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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home3/hipvacat/public_html/abdul2-rosslynredux-com/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6121As I mentioned recently, Adirondack autumn invites retrospection and introspection<\/a>. But don’t fret, today’s lilt is less wistful. Levity is restored and whimsical iPhoneography is the flavor or the day.<\/p>\n With September and October skulking away and November slithering in, I’m dishing up a photographic retrospective, a parade of annotated images gathered “on the fly” over the last few months.<\/p>\n Viewed en masse they offer a voyeuristic immersion in the lifestyle which binds us to Rosslyn, Essex, Lake Champlain<\/a>, and the Adirondacks. Most of these images were shared through my personal Twitter feed<\/a> (@virtualDavis<\/a>) and\/or the Rosslyn Redux twitter feed<\/a> (@rosslynredux<\/a>), and their creation and distribution was made possible by the narcotic genius of this virtual symphony: iPhone<\/a>, Instagram<\/a>, Instacanv.as<\/a>, Tout<\/a>, and YouTube.<\/p>\n This first photo was actually taken in August, but I couldn’t resist including this unsettling image. I came across this freshly killed three foot long Adirondack timber rattlesnake<\/a> while cycling along Lakeshore Road near Essex. The blood was fresh and the rattle had been cut off.<\/p>\n Although I want to believe this near-black Crotalus horridus<\/a> was accidentally hit and killed by a car, it prompted a serpentless September rattlesnake safari<\/a>, and catalyzed much conversation with friends about our local population of timber rattlesnakes. How can we protect them?<\/p>\n I’ll share rattlesnake news if\/when relevant. For now I’ll move over to the autumn harvest. Given our hot, dry summer it was been a phenomenal year for most locally grown produce.<\/p>\n While we began flirting with frost most nights in September (earlier than the previous two years), tender vegetables like tomatoes were still coming out of our own garden and our local CSA,\u00a0Full and By Farm<\/a>, owned by Sara Kurak and James Graves.<\/p>\n These “ugly but delicious” heirloom tomatoes from Full and By Farm tempted me despite the fact that we’d been giving away and composting excess tomatoes since August. Too many, too fast. I’d been eating 2-3 tomatoes every day for lunch and dinner. Literally. I’m not exaggerating.<\/p>\n\n