Greetings and salutations, everyone; yes, once again it is I, Mani the purebred border collie, Mani the roasting hot purebred border collie, filling in for the guy I live with, and here today to tell you how hot I am, and talk about some other stuff. You may remember me from such posts as “Unbelievably Roasting Hot”, among so many, many others.
Here I am in a characteristic pose, not yet totally roasting. This is another morning pose.
The guy I live with couldn’t figure out what to do in the roasting heat. As I’ve pointed out before, he doesn’t mind working in the heat, since he worked outside in heat like this, in telephone repair and installation, wearing a long-sleeve flannel shirt no less, but he had no specific plan for today. He usually has a plan.
The guy I live with wept, because he had no more heavy rocks to move.
“Oh”, he said, “but they can be repositioned.”
(As an aside, because it’s so, so hot, the guy I live with said there’s “internet nonsense” going around claiming that the line “And when Alexander saw the breadth of his domain, he wept, for he had no more worlds to conquer” originated with the movie Die Hard.
It did not. Here is Edward Marbury, A commentarie or exposition on the prophecie of Habakkuk (etc. one of those interminable titles), 1650.
The guy I live with researched this and found a very erudite person who gave this and other examples.
Maybe if it weren’t so hot the guy I live with wouldn’t be so annoyed with such things.)
Anyway. The guy I live with decided to be sensible and reposition the rocks when it gets cooler.
He predicted that would happen in February of 2031, for about two hours, which would be enough time. Historians would call this “The Great Cooldown”.
Speaking of the future, the guy’s I live with’s doctor insisted he have all these routine tests, including one on his birthday, so he can possibly experience that “great cooldown”.
A lot of waiting rooms to spend time in. The guy I live with is very good at waiting; he says it shows him that he’s not the only person in the world, and doesn’t get upset with waiting.
We have a waiting room here. I showed it in the first picture, but here it is, closer up.
The plants in the big clay pots are Salvia coccinea, raised from seeds. but the guy I live with said they probably want lots of water, considering their native habitat is along the Gulf Coast. So he doesn’t have much hope.
The rest of the plants have been repotted into larger pots, with gritty, sandy stuff surrounding the root balls (the “super genius method” again). He won’t wait to plant them until “The Great Cooldown”, but maybe this coming autumn.
It’s easier to give these plants a little water than walk around the garden with a watering can, watering newly-planted plants in this heat, and hoping that the nursery root ball will be completely wetted, because it won’t be.
The guy I live with said he couldn’t count how many plants he’d lost just sticking them in the ground and then watering them, thinking that the watering would wet the nursery soil around the roots, when it never did, and the plants died.
The plants don’t have any old magazines to leaf through, though, in their waiting room.
They’re in shade, but still pretty roasting.
This is me in shade, not roasting, but with the cool, damp breeze of the swamp cooler on me. I’m obviously better off than those plants. Or a lot of people, too.
Some plants don’t need all this fancy treatment, even when it’s roasting outside.
Like these things.
The sacatons, Sporobolus wrightii, look much better after they were transplanted. They’re still roasting, though.
So that’s it for today. It’s way, way, way too hot.
I’ll leave you with a picture of me in my Kitchen Fort, again with the cool breeze of the swamp cooler blowing on me.

Until next time, then.








