Sunday, December 28, 2008

Shelli's Engaged



Here's a photo of my DD and her new husband-to-be. He came by last Saturday and asked my permission, which I was happy to give. Erik's matured into a lovely young man over the last few years and he's got a good head on his shoulders, so I'm sure they'll be fine. He proposed on Tuesday during a horse-and-carriage ride through down-town Austin.

They won't be getting married too soon, though. Erik has another semester at his university and Michelle graduates next December. Shelli was saying something about this next summer, perhaps.

Anyway, best wishes to both kids and all my love.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Well, It's Been a While...

But now I'm back. The Fall semester is nearly over, just a couple of papers to write and a final exam to take and I'll be free for the holidays... sigh... I'm not so sure my GPA will survive the semester, but I have. Sometimes I wonder why I'm doing this to myself at all, especially when I look in my study and see all those balls of yarn and the shelves to finish putting up and the sewing machine I haven't even broken in yet. I guess I'm just a little down about it all at the moment.

My company has been tied up in temporary lay-offs for the last month or so. I'm only now being affected with the three-day work week that we're all on at the moment. At the end of December, the permanent lay-offs begin. We'll have to see where I am at the end of the month.

With everything that's going on right now, I'm afraid the garden's gone by the wayside for the time being. I haven't had a chance to do more than mow and now that it's getting cold the grass will be going dormant. Maybe I'll get out and do something next weekend once the school work is behind me.

I did get a chance to watch a mockingbird enjoying my chile piquins earlier in the week. They grow up through the front steps every year and keep the birds happy all winter.

On top of everything, I really need to start working on my grad school apps again... sigh...

Why am I doing this again?

Saturday, June 21, 2008

It's Dry Out There

It is dry, dry, dry. I've been watering every couple of days or so, but it just seems to disappear by the next day. We're in drought restrictions for the summer, now, so I can only water enough to keep everything alive at the moment.

Just a few minutes ago, though, the wind kicked up and some dark clouds are building. The bamboo - dry and crinkly as it is - is leaning over almost double out there. Hopefully we'll get some rain out of this, but lately it seems everything just skips right over us and dissipates in the air. You'd think, dry as it is, we wouldn't have mosquitos, but it doesn't seem to have deterred them any.

There's a new generation of baby barn swallows peeping out of the nest in the eaves this weekend. The previous set still perches in the porch eaves at night, hunting the bugs attracted to the porch light.

There are a few things blooming. I couldn't get a decent photo of the lantana, which is blooming its little pink and yellow heart out, but here are a couple of photos from the garden today.

Sunday, June 1, 2008

There's Only so much Mowing one can do with a Weed Eater. . .

I do own a lawn mower. I'm stating this for the record, because if a stranger were to look at my lawn right now, they wouldn't be able to tell. I've been the proud owner of a Black and Decker electric mower for about a year and a half.

I've read complaints that electric mowers just aren't as efficient as gas powered mowers, but it's never been an issue in my garden. My yard isn't big to begin with, and I'm frankly not picky about mowing. So long as I can see to walk through the grass to get to the flower beds safely, I'm good. In my opinion, a lawn isn't something to be worried over. At best, it's utilitarian; at worst, it's taking up valuable planting space. Also, with gas prices getting so high and that brown haze we've been seeing around Central Texas increasing over the last few years, I was happy to find a mower that could do the job as well as I desired cheaply and without added exhaust. The quiet engine was an added bonus.

A few weeks ago, my mower stopped dead, halfway through the front yard. It just stopped. There had been this rattling sound when I'd first started it up for the season, but I hadn't been able to locate the source, so it wasn't exactly a surprise. I just didn't think it would be difficult to get it repaired. Then I started looking for a repair shop.

None of the small engine repair shops around here will touch the things. I finally located a repair shop whose owner directed me to the local Black and Decker service center -- who knew they had one? Not I. Local, by the way, is a relative term. It's in North Austin off Mopac. I'm -- not.

Anyway, long story short, my poor lawn has been without a mower for about a month. That's right, a month in prime Central Texas growing time. Which is why, every so often while waiting for the parts that have been on back-order, I've gone a bit wild with the weed whacker. I'll have my lawn mower back next week, though, and all will once again be right with the world.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Mexican Petunia

Look what's blooming in the garden! I happened to notice the first flowers in the patch of Mexican Petunia growing under my bedroom window as I was leaving for work yesterday and had to stop and take a couple of pictures.

Until I moved into this house, I never really appreciated the Mexican Petunia. Sure, it's pretty. Its little purple trumpet-shaped flowers have a texture like crinkled tissue paper, and the dark green leaves always look nice and cool on hot summer days. However, the flowers, while pretty, aren't particularly showy. They tend to get lost in the abundance of foliage, and there's a lot of foliage in which to get lost. I sort of considered them a "whatever" plant, the kind you stick in a spot because you don't really know what else to put there, a placeholder until something better comes to mind. Over the last couple of years, though, I've gained a new admiration for this cheery little workhorse.

Although it has a rather limited range from zone 11 to 8a,
within that range Mexican Petunia, or Ruellia brittoniana, is a tough little plant and if you want butterflies and hummingbirds in your garden, it's definitely one to try. Mexican Petunia will bloom from early summer until first frost and the nectar drinkers just love it. It can be invasive in optimal conditions - gardeners in the warmer areas along the Gulf Coast might do well to avoid it - but in my hot and dry location it stays pretty much where it's wanted.
It's a reliable performer along the side of the house nearest the driveway and doesn't seem to mind the mostly shady location. Most references say to keep it moist, but I've been able to keep it happy by running my soaker hoses along that wall to the front gardens. Whenever I water the front beds, the Mexican Petunia gets a bit as well. When it does get out of bounds, I just mow it. The plants of the species varieties grow to about three to four feet high, but there are some more compact versions available on the market as well.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Regal Lily

“If only one lily is to be grown, it may well be this.”
George Slate, Lilies for American Gardens.

The Regal Lily is a species lily, Lilium regale, that was introduced into the gardens of Europe, and then America, around the turn of the 20th century. It is the parent lily for many of the trumpet lily hybrids that currently grace our gardens. They are early summer bloomers, and are hardy from zones 8b through 4 in the US. The stalks carry from five to ten blossoms per head. The scent is reported to be heavenly, and I can't wait to find out.

Last night, I found several flower heads forming on my Regal Lilies, ordered from Old House Gardens (that's also where I first saw the above quote.) They were leaning over, so I used some of the ever-present bamboo to stake them up - that's wild Queen Anne's Lace growing behind them (I know, I know, but I like the stuff.) I'm looking forward to seeing these lovely ladies in action.

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Summer's Here -- A Bit Early

Well, summer's officially here in Central Texas. The temps broke 90 deg F, and I broke down and turned on the air conditioners. Bye-bye $56 electric bills. It'll be interesting to see what the bills are, actually. The window units will be on some times during the day, but I've still got all the lights switched over to compact flourescents and I got rid of the television months ago. I was shocked by how much my electric bill fell once I got rid of that power hog; if you must have one, definitely put it on surge supressor and turn off the power when the set is off. You'll have to wait a couple of minutes for the unit to warm up, but the cut in power consumption is definitely worth it.

I haven't done much in the garden the last couple of weeks, and I'm afraid it shows. There's plenty of weeding to do this long weekend. I started it this morning, but will have to wait for cooler temps this evening to do any more. My Homestead Yellow day lily started blooming a week or so ago, and the red and double red varieties were close behind it. The little pink scented one hasn't even set a bud, but the leaves look nice and healthy. I wish I could say the same for the fancy dark blue Agapanthus I ordered. The medium blue varieties are setting new leaves, but the dark blue one is barely hanging on. Sadly, I'm afraid we may be too hot and dry for it. There won't be much I can do to help it, either. We're already on water restriction for the summer.



Weekend before last, I spent building some book shelves in my workroom/ library. I've been looking for bookcases that I can afford, but apparently all I can afford is cheap and ugly, so I went down to Home Depot and bought some 1x12 #2 pine lumber, which they cut to the necessary length, and some steel shelf brackets and a cross-check level. I painted the wall where I wanted the shelves, attached the brackets, painted them the same color as the walls and attached the shelves. Here are the results. Not bad if I do say so myself. I just need to paint the shelves themselves and add more on the other side of the window and over the top.

Finally, week before last I spent volunteering at the 2008 Mississippian Iconography Workshop, and annual event at Texas State University, hosted by the Center for the Arts and Symbolism in Ancient America. This was my second year as a volunteer. It's an invaluable opportunity for students to meet and watch some of the leaders in our field working. It was great fun, as always, and I finally got up the nerve to talk to one of the professors about his university's graduate program. He was encouraging and offered to read my statement of purpose before I submit it, for which I'm very grateful. The Cahokia Mother and Child Pipe is Mississippian, but really has nothing to do with what we were doing, I just like the photo and needed a way to get Blogger to acknowledge the new paragraph. It's made from bauxite and was found in Madison County, IL.

I apologize for the formatting. For some reason, Blogger has chosen to ignore any and all paragraph separations in this post, no matter how many times I reformat. Sigh.

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Nocturnal Visitations


Look who came to visit late last night - or was it early this morning? Either way, a sphinx moth popped in through the open window and bounced around the living room until I turned off the light and he found his way back out to the porch. Some one else who has done much more research than I has a wonderful post on sphinx moths, here.

We had another visit last night as well from a katydid. Selkie had a great time stalking him all over the living room. Don't worry, the katydid was never in danger. This first picture is the closest Selkie got. The katydid is up on the window sill.


Sunday, May 4, 2008

Cypress Vine is Back

I'd almost given up on the Cypress Vine this year. I planted one last year that just about covered the porch in the couple of months it was there before the first freeze, and I loved it. Although this vine is an annual, according to all the websites, it self-sows freely; in fact, the jist of the comments was "plant it once, have it forever in your garden - and your neighbors' gardens - and their neighbors' gardens. . ." So, I wasn't worried.

However, as the spring has been rolling along I've been watching for the seedlings and not finding them. They just didn't seem to be coming along at all. This weekend, though, I noticed about four of them, good strong little plants. I'll just have to wait until they're a little bigger and move them to where I want them.

Cypress Vine is a remarkably pretty vine, with delicate, bright green fern-like leaves and clear, bright red star-shaped flowers. It will grow up to 20 feet or more in a single season, and is amazingly drought and heat tolerant. I grow it on my front porch in an area with a strong western exposure that wipes out most other vines and all hanging baskets. The Cypress Vine loves it.

Cypress Vine is a member of the Convolvulus family, and the genus Ipomoea -- the same genus as the Morning Glory. All parts of the plants of this genus are highly toxic. The seeds of the Morning Glory were once highly valued for their hallucinogenic properties, and contain both D-lysergic acid and D-isolysergic acid. Chemical analysis of residue found in the bowls of pipes recovered from Mesoamerican sites as far back as the Olmec civilization have been found to contain the remains of Ipomoea seeds and tobacco, which has hallucinogenic properties of its own when used in great amounts. The common Morning Glory, Ipomoea violacea, is one of two plants that have been identified as the Aztec pharmaceutical and religious plant ololiqui, the other being another member of the Convolvulus family, Rivea corymbosa.

Darwin Note: The above information is provided for interest only. Do not try this at home; all of these plants are highly toxic and will most likely kill you long before you stumble upon the correct dosage. Don't become a casualty of natural selection.

Herbalism References:

Schultes, Richard Evans and Albert Hofmann. Plants of the Gods: Their Sacred, Healing and Hallucinogenic Powers. Healing Arts Press: Rochester. 1992.

Wilbert, Johannes. Tobacco and Shamanism in South America. Yale University Press: New Haven. 1987.

Saturday, May 3, 2008

Long Overdue Post

It's been a while since I posted; I'm afraid the second half of my semester got a bit more frantic
than I had anticipated. I've almost finished with finals, though, and I seem to have survived another semester with my GPA intact. No more classes until next fall, so I'll have a bit more time to devote to the garden and crafts. Here's hoping for a nice relaxing summer before I have kick it into gear again. Of course I still have to finish my grad program applications this summer, too.

Here are a few pictures of what's going on in my garden the past month:



The patchwork wallflowers have been blooming their little hearts out. I just love these little guys. They'll bloom from now until Christmas.






Here's another shot of the wallflowers with a Venus' Looking Glass coming up in the middle of them.






The Texas native Pink Evening Primroses, or as we used to call them, Buttercups (because of their yellow pollen) are making their annual attempt at world domination. I've got it as a volunteer in both flower beds, across the yard and throughout the ditch.


Remember the fairy statue? Can you find her in the next picture?



And here's a close-up of that native Verbena.


The rose I wasn't sure about is blooming nicely. There's a bit of a problem with powdery mildew, but nothing too terrible. I guess she's a keeper.
Kitties in the garden:




Suzy Q





Selkie






& Suzy, again.

Finally, the swallows are back for another year. There are four little nestlings huddled up in that nest. It's almost too small for the lot of them. That wasp's nest in the corner of the porch is history. Their mama and papa ate every one of them.

Friday, March 21, 2008

Camera!

My new camera has arrived. It's a Canon PowerShot SD750 with 7.1 megapixels, which my daughter tells me is fine for what I want. Now, I can start showing more photos with my posts, as soon as I figure out how to use the thing. Here are a few beginners' shots.





Here's the fairy statue peeking out from among the oregano, verbena and evening primrose.







Sweet alyssum is growing around the rosemary at the foot of the steps.






English Thyme growing along the walkway, with it's little tag. The tags are ceramic and were made by one of the Fine Arts majors at the University. She sells them at the ceramics booth that they sponser several times a semester as a fund-raiser.







And finally, a potted Diascia sitting on the porch.









Those are all the photos I have for now. I'm going to have to wait until it's a little cooler this evening to take a few more.


On another note, my Suzy Q is back! My pretty calico kitty disappeared just before the last freeze and I was very worried about her. I'd given up hope of seeing her again and was only hoping that someone had taken her in. That's apparently what happened, because she showed up this morning, looking a bit thin and hungry, but with a pink collar that was a couple of sizes too small around her neck! I popped the collar off and she seems much happier now. She's cuddled up with one of the other cats right now.

Monday, March 17, 2008

A Goal Reached and a Two-fer Surprise

I reached my first weight loss goal this weekend: twenty pounds! I'm down to 200 pounds and had to go out and buy new clothes for work and school, since nothing I had that still fit was suitable. Shelli and I hit the Coldwater Creek outlet at Prime Outlets on Sunday. I can't afford to do that often, but it sure felt good to be down a full size in pants and tops!

Lady Banks had a surprise waiting for me when I got up this morning. She now has four lovely blooms -- two yellow and two white! When I looked closely, I could see that the two different colors were from two distinct tines emerging from the soil. It looks like whoever was rooting the cuttings got mixed up and rooted an "Alba" cutting or two along with the "Lutea" cuttings. Once she matures, there will be a fountaining mixture of white and yellow blooms. Another happy accident for the garden.

Saturday, March 15, 2008

New Additions in the Garden

After spending the last couple of mornings digging up yellow clay and mixing in compost and sand, I've finally made some new additions to the front bed. I've planted some thyme along the walkway -- probably too close to the walkway, but we'll see. There's a delphinium behind the cooking sage and to one side of the new rose bush. The Double Bridal Wreath Spirea will go into the ground tomorrow in the bare spot on the western end of the wax myrtle hedge where it will hopefully be happy.

A new
rose, Brilliant Pink Iceberg (the image is from Stockphoto) is the new centerpoint of the bed. I didn't actually intend to buy this variety. One side of the pot was labeled Gruss an Aachen, a lovely pale pink floribunda with a fairly modest growth habit. The plan was for two roses in this bed, the Gruss an Aachen toward the middle and to one side, and something a bit larger toward the back. I didn't see the label on the other side of the pot until I got the plant home. I looked it up online to get more information, and based on the description decided to keep it.

Brilliant Pink Iceberg is a sport of the more familiar white Iceberg. It has a similar growth habit to it's parent, in other words, it gets big -- sometimes very big. It is a repeat bloomer, flowering from spring to first frost, with moderately scented blooms in a mixed bright pink and white. It has no thorns, and as such is not in any way deer-tolerant -- something of an issue in Central Texas -- but I haven't had any deer problems in this area, and with the local pastureland being developed into subdivisions -- don't get me started -- I don't expect to see them become a problem in the future. It is very disease hardy -- a definite plus as I absolutely hate spraying anything on roses or coddling plants along. It's one the reasons I tend to grow old roses in the first place.

So the Pink Iceberg gets to stay, and the garden plan gets revised. It will probably turn out to be a happy accident, but next time I'm looking for a rose, I'll head over to the Antique Rose Emporium.

Here's a photo of what's been done so far (the new camera is on order from Amazon.) Still to come, there are some agapanthus bulbs on order, deep and medium blue, and I'll still need to pick up some fern-leaved lavender for the middle of the bed, in front of the rose. The daylilies still need to be shuffled around a bit and some of the scabiosas will find a home between the lavender and the thyme. Then I'll fill in the bare spot at the front with lamb's ears and either more thyme or some parsley.

Tomorrow, I'll start tackling the bed on the other side of the walkway.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Venus' Looking Glass

I was out this morning with the weed-whacker, taking out the Johnson grass and other bits that were trying to absorb the brick pathway back into the soil while trying not to take out the little Venus' Looking Glass seedlings that were starting to peek out from between the bricks.

Venus' Looking Glass, or Triodanis perfoliata, is one of my favourite wildflowers. I've been quietly encouraging the little darlings for several years, now, and get a decent clump every spring. It's not as showy as some of our other wildflowers. No one will ever stop the car on the highway to bundle the kids out to have their picture taken in a field of them -- the Babies in the Bluebonnets photo is an annual ritual here in Texas. No one will ever come around a bend and be dazzled by a sea of them, as I was last Fall by the Maximillian sunflowers. But I think they are easily one of the prettiest of the annual wildflowers, and the one that always means Spring to me.

Dave's Garden lists the mature height of the Venus' Looking Glass as 18" - 24", but I've never really seen them larger than about 10". According to the USDA website, their range extends throughout the continental US, except for Nevada and some of the northern central states. They produce pretty little six-petaled flowers in a rich shade of purple or blue-violet that's not often seen in wild flowers. My neice, Theresa and I used to use their flowers, along with grass leaves and blue Day-flowers, as an improvised paint, mashing them onto paper to create smears of color. They also press well. There are probably still a few between the leaves of my mother's 1952 Encyclopedia Americana.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

A Lady in the Garden

My freshly-planted Lady Banks rose is blooming! Her first two buds opened fully this morning. I'm sorry there's no picture, but after spending several probably very entertaining minutes trying to focus the webcam on the flowers while balancing my laptop on one hand without dropping it, the best shot I got was the one I've attached below. Time to invest in a camera.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

"Can't a man even clean up his work area without inadvertently conjuring up a pack of lightning-breathing ocelots?"

My friend Laura just sent me the best article from The Onion. Yes, of course it's a spoof -- it is from The Onion. For an archaeology geek, like me, though, it's priceless.

Archaeologist Tired Of Unearthing Unspeakable Ancient Evils

Recipes to Pick Up a Dreary Day


James Beard’s Banana Bread


This is the best banana bread recipe I’ve ever found. I use it over and over again. The crust is crisp and the body of the bread is fine-grained, tender and moist. The banana flavor is perfect – well-flavored and not too sweet. I’ve made it both with and without nuts, and I think I prefer it without. The recipe lists either butter or shortening, but I’ve always used butter – real butter, not margarine. With the recent concerns about transfats, you may want to do the same.

Actually, every recipe in this book is a keeper. If you can find a copy of this cookbook in a used bookstore somewhere, buy it. Source is listed below this recipe. My comments are in blue.

2 cups sifted all-purpose flour
1 tsp. baking soda
½ tsp salt
½ cup butter or other shortening
1 cup granulated sugar
2 eggs
1 cup mashed, very ripe bananas
1/3 cup milk
1 tsp lemon juice or vinegar
½ cup chopped nuts
(optional)

Sift the flour with the soda and salt.

Cream the butter and gradually add the sugar. Mix well. Add the eggs and bananas and blend thoroughly.

Combine the milk and lemon juice, which will curdle a bit.

Slowly and alternately fold in the flour mixture and milk mixture, beginning and ending with the dry ingredients. Blend well after each addition. I never actually remember to do this. It works just as well if you just dump in the milk and flour mixture and stir, although I do add the flour mixture gradually, for ease in stirring.

Stir in the nuts, then pour the batter into a lavishly buttered (or thoroughly Pammed) 9” x 5” x 3” pan (I use a four-space fancy mini-loaf pan for mine) and bake in a preheated 350 deg F oven for 1 hour, or until the bread springs back when lightly touched in the center.

Source: Beard, James. Beard on Bread. Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., New York: 1974.



Patricia’s Turkey Chili

1 pound 99% fat free ground turkey
1 shallot, roughly chopped
1 clove garlic, minced
1 Tbs olive oil
1 med. white onion, roughly chopped
1 green bell pepper, roughly chopped
1 med. zucchini, roughly chopped
2 16 oz. cans chicken or veggie broth
1 16 oz. can chopped tomatoes
3 Tbs chile powder
1 jalapeno pepper, chopped
1 Tbs tomato paste, optional
1 tsp. ground cumin
2 tsp. dry basil
1/2 of a large bay leaf
salt and pepper to taste

In a large Dutch oven, heat olive oil until fragrant. Add shallot and garlic. Saute over med-high heat until lightly browned. Add onion and saute until translucent.

Add ground turkey to the onion and garlic mix. Cook until no longer pink, but not fully. Add tomatoes, bell pepper, broth, zucchini, jalapeno and spices. Reduce heat to med. low and simmer for about 45 mins, or until liquid is reduced by 1/2, stirring occasionally.

Taste and add more spices or tomato paste, as desired. Continue to simmer on med. low heat until the chili reaches the desired consistency.

Serve over corn bread, and top with chopped onions and shredded cheese.

Source: Original Recipe


Baked Butternut Squash


1 butternut squash
2 tsp butter
2 tsp light brown sugar
cinnamon to taste

Heat oven to 350 deg F. Halve squash lengthwise. Scrape out the strings and seeds. Divide butter and brown sugar and place in the cavities of each half. Dust with cinnamon. Prick along the exposed surface of the squash with a fork to allow juices to escape; the squash will sing to you while it’s baking. Bake on a cookie sheet for 1 hour, or until flesh is tender to a fork.

Serve as is, mashed, or in any other way desired. May be a side dish or the main dish.

Source: Original Recipe, based on my Dad’s

Monday, March 10, 2008

A Lazy, Rainy Day

This morning started with the thunderstorms the weather reports had promised, but it's settling into one of those drippy days -- not enough rain to keep me indoors, but too much to allow me to really do anything once I get outside. So, I think this last day of my three-day weekend will be a lazy one. The cat in the photo to the right is Oliver. He insisted on going out last night at midnight and just came back in, all drippy.

I did get some things accomplished this weekend. Another of the poor cottoneasters that drowned in last year's rainy summer has been pulled out, and the others have been cut back to their bare skeletons. They'll be easy enough to dig out as time goes on.

One of them won't be able to come out, though. There's a volunteer native bi-color lantana that's grown up alongside it's trunk, and I won't be able to dig out the cottoneaster without digging up the lantana as well. Oddly, the lantana complements my Patchwork wallflowers almost perfectly. Serendipity in the garden, I suppose. Assuming it doesn't grow out of bounds and eat the wallflowers, that is.

I moved one of the daylilies, too. I didn't realize it was so much shorter than the others when I bought it and planted it too close to a much larger daylily; it's been moved to the front of the bed where it can be seen once it decides to bloom for me.

As you can see from the pictures attached to this post, I also got some painting done in the kitchen. (For those who don't know, it used to be this sort of dingy peach color.) It's not completely finished, but it's getting there. Only the half-wall behind the stove and refrigerator is left. No, I don't plan to pull the refrigerator and stove out to do the entire wall. Call me lazy, if you wish. There are also the bits around the ceiling that I just can't reach, even from a chair. I'm hoping that my daughter's boyfriend can be imposed upon to aid the vertically challenged.


So, now my plans for the day are to drink hot tea, make some nice, low fat turkey chili for my dinners at work for the rest of the week, bake that butternut squash in the veggie bowl, and knit a new dishcloth. One of the ladies on my dishcloth list emailed a link to a blog called To Knit is Divine and a pattern called Diagonal Ripple Dishcloth. It's very pretty, and I can't wait to try it. The rest of Leanne's blog is also very interesting; I plan to return fairly frequently to see what she's up to.

Sunday, March 9, 2008

Tucking in the Scabiosa Babies


I transplanted my scabiosa babies this morning before lunch. They'd been incubating in their little peat-pellet nursery for a couple of weeks, and had started to out-grow it a tad. Most of them had developed their secondary leaves and all of them had little white rootlets poking out from the pellets, so it was time to move them to a larger playroom -- in this case a variety of 3" - 8" pots (and a couple of make-shift pots from the bottoms of Diet Coke bottles) on my front porch. I don't quite trust the weather around here, so I wanted something I can move quickly if I needed to -- which I may be doing soon. The wind is kicking up out there again.

It was a real pleasure to find this particular variety of scabiosa again. I really can't stand the basic powder blue and pretty pink varieties we get from the nurseries around here. They're kind of insipid looking -- the milquetoasts of the garden set. A few years ago, however, I found a variety of dark purple scabiosas called Ace of Spades. I don't remember now where I got them, and can't locate them again from any of my regular suppliers, so I must have just stumbled across them somewhere. Only a few of the seeds sprouted and only about five or six of those survived to be transplanted into the garden. But once they were there, wow!

Those few plants completely took over a 3' x 4' raised bed, squeezed out everything but the climbing rose. And the flowers! Twice the size of the regular scabiosas, dark red-purple, absolutely stunning. I loved them. I collected some seeds from them, but we moved soon afterwards and I have no idea what happened to the seeds.

Then this spring I was wandering through the local Home Depot, and there on the Burpee's seed display was a pack of mixed scabiosa seeds -- dark purple and pure white. I don't know for certain if these are my Ace of Spades scabiosas or some other similar variety, but I hope they are as successful in this garden as in the last.

Saturday, March 8, 2008

First Post

I've seen so many lovely Blogger blogs that I've finally been converted and decided to migrate my original blog over here.

"So what do you blog about?" my daughter Shelli asks dubiously. It's a good question, so I'll address that. I blog mainly on things that occur in daily life. I write about my garden, which is largely year-round here in lovely zone 8b Buda, TX. I write about my daughter and my family and their adventures, and about my own adventures as a returning adult college student -- and hopefully by next year graduate student. I write about my knitting and other needlework on occasion. I also write about my cats and the birds outside my windows and the wildflowers that come and go with the seasons.

I sometimes write about spiritual or religious subjects, but not often. There are so many other pagan blog authors who write so much more articulately and elegantly on the subject than I ever will, that I only write about religion once in a blue moon, when I have something to say. I also rarely write about politics or news events. It sometimes takes me a while to decide where I stand on issues -- there are so many different ways to look at things -- that by the time I've settled on something it's generally old news. Again, there are others much quicker and better suited to write on these subjects, so I typically leave them alone.

Well, that's about it for this post. I've got a three-day weekend ahead of me, so there are bushes to pull out and dishes to wash and a kitchen to finish painting -- er, well, we'll see about that last one.