Say your piece and sail away until the tide's in
I checked in on the magnolia. It seemed to be doing all right.

The shadow of the house we live in fell so nicely on the garage that isn't ours.

It would probably not have occurred to me to decorate my front yard with a wagon wheel, but I am delighted that it occurred to someone else. With the green leaves winding its spokes, it looks like a Tarot card.

As promised, the magnolia. The telephone pole stayed out of shot this time.
I could not get a picture of the two raptors we saw circling over the Tufts campus, and the weeping cherry discovered at a local intersection was so barely in bloom that it seemed unfair. I will return for it.
I am trying to figure out if our upstairs neighbors are watching a period drama or just listening to music, because first I heard "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right" and then "Anji," both of which are extremely recognizable echoing through our ceiling.

The shadow of the house we live in fell so nicely on the garage that isn't ours.

It would probably not have occurred to me to decorate my front yard with a wagon wheel, but I am delighted that it occurred to someone else. With the green leaves winding its spokes, it looks like a Tarot card.

As promised, the magnolia. The telephone pole stayed out of shot this time.
I could not get a picture of the two raptors we saw circling over the Tufts campus, and the weeping cherry discovered at a local intersection was so barely in bloom that it seemed unfair. I will return for it.
I am trying to figure out if our upstairs neighbors are watching a period drama or just listening to music, because first I heard "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right" and then "Anji," both of which are extremely recognizable echoing through our ceiling.

no subject
no subject
Thank you!
no subject
no subject
Thank you! I am afraid I have no idea. After perusal of the internet, it looks most like this variant of star magnolia to me. They are common ornamentals around here; there was a very nice one on our former street.
no subject
no subject
/gets back in her basket
no subject
Come out of that basket! I want to ask you what the right conditions are!
no subject
This comment led me to picture hang-gliding velociraptors riding the thermals over our neighborhood, which I am really charmed by, thank you.
no subject
*surprised expression* I remembered more than I thought! Magnolias are awesome though, been around since the dinosaurs.
/basket creak
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
"Historical" felt weirder! I didn't think much about it at first because it's the music I grew up listening to, then I remembered that our upstairs neighbors are two decades younger than I am and I wondered if it was the soundtrack to a show.
no subject
It may be common in other parts of New England, but in the Boston area it is uncommon enough that I don't think I've seen one before. Do you know what it connotes in your locale, if anything?
no subject
An inspiration to us all!
no subject
no subject
That makes sense. Not exactly the same gesture as bringing the oar inland, more like hanging up the guns.
You do not generally see them in the same neighborhood as Bathtub Marys, for whatever that’s ethnographically worth.
That also makes sense. We're up to our teeth in bathtub Marys in Somerville. We made Atlas Obscura for it.
no subject
no subject
Nice!
no subject
no subject
no subject
Your reasoning is impeccable: you are yourself a generation too young for this music (I take it it's what your parents chose to listen to...?) - this is not a criticism.
no subject
no subject
no subject
The majority of my parents' record collection was the British and American folk revival, plus some outcroppings of classical and rock music with a decent percentage of musicals. I had a terrific grounding in Pentangle, Phil Ochs, and the Newport Folk Festival and missed most of my actual generational music for decades, which I continue not to feel bad about.
I think "historical" connotes "out of living memory" to me, while "period" does not, which may not be how anyone else thinks of these adjectives.
no subject
no subject
no subject
Interesting. Whereas for me, "historical" says something about the attitude wih which the period is approached, an awareness that that was then and things were different. "period" - and this may be tainted by a certain dniffiness about "period dramas" - is about appearances, elaborate costumes and candlelight.