before the deep freeze

Greetings and salutations, everyone; yes, once again it is I, Mani the purebred border collie, filling in for the guy I live with, and here to bring you up to date with the latest news from our garden. You may remember me from such posts as “Still Not Much Happening”, among so many, many others.

Here I am in a characteristic pose.16121607I spend kind of a lot of time on the bed these days. There’s not much gardening going on right now, and it’s supposed to get really cold tomorrow night.

The guy I live with said it would probably be best to let the last, sad post sit on the blog for a while, as a matter of respect, and he was probably right.

You can see how bleak it is here. The heater for the birdbath has been set up.

16121604There was still some blue sky before the sun went down this evening.16121605On my walk this evening I saw ducks in the neighbors’ yard.  They were gobbling up bird seed. Purebred border collies like bird seed, too. 1612601One of the ducks was on the other side of the fence, and we walked toward it. I think you can see him in this picture, if you look super-closely. The creek is on the right; it makes a turn to the east before it goes into the culvert under the canal. I’m not sure why there’s no grass here. 1612602We turned left, which is west, at the fence, and the duck was still walking.16121603I decided I needed to get what the guy I live with said was “too close”, and it flew over the fence to join its friends.

Very little has been happening here. The guy I live with has taken some pictures with the other camera, and the macro lens, and posted them on Facebook, but he says with the compression algorithm they have, that the pictures might look better here. Oh, they do look better here. This is Ceanothus greggiigreggii

And this is Shepherdia rotundifolia.

shep1

The irises are coming along, too. These are the roots, which sometimes decide to grow up into the air, instead of down into the perlite. Dumb irises, huh. The roots have to be pushed very gently down into the perlit. But the irises are doing well. Iris lineolata in front. 16121610One other thing. This is kind of sentimental, but the guy I live with says this can be a somewhat sentimental time of year, and so he said why not mention it. He was looking for something in the upstairs closet and found this. It has some water stains, and is very brittle.16121608This is a chromolithograph print made by Cecil Aldin. It says “The breakfast at the Three Pigeons” in small print. I guess, like what they say on “The Roadshow”, which you may recall me watching with interest, “condition is a problem”.

It’s what’s on the other side that matters. 16121609This was given to the guy I live with’s great uncle Jim, who died in 1957, and whom he never met, but heard a lot about when he was little. He went back to Newport, Rhode Island, that year, or the year after, and saw the house that his Uncle Jim had built himself (he was a master carpenter), entirely out of oak.

I’m kind of digressing. We purebred border collies tend to do that, when we’re not ultra-focused on something important. The guy I live with says that tomorrow night it will get down to eight below zero (-22.2C), so we’ll probably not go on our walk tomorrow evening. Last time it snowed I got ice in my paws, which wasn’t much fun at all, though the guy I live with is a paw-deicing expert.

I guess it’s time to sign off now. 16121606

Until next time, then.

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a sad day

Greetings and salutations, everyone; yes, once again it is I, Mani the purebred border collie, filling in for the guy I live with, and here to bring you the latest news from our garden, in this case very sad news. You may remember me from such posts as “For Whom The Bedclothes”, among so many, many others.

Here I am in a characteristic pose. dsc_1130

The guy I live with has been very sad. He got news last night that one of his pen-pals had died, after a long and terrible illness. You may remember “Marcus from Down Under”, if you’ve been following the blog for a while.

Here is one of the iris seeds germinating; one of the ones that were in the salt shakers. (The brownish tip is okay; that’s where it was cut. It’s the tip of the root.)dsc_1165

The guy I live with is crazy about bulbs, as you no doubt know, and about getting these irises to grow, and so was Marcus, who loved crocuses especially, so I’d like to dedicate this post to his memory.

lemon-tiger

Crocus korolkowii ‘Lemon Tiger’

uklin

Crocus vernus Uklin Strain

rujan

Crocus rujanensis

paschei

Crocus paschei

golden-nugget

Crocus korolkowii ‘Golden Nugget’

kuh-e

Iris reticulata Kuh-e-Abr

 

charles

Geranium charlesii

linearilobum

Geranium transversale var. linearilobum

 

fritillaria-stenanthera

Fritillaria stenanthera

 

frit1

Fritillaria sewerzowii

siculum

Nectaroscordum tripedale

atro

Gladiolus atroviolaceus

cartwrmarcel

Crocus cartwrightianus ‘Marcel’

asumaniae-2_zpsy7efwzfk

Crocus asumaniae

Until next time, then.

 

 

 

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