slightly less roasting

Greetings and salutations, everyone; yes, once again it is I, your popular host, Mani the purebred border collie, here today to bring you up to date on stuff that’s been happening here, which, really, is not a whole lot at all. You may remember me from such posts as “Still More Summer”, among so many, many others.

Here I am in a characteristic pose.Pretty sophisticated, huh? I mean if you ignore the condition that the ramp is in. The guy I live with’s late wife built that for Flurry, the first purebred border collie who lived here, when he got to be really ancient.
The guy I live with occasionally says stuff about replacing the ramp, but I think he’s too sentimental to do that. Since there are two sliding glass doors, the what I guess you would call “stoop” is shorter than usual and so a ramp was necessary. It is nice to have a ramp of one’s own, no matter how derelict it’s getting.

Anyway. I know this might be hard to believe, but it rained here.
Not what you would call a soaking rain; a little over three millimeters. But at least it was rain.

It’s cooled off a little, though still hot, and still dry, despite the rain (if you know about rain, you know that three millimeters is hardly anything, though the guy I live with was still grateful for it).
Some plants have been doing perfectly well despite everything.

Sedum ‘Matrona’.

Sedum ‘Xenox’.

Sedum ‘Desert Red’.

I guess you really call these Hylotelephium or something like that, but we still call them sedums. The ‘Desert Red’ is a lot redder than the picture suggests, by the way.

The other gardening thing–and there haven’t been very many gardening things to think about here at all, what with the heat and drought and the fact that the guy I live with hasn’t been very motivated at all, is the desert willow seedlings. 

I know they look pretty hopeless, but in fact most of them are doing okay.
So many plants in the garden are not doing anything like okay that having some desert willow seedlings is something to feel good about.

There have been some other things. The guy I live with didn’t go to the plant sale. He got a very late start, and then after he drove off, realized he’d forgotten his hat, and was so discouraged that he turned around and drove home.
This is something that’s been bothering him ever since the first stay-at-home order here: he hasn’t gone out very much, and every time he does, he forgets something, like his wallet, or his mask, or something that, say, last year, he would never have forgotten. And so he feels weird about this.

The other thing, which the guy I live with would agree was much more important, was my what you might call digestive issues. I started having some problems, and I could tell that the guy I live with was pretty concerned, and he even called my doctor.
He told me that he was very experienced with this sort of thing, like when Chess, the purebred border collie who lived here before me, was sick, or Slipper before him, but at the same time had to keep reminding himself that he could get in the car and drive to the doctor’s. It’s not very far at all, but this hesitation was because he hasn’t gone out very much at all; going out has become a little strange to him.
He found a can of sweet potato in the pantry and gave me some of that, and after a couple of days everything was back to normal.
As normal as things could be, these days.

Since, as maybe you can tell, we kind of value continuity, it was pleasant to see that the owls have returned. 

And we’re still seeing striped kitties on our midnight walks. I realize this is an awful picture. (I didn’t take it.)

So that’s what’s been going on. This and that, I guess you would say.
It’s not supposed to be so ridiculously roasting hot next week, and that alone is good enough for me.

Until next time, then.

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smoke, stripes, and glowing eyes

Greetings and salutations, everyone; yes, once again it is I, your popular host, Mani the roastingly hot purebred border collie, here today to tell you just how hot I’ve been, and about some of my adventures. You may remember me from such posts as “A Smoky Day”, among so many, many others.

Here I am in a characteristic pose,  on a hot and smoky afternoon.It still hasn’t rained, and none is in the forecast. The guy I live with has been watering a bit, but not enough, he says. Even the local residents are hot.I’ve mostly been lying around, roasting. I’m not sure I’ve ever been this hot for so long.

The sunsets have been pretty spectacular, though. This isn’t a really good picture. There are things going on in the garden. A few things, anyway. There’s this little oak seedling:And some cyclamen. This is Cyclamen fatrense, flowering just about on time. It got a little water last week.And the big shrubby buckwheat, Eriogonum corymbosumSo that’s the non-striped news.

As you no doubt know, I’ve been getting three walks a day, with the third walk some time after 10:30 at night. It isn’t nearly so hot then.
Well, last night, our adventure quickly became a striped one. These aren’t very good pictures but you can see what I mean. See that black spot in the center, way back by the trees?The striped kitty headed off to the right, to hide behind the trees, I guess.I wanted to get closer but the guy I live with said no. When we got to the sidewalk we could see where the striped kitty went. I know this is a super blurry picture but you can still see it, trotting down the sidewalk. Imagine walking down the sidewalk and meeting a striped kitty.So then I wanted to go back, and we did. There are things to check out on the canal road which are more interesting than sidewalk things.
We were walking along the canal road, on the way towards home; the guy I live with had his headlamp on, because we’ve seen more than one striped kitty here, and all of a sudden we saw a pair of glowing eyes coming towards us.
The guy I live with said just to stand where I was, and not do anything, so I didn’t.
The eyes kept coming closer.
Finally they stopped, looked in our direction, and headed off on the path on the south side of the canal, then turned and went on the path we walk on, behind all the houses.
It was a coyote. So of course it went along the coyote path.
But that was pretty scary until we knew what it was.

That’s been the last few days. Hot and smoky. Not much else going on.

Until next time, then.

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