A five minute stroll west takes you to Red Hook. The Gowanus Nursery has some very tempting selections (I have already bust my gardening budget so must twiddle my thumbs for a while).
Giant
15 minutes south and you are near the waterways behind Fairway, where Sandy wreaked havoc two years ago.
An empty building is painted, near the projects.
And the edges still look like a ghost town - this will not last: already the condos are rising.
Asters on the water.
And back north again, 25 minutes, into Gowanus, the neighbourhood flanking the great green greasy canal, also subject to major real estate development.
Bug services required?
Still in Gowanus, on 3rd Street, just past the new-ish Wholefoods.
And in Boerum Hill, the other excellent little nursery, GRDN Brooklyn. These asters would be perfect in rock gardens or as ground covers full sun - Aster ericoides. I could shop here every week.
It is still golden rod season, in the city.
The smooth cordgrass grows with its feet in the salty water. It has fared better than the pickerel weed that used to be in the marsh just above it, which has since been swallowed by more aggressive plants.
Circling home again on Henry Street...
...where there is a window cat. Carroll Gardens is a place of cats.
A grey cat in a front garden nearby - we see it in our garden, sometimes, but it is very scared when called. I think it is feral but is fed at this house. It and an all-grey friend are often waiting, a few doors down.
Petro is on the sidewalk almost every day, a friendly little greeter of passers by.
So skinny, though. She must weigh 5lbs.
The tantalizing grapes ('Niagara,' I think) on the arbour outside the Dunkin Donuts on Court Street. Who picks them? I asked the girl who sold me my Catskills jelly donut a week ago - the owner, she smiled, pointing upstairs But he doesn't. They just hang there. It's killing me.
And much later a rising moon over the sunken and roaring BQE, a useful bridge to Columbia and Van Brunt Street in Red Hook, and the adventures they offer.
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