Festival of the Trees #18, November Arborea, is up on Larry Ayers’ Riverside Rambles. This issue has a link to my post about Brooklyn’s Trees, the Flickr photo pool I started this year.
The 19th Festival of the Trees will be hosted by Lorianne of Hoarded Ordinaries. She’ll be taking submissions until midnight on December 30th. You can e-mail her at zenmama (at) gmail.com. You can also use the handy submission form.
Tag Archives: Blogs
First Snow, and Snowbirds, of the Season
Updated 12/6: Added Brian of Brooklyn, who has the most photos I’ve seen so far.
Updated throughout the day Monday, December 3, to add links to other blogs with photos of the first snow.
Slate-Colored Junco, Junco hyemalis hyemalis, in my Flatbush backyard
We had our first snow of the season overnight. It was in the 20s all day, gradually warming, and it will be in the 30s tomorrow, so it will all be gone soon. I didn’t get any pictures of it myself, but others did:
A Brooklyn Life
Bay Ridge Rover
BK11201
Brian of Brooklyn
BushwickBK
Ditmas Park Blog
Gowanus Lounge
Loopweaver
McBrooklyn
Only the Blog Knows Brooklyn
Pardon Me For Asking
Self-Absorbed Boomer
Sustainable Flatbush
I didn’t get out of the house today. Too busy cleaning, getting ready for guests tomorrow evening. But I was keeping an eye on the bird feeders yesterday and today. The winter migrants are firmly established now: Juncoes, Chickadees, and a little crested one whose name escapes me at the moment. I was looking for nuthatches, my favorites, but I didn’t see any this weekend.
American Goldfinch, Cardulis tristis, in winter plumage. I think this is a female. Thanks to Flickr pals megankhines and PhotoJeff for the id!
The Volunteers
I’m guilty of rarely highlighting other gardeners or their blogs here. I read something wonderful today:
She embodied the spirit of volunteerism in both its meanings. She was a person who performed services willingly and without pay, providing an example to others who may have come to the garden for personal growth but stayed to cultivate that passion in others. But she was also like a stubborn volunteer plant, flourishing in our communal garden without being planted or cultivated.
– Death of a Gardener, Grow This
I’ve written many times here about the connections I feel among between gardening, grief and recovery. This echoes it beautifully:
Dorcas embodied the gardener’s faith that the ground we prepare, and the seeds we sow today, will bear fruit in the future – regardless of whether today’s gardeners will be there to witness the next harvest. While she will be greatly missed, the volunteers that she inspired will continue her work for many seasons to come.
Word.
Welcome to the (Bloggy) Neighborhood
Via Across the Park, one of my blogging neighbors, I just learned of a new blog on the block, Hawthorne Street:
Hello and welcome. Before creating any misconceptions, let me say up front that we’re going to be posting irregularly: anywhere from a couple of times a week to once every two months. Quality over quantity!
– Reading this blog
Even better, they’re tree huggers:
Since our block—and areas south and east of us—could use more trees, I passed info out to my neighbors on how to request a free tree in front of their houses. I made about 70 copies of the documents below and folded them into a flyer, which I placed in mailboxes of homes without trees on Fenimore, Hawthorne, Winthrop, and Parkside blocks from Flatbush to Nostrand Avenues.
– Getting more trees on your block
Sweet!
Note that, in addition to submitting the paper form, you can request a street tree online. You can request a free street tree, or you can plant your own. Tree planting season runs another month, until about December 15. After that, Spring will be the next opportunity for planting. For more information, see Request a Street Tree on the Parks Web site.
Meta: #4 (The Brownstoner Effect)
As of this morning, Flatbush Gardener is, however briefly, #4 in Top 100’s list of gardening sites. As Willy Wonka would say, “That’s just unexpected, and … weird.”
[When I started out writing this post, I was #5. It went up to #4 while I was writing it.]
There are a couple of things going on that contribute to an anomaly like this. Part of the explanation is that I’ve been home sick most of the week. I’ve had time to do research and write for the blog, and I know that fresh content is the biggest draw for visitors to the site. However, the larger factor in this anomaly is what I call the “Brownstoner Effect.”
I use a couple of different tools to measure visits to the site. Here are charts from two of them, Sitemeter and Statcounter, showing page views and visits to the site over the past 30 days.
SiteMeter 30-day Chart for Flatbush Gardener, November 10, 2007
StatCounter 30-day Chart for Flatbush Gardener, November 10, 2007
A couple of things are visible in these two charts:
- Although their actual counts are different, the shapes of the two charts are roughly the same.
- There was a spike in visitors and page views from October 23-25.
- There’s been a sustained higher than usual number of visitors over the past four days, since November 6.
I need to dig just a little deeper to figure out why there’s increased traffic on those dates. It doesn’t take long to determine that those are days that Brownstoner had a link to one of my posts.
My free Sitemeter account only provides details for the last 100 page views. It’s okay for seeing the most recent activity, but nothing beyond that. Also, it doesn’t provide any quick analytical views of the data. But I can’t see the 100 most recent “Referrals”, links from other sites. Right now, for example, 8 of the 20 most recent came from Brownstoner. So the sustained traffic of the past few days seems to be continuing.
My upgraded StatCounter account records the last 2,000 page views. More important, it provides some basic analysis of the data.
Referring Link | ||
376 | www.google.com | |
252 | No referring link | |
192 | images.google.com | |
191 | www.brownstoner.com | |
68 | www.blogger.com | |
65 | brownstoner.com | |
46 | www.livinginvictorianflatbush.com | |
43 | ditmaspark.blogspot.com | |
25 | kensingtonbrooklyn.blogspot.com | |
24 | search.yahoo.com | |
15 | images.google.co.uk | |
15 | www.flickr.com | |
13 | brooklynjunction.blogspot.com | |
11 | aolsearch.aol.com | |
8 | www.kensingtonbrooklyn.blogspot.com | |
7 | del.icio.us | |
7 | images.google.ca | |
7 | search.aol.com | |
7 | www.google.ca | |
6 | images.google.com.au |
As usual, Google tops the list with 376 of the last 2,000 views. Most of the visits to my blog come from Google searches. I periodically look at what people are looking for when they find my blog. That helps me categorize my content better, and sometimes leads me to improve specific posts. But that’s a topic for another post.
In second place, with 256 views when you combine the results for “www.brownstoner.com” and “brownstoner.com”, is Brownstoner. You can also see several other familiar (to Brooklyn readers) blogs: Living in Victorian Flatbush, Ditmas Park Blog, Kensington (Brooklyn) (with 2 URLs), and Brooklyn Junction. They’re all neighbors who write about local topics.
Next is “No referring link.” In theory, this should reflect all views where folks visited my blog directly, without getting referred by a link from another page. In practice, this also includes anyone who is blocking referrer information, or who has cookies disabled, perhaps specifically for StatCounter.
There are always some sources of error in numbers. Identifying and removing them is important to me. For that I prefer the power tool of “hit counters” Google Analytics.
Update: By the evening, Flatbush Gardener was #3.
Meta: Blog Care & Feeding
I’m home sick today, and it’s cold out, an opportunity to do some blog maintenance, dust off a draft or two, catch up on some of the huge backlog of blog reading.
Links
I’ve been working on re-organizing the sidebar. The newest addition is a section titled “Links > Flatbush & Neighbors.” For the first time, there are enough blogs and other online resources in my area to warrant its own section; four of the blogs listed there are new in the past few months. I don’t want my list for local resources to get lost in the It’s “and neighbors” because I want to recognize the connections, geographical, political, and otherwise, we share.
Blogger recently added a “Link List” widget to their layout tools. It’s pretty basic, but it captures most of what I’ve had since the beginning in the larger, longer “Links” section of the sidebar. It can be kept sorted alphabetically, and I can have multiple sections for each group of links. So I’m gradually migrating from my old, manually-edited raw HTML links to the Blogger widget.
Brooklyn Blogging Highlighted in the NY Times
I’ve never seen or heard the word “Bloglyn” before this:
In the past year, the word Bloglyn has been cropping up a lot, a reflection of the fact that Brooklyn, particularly brownstone Brooklyn, has emerged as possibly the center of the placeblog world. Web forums serve as virtual town hall meetings (complete with hecklers), and bloggers peer with equal interest at controversial development projects, restaurant openings and the most minute of neighborhood minutiae.
– Cracker-Barrel 2.0
Most of the article is about Louise Crawford, Only the Blog Knows Brooklyn, and the Blogfest back in May. In addition to other heavy hitters, the article mentions a couple of specific neighborhood blogs. There is only the briefest mention of the Blogade, and not by name:
… as the newest members of the community introduced themselves [at the Blogfest new blogger shoutout], there was a conspicuous lack of representation from less gentrified neighborhoods. No Brownsville. No East New York. No Canarsie. To remedy this, several bloggers, including Ms. Crawford, have organized a series of blogger socials, the first of which took place last month in Flatbush, to encourage networking and, as she put it, to “take the show on the road” to underblogged neighborhoods.
And the next of which will be in Greenpoint on July 22, which the article omits. Nor did the article include any of the hundreds of photographs taken by the Times photographer at the Flatbush Blogade event.
I wasn’t interviewed for the article. I provided some info by email on myself and my blog. Flatbush Gardener is listed as one of eleven in a sidebar of “a few but by no means all of the Brooklyn blogs.” I have 137 listings in the “Brooklyn” category of my Bloglines feeds, so no, by no means all.
Festival of the Trees #13
Festival of the Trees #13: Putting Down Roots is up on Wrenaissance Reflections. WrenaissanceWoman subtitle her blog “Notes from a Backyard Wildlife Habitat” and it’s always an interesting read. You can also find a link to it in my Gardening blogroll in the sidebar.
This is the first anniversary issue of Festival of the Trees. WW writes in her introduction:
Trees are inextricably linked to places, perhaps because it takes them so long to reach maturity and majesty. When we become very attached to a place, we liken ourselves to the trees, and say that we have put down roots. This month’s Festival of the Trees looks at places where trees have taken hold, including places in our hearts.
WW has found lots of good reading, stories of trees from all over the world. Go check it out and leave her a comment about your own “trees of the heart.”
I submitted a recent press release from the Parks Department about the planting of a new Tree of Hope in Harlem, on on Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. Boulevard between West 131st and 132nd Streets. The stump of the original Tree of Hope, an elm, greets performers on the stage of the Apollo Theater:
The Tree of Hope came to symbolize the promise that Harlem held for so many African Americans and performers such as Ethel Waters, Fletcher Henderson and Eubie Blake were said to have visited it. But in 1934 what was then called the Boulevard of Dreams was widened and the tree was removed. Today, thanks to the suggestion of the Copasetics Connection, a new tree stands near the original site to commemorate this important piece of Harlem’s history. Although an American Elm, the original type of tree, could not be planted because it is susceptible to disease and pests, the new tree is a member of the elm family, a Zelkova.
– A New Tree of Hope Takes Root
I was surprised and pleased to see that WW also picked up one of my posts from earlier this week, the most recent addition to my Grief and Gardening series. I wrote about revisiting, for the first time in nearly 15 years, my first garden in NYC. The centerpiece of that garden is a maple tree.
The First Brooklyn Blogade, at Vox Pop in Flatbush
Update 2010.01.03: Corrected all links to the old Gowanus Lounge domain to the new memorial domain.
I hope to see many photos, and many posts, from this event. It was great fun.
[Confidential to New York magazine: We weren’t all there, and we’re not all “snarky!”]
Reportage:
- Brit in Brooklyn
- Dope on the Slope
- Dope on the Slope, Special Audio Edition, a massive (24MB, 17 minute) MP3, featuring 12 or 13 minutes of audio interview with me (we laugh a lot)
- Gowanus Lounge: Is Blogging Journalism or Therapy?
- New York Shitty
- Only the Blog Knows Brooklyn
- Self-Absorbed Boomer
The next event will be July 22 in Greenpoint, hosted by Miss Heather, New York Shitty. Watch her blog for more information.
Miss Heather, New York Shitty
Anne Pope, Sustainable Flatbush, was my co-host for today’s event.
Anne Pope, Sustainable Flatbush
Many thanks to Sander Hicks and the staff at Vox Pop for hosting today’s event.
Sander Hicks, Vox Pop, sander.gnn.tv
Petra, Bed-Stuy Blog
Claude Scales, Self-Absorbed Boomer
Rob Lenihan, Luna Park Gazette
Eleanor Traubman, Creative Times
Robert Guskind, Gowanus Lounge
Dave Kenny, Dope on the Slope
Adrian Kinloch, Brit in Brooklyn
Louise Crawford, Only the Blog Knows Brooklyn
Meta-Meta: Blog-Blogging-Blogging (27 lessons About Blogging)
I’m always interested to read tips on how to blog – and write – more effectively. This list of “lessons” comes from Pick the Brain, via 10,000 Birds:
Over the course of 97 posts and 1602 comments, traffic has grown to over 3,000 unique visitors a day, over 2200 readers have subscribed to the RSS feed, and several articles have been featured on the popular pages of Digg, Del.icio.us, Reddit, StumbleUpon, and Netscape. It isn’t the most amazing start (there have certainly been bumps along the way) but I’m proud of what I’ve built and optimistic the site will continue to grow.
I want to share what I’ve learned, but it’d be pointless to try explaining it all. Rather, I’ve compiled a list of the 27 most important lessons.
– 27 Lessons Learned on the Way to 3000 Visits a Day and 2200 RSS Subscribers, Pick the Brain
I find I agree with most of the 27. I believe I’m even following most of the ones I agree with. A handful I disagree with; maybe I haven’t learned that lesson yet, or maybe my context differs sufficiently from P the B that it doesn’t apply.
Here’s my synopsis, with my reflections in [brackets], including some questions for you, my readers. Read the full post for more explanation of each Lesson. If you have a thought about any of this, please leave a comment.
- a) help people solve a problem, and b) differentiate yourself.
[I think I’m doing both. But not every post, or blog, needs to be task-oriented. “Build a raised bed in five minutes with no tools!” In fact, there are already sources of such information out there, biased or revenue-driven they may be. These two goals are in tension, so striking a balance between them is the art.] - Blogging is not a great way to make money.
[I never thought it was. I’ve had a Web presence since the early 90s. It’s never been about money for me.] - Make it as easy as possible for people to subscribe to your feed.
[I’ve thought about putting more subscribe widgets at the top of the sidebar, or in the header. But I also get annoyed when I see 20 or 30 different widgets on some other blog or post. How hard is it to subscribe? What would make it easier?] - Offer a full feed.
[Here I disagree. I had a full feed at first. I changed it to a digest. I wish I had more control with Blogger about how much goes in the digest. Often the first X words don’t make any sense. On the other hand, the first few sentences should make some sense on their own, per #9.] - A bad post is worse than no post.
[Yup. I’ve written my share.] - Be prepared to completely run out of ideas after the first 3-4 months.
[It took me about 8 months before I hit a dry spell over December-January. But it wasn’t because I had run out of ideas. I always have lots of ideas. I had run out of energy and enthusiasm for it. I had to regroup to find my direction again.] - It’s not always what you know, who you know is important too.
[The fuller explanation suggests to use one’s contacts for feedback and promotion. I’m getting a little less bashful about that, but my contributions must still stand on their own. ] - Write catchy headlines and list posts that will be popular with the social sites.
[Catchy headlines? I have been too clever. The headline and first sentence or two must make some sense. As for popularity, that’s never been my strength, and I’m not going to start now. Though I look to statistics about visits and page views for feedback about how I’m doing, I’m not doing this for numbers.] - Do everything you can to make your headline and opening paragraph as compelling as possible.
[Compelling, okay, but not misleading. I find these three lines the hardest to write. See also #4 and #8.] - Courteously encourage friends, family, and casual acquaintances to vote up and link to your posts.
[You are hereby encouraged!] - Don’t write every post for the social sites.
[I don’t write any!] - Listen carefully to every piece of feedback but don’t be a slave to it.
[The most difficult feedback for me to deal with has been communicated through private correspondence. Both instances occurred over the past month or so. Both have caused me to second-guess myself, and ultimately censor my own words. Anyone who knows me knows that’s a BIG DEAL. In both cases, I’ve not been satisfied with the outcome, and I don’t know what a preferable resolution would have been.] - If your writing doesn’t have an edge it might as well not exist.
[I err more on the side of edge. That’s not always a good thing!] - Always look for a different angle.
[This is one of my strengths, I think. I like making connections, seeing relationships, understanding systems and interactions. I think that’s what I like about natural history, ecology, and environmental sciences. I think it’s also what attracts me to technology and engineering. This whole blog experiment is a long arc of making connections among themes and topics which resonate with each other for me.] - If linking doesn’t provide value to your readers it’s a bad idea.
[I don’t link for linking’s sake. It’s always something I read, or find interesting, myself. In my sidebar is my real blogroll for Gardening and Nature blogs and sites. Yes, I need to find room for Brooklyn blogs, too! I try to follow the usual best practices for link usability in the body of my posts.] - Write about your life in a way that’s relevant to your topic.
[I try to relate my personal life to the themes of this blog. There’s a lot I don’t write about in this blog. I think there’s been only one, maybe two, pictures of my cat. My cat is relevant to me, but to this blog, not so much.] - Make people think.
[I hope I do. First thing is to make myself think. See also #14.] - Don’t be anxious to plaster Google Ads all over the place.
[I’ve seen no good reason to ever start.] - Design matters.
[I’ve tweaked a ready-made template to get the look of this blog. But I’ve focussed more on content than container. There are some things which annoy me about the way my blog is laid out, which I would change if I had the time for R&D. What would you change about my blog’s design?] - Posting comments on other blogs is overrated.
[I comment on thers’ blogs only because their post sparks some reaction in me which makes me want to respond. I don’t leave comments solely to drive content to my site, though that sometimes happens.] - Respond to your commenters, especially the ones who disagree.
[I try to respond to every comment, though I know I miss a few now and then. I’m glad that Blogger now has the ability to subscribe to comment feeds, though I don’t know if anyone does. It would be nice if there was a single feed for allthe comments; that would be a more reliable way of keeping up with the conversations.] - Obsessively reading other blogs and checking traffic stats are not productive activities. Your time is better spent doing things that actually increase traffic like creating content, doing research, and posting to relevant forums. [I’ve left this lesson in its full form, because the author makes several points, and this is something for which I’m still trying to find a balance.]
- Once you have a bit of success don’t flaunt it but let other people know.
[I’ve done this a couple of times, such as this Spring’s Rabies More Popular Than Sex and, more recently, I Was On TV! My photography is starting to get more notice, and that’s new for me. I’m curious to see where that goes, and takes me.] - Make use of blog carnivals.
[I’ve contributed to several blog carnivals, and I enjoy finding opportunities to do so. I hosted my first blog carnival, Festival of the Trees #11, earlier this month. And I can tell you, it’s an investment. And now I’m one of the coordinators of the first Brooklyn “meat carnival” which will follow up on the success of the Brooklyn Blogfest earlier this month.] - Display your best posts on every page in a prominent location.
[I like this idea. It’s easy to do. But what are “my best posts”? Are they the most popular ones? The ones I’m most proud of? I think it has to be a mix. What would you choose to be among my Top N posts?] - Read blogs about blogging.
[Most of these are not that interesting. Frankly, I don’t have the time. I’ve been on the Web, though not blogging, a long time now. For me, blogging is writing, first. I could spawn a parallel photoblog, but, again, I just don’t have time. I know that folks like my photography. Maybe I could add a “picture of the week” to this blog which doesn’t take a lot of time.] - Do what works for you. Be completely genuine.
[Oh, that would never work. I’m far too shy, withdrawn and reticent.]