Island Light: For the Roses
Ferry Martha's Vineyard in her Island port of Vineyard Haven.
Gassing up for an aerial tour of the Island in Katama Airfield red biplane.
Black-Eyed Susans perform in Ocean Park's Bandstand last Sunday.
Roses adorn a picket fence in Vineyard Haven.
Trailhead in Caroline Tuthill Preserve offers many routes.
The view of Sengekontacket from Caroline Tuthill.
Heron wanders the shore one foggy morning.
Getting air in Oak Bluffs.
Catching the wind.
Red-tailed hawk.
End of the day at Tashmoo.
Roses in Oak Bluffs.
Goats work their magic at the Featherstone fields.
Jetski spray.
Oyster cages on the shore of Sengie.
Little League action at Veira Park in Oak Bluffs.
Taking a swing.
Winding up.
June is the season of roses, either growing wild on the beach or landscaped in Island yards. Now is the time to replant window boxes and dooryard pots, replacing cold-hardy pansies and Johnny jump-ups with their heat-loving stand-ins: geraniums, impatiens and nasturtiums. Time to put out tomatoes, peppers, eggplant and summer squash in the vegetable garden. Time to shear the sheep and put away horse blankets for the year.
In meadows and at the edge of farm fields, daisies are the wildflower of the month — great drifts of them, strewn across the landscape like a scene brushed by Monet. Blue-eyed grass is also in bloom. Baltimore orioles and finches decorate bird feeders with their brilliant oranges and yellows. A cardinal trills loudly outside the Gazette newsroom.
Hello June, the month for brides and graduates and the first ice cream cone of the season.
