minutes every day, no matter how tired or busy or stressed I am (in fact, especially on those days). There’s always something going on, and it is so calming to just watch plants and insects and birds do their thing.

Thursday Poem – Dirge Without Music by Edna St Vincent Millay

 

I know lots of poems that attempt to bring consolation after someone has died, but few capture the rage. This one works for me! See what you think.

Dirge Without Music

By Edna St. Vincent Millay

I am not resigned to the shutting away of loving hearts in the hard ground.
So it is, and so it will be, for so it has been, time out of mind:
Into the darkness they go, the wise and the lovely. Crowned
With lilies and with laurel they go; but I am not resigned.

Lovers and thinkers, into the earth with you.
Be one with the dull, the indiscriminate dust.
A fragment of what you felt, of what you knew,
A formula, a phrase remains,—but the best is lost.

The answers quick and keen, the honest look, the laughter, the love,—
They are gone. They are gone to feed the roses. Elegant and curled
Is the blossom. Fragrant is the blossom. I know. But I do not approve.
More precious was the light in your eyes than all the roses in the world.

Down, down, down into the darkness of the grave
Gently they go, the beautiful, the tender, the kind;
Quietly they go, the intelligent, the witty, the brave.
I know. But I do not approve. And I am not resigned.

Wednesday Weed – Crape Myrtle Revisited

Dear Readers, in this sultry weather it seems only appropriate that there is crape myrtle in flower in East Finchley. But there are no cicadas, which, as I mention in the piece below, are the sound of the southern states in the US. When cicadas hatch, all the nymphs from a particular year and species tend to do so at the same time (a brood), leading to a crescendo of sound that reminds me of the sea on a pebble beach.

https://earth.fm/recordings/brood-x-periodical-cicadas/

We do (or did) have one cicada species in the UK – the New Forest Cicada (Cicadetta montana). As with all cicadas, only the males sing, but their call is said to be too high-pitched for most adult human hearing, though children can often hear them. Adding to the problem is the fact that, when adult, they climb to the top of tall trees in order to sing, Furthermore, they need still conditions and temperatures above 20 degrees celsius to perform. Sadly, no New Forest Cicada has been seen since the 1990s, but as we discovered with the stalked jellyfish recently, this doesn’t mean that they’ve gone, merely that we aren’t paying attention. Buglife, in collaboration with Southampton University, the Forestry Commission and the New Forest National Park, have developed an app which, like a bat detector, will pick up the sound of the cicada. Fingers crossed! They may not be the most attractive of insects to our eyes, but then they probably aren’t impressed with us either.

So, read on for a bit more about Crape Myrtle.

Crape Myrtle (Lagerstroemia indica)

Dear Readers, the Crape (or Crepe or Crêpe) Myrtle is originally from India, China and other areas of eastern Asia, though I think of it as being a tree that is synonymous with the southern states of the USA. I was in Washington DC a few years ago, and between the singing of the cicadas and the flowers on the Crape Myrtles it felt very sultry. All I needed was a mint julep and I’d have been in my element.

In China, the tree is known as Pai Jih Hung, which apparently means ‘100 days of red’, after the plant’s long flowering time and red flowers (the pink, mauve and white varieties are cultivars). It was also known as the ‘monkey tree’ because the bark is smooth and difficult to climb. So I suppose it should be called the ‘no monkey tree’. Or possibly the ‘monkey puzzle tree’, except that we already have one of those.

But what is this tree doing in East Finchley, parked at the end of Huntingdon Road in the County Roads and blooming away to its heart’s content? A while back I mentioned that the council was getting much more ambitious with its street trees, and Crape Myrtle was one of the trees mentioned. It really is spectacular, and most unexpected. In his book ‘London’s Street Trees’, Paul Wood mentions that in previous years the tree was considered only half-hardy in London’s winters, but as climate change kicks in, it seems to be thriving. Crape Myrtle doesn’t flower every year, so when it does it’s a real treat.

The fact that the tree doesn’t flower annually has led to some brutal pruning practices (actually known as ‘crape murder’) particularly in the US. All the outer branches are cut off in the autumn, leaving just a stump. In fact, the tree will flower whenever conditions are right and it has the resources to do so, and pruning that hard leads to soft growth, which can attract aphids and mildew, and suckering from the bottom. Be kind to your Crape Myrtle, people! It will flower when it feels like it!

Crape Myrtle is a member of the Lythraceae family, which also includes purple loosestrife of all things. Who knew? I guess they’re both pink (though bear in mind that Crape Myrtle comes in a variety of colours, including bright red.

As far as pollinators go, Crape Myrtle doesn’t have a lot of nectar but it is said to have two types of pollen – the usual stuff, which is full of protein, and ‘false’ pollen, which is generated specifically to attract pollinators. As it blooms in September/October in the UK, it could potentially be a good source of late pollen for any bees who are still active. I shall keep an eye on the one on our street to see if anyone is popping in for a bite.

What I’ve found interesting from reading some of the legends about Crape Myrtle is how, all of a sudden, it’s associated with Aphrodite. What? This is a plant originating in eastern Asia and then heading to the US without so much as a stopover in Europe. What’s happened (I think) is that people are getting confused with a European plant that is interwoven with myth called Myrtle. This is a completely different plant, associated with love and marriage and all those other pleasant things. It is not, however, a Crape Myrtle, so enough already. This is where (Pedant alert) those so-called  boring, elitist Latin names come in so handy when we are trying to identify something precisely.

Common Myrtle (Myrtus communis) Photo By LIGURIAN VASCULAR FLORA – https://www.flickr.com/photos/196946800@N04/52505075873/, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=125783445

Back to Crape Myrtle. This really is an excellent tree for a small garden if you want something that has more than one season of interest (though for wildlife value I think there are better choices) – the bark of the tree is apparently very smooth (as mentioned above), and I must go and inspect the East Finchley tree to see what it looks like. The author of the photo below says that you have to actually stroke the tree to appreciate the smoothness (from the Wild in Japan blog, which is a very good read). In the photo below it looks rather like a more-refined London Plane, which is anything but smooth, as we know.

Crape myrtle bark – ‘as smooth as a baby’s bottom’ (Photo from https://wildinjapan.wordpress.com/2013/11/13/even-monkeys-fall-from-trees/)

And then there’s the autumn foliage colour, something else for me to look out for later in the year.

Crape Myrtle leaves in autumn (Photo Famartin, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons)

Medicinally, Crape Myrtle is one of those trees that is literally meant to cure everything from diabetes to cancer. stroke to heart attack. A more reasonable assessment is given over on the Plants for a Future website, where it seems to be more use as a ‘drastic purgative’ (yikes!), as a paste for the treatment of wounds, and as a treatment for colds (if you use a decoction of the flowers). As usual, Bug Woman advises extreme caution.

And finally, here’s a poem by Evie Shockley, a black woman who grew in in the Deep South of the US. Here’s what she says about being ‘a southern poet’ –

I grew up: hearing certain accents and vocabularies and speech patterns that were the aural essence of ‘home’ or the audible signal of danger, depending; thinking that racism wasn’t much of a problem in other parts of the country; eating a cuisine that was originally developed under conditions of make-do and make-last; enjoying five- or six-month summers and getting ‘snow days’ out of school when the forecast called for nothing other than ‘possible icy conditions’; knowing that my region was considered laughable almost everywhere else; assuming there was nothing unusual about finding churches on two out of every four corners; and believing that any six or seven people with vocal chords could produce four-part harmony at the drop of a dime—and that all of this informs my poetry, sometimes directly and sometimes in ways that might be unpredictable or illegible.”

I love this, and I love this poem. See what you think.

where you are planted
BY EVIE SHOCKLEY

he’s as high as a georgia pine, my father’d say, half laughing. southern trees
as measure, metaphor. highways lined with kudzu-covered southern trees.

fuchsia, lavender, white, light pink, purple : crape myrtle bouquets burst
open on sturdy branches of skin-smooth bark : my favorite southern trees.

one hundred degrees in the shade : we settle into still pools of humidity, moss-
dark, beneath live oaks. southern heat makes us grateful for southern trees.

the maples in our front yard flew in spring on helicopter wings. in fall, we
splashed in colored leaves, but never sought sap from these southern trees.

frankly, my dear, that’s a magnolia, i tell her, fingering the deep green, nearly
plastic leaves, amazed how little a northern girl knows about southern trees.

i’ve never forgotten the charred bitter fruit of holiday’s poplars, nor will i :
it’s part of what makes me evie :  i grew up in the shadow of southern trees.

At Alexandra Palace..

Alexandra Palace

Dear Readers, it’s been lovely to see the gradual resurrection of Alexandra Palace, from a state of near-dereliction following a fire in 1980, to a place with a theatre, exhibition space, ice rink and all sorts of other exciting things, including some studio space where I was visiting a friend.

As you probably know, Alexandra Palace was the original home of the BBC, with the first broadcast happening in 1936. In fact, the television mast is still used today.

Television mast!

During the First World War, the building was used first as a refugee camp for displaced Germans, and then as an internment camp for German and Austrian civilians.

Of course, one reason for stomping all the way up here is the unparalleled view of London, even through the heat haze.

Canary Wharf

South London (and Crystal Palace mast in the background)

The Shard

The Post Office Tower

Inside, it’s very, well, glassy. And a bit hot.

Well, after a coffee with my pal it was time to walk uphill back to Muswell Hill to catch a bus home. This involves a walk along Duke’s Avenue, which has some of the loveliest Edwardian buildings that you can imagine. There are so many details – round windows and plasterwork, as in this pair of beauties below….

Ironwork, woodwork, original encaustic tiles on the pathway, fine porches and doors…

Turrets….

…and stained glass windows…

and yet more plasterwork…

…and before I knew it I was back at Muswell Hill roundabout, and was lucky enough to board a 234 bus before I even had time to register how warm it was.

Incidentally, if you’re in Muswell Hill I am much taken by Roni’s Bagel Bakery – and I saw people carrying away sackfuls of Bagels on Sunday to keep them going through the week, so they must be doing something right!