Harlequin’s Gardens

Greetings and salutations, everyone; yes, once again it is I, Chess the purebred border collie, filling in for the guy I live with, and here to show you pictures taken on a day I was left at home, alone. You may remember me from such lonely posts as “Left Alone” and the other “Left Alone”, and “Home Alone Once Again” and “Left Alone Again”, among so many, many others in which I was left alone.

Here I am in a characteristic pose, glad to have the guy I live with home again, and glad to have gone on my afternoon walk, and glad for the fan blowing moderately cool air on my personal self.14080200As you can probably tell by the title of today’s post, the guy I live with left me alone and drove to Boulder, to Harlequin’s Gardens. We’ve shown pictures of the nursery before, but feel like showing more today. It’s how we are, you know. (By the way, these are really big files, so you can embiggen them by clicking on them.)

It was a sunny, albeit slightly hazy and humid day. It rained a lot, if you’ll recall. Humidity was an “awful” thirty percent.

Harlequin’s is in north Boulder, and is reached by a suitably lonely dirt road.14080217

looking southeast toward Denver

looking southeast toward Denver

looking northeast

looking northeast

looking to the north, past the nursery

looking to the north, past the nursery

looking back, southwest, sort of, to the nursery

looking back, southwest, sort of, to the nursery

looking at the Flatirons, South Boulder Peak, and Devil's Thumb

looking at the Flatirons, South Boulder Peak, and Devil’s Thumb

entrance

entrance

14080203

native grasses

native grasses

lots of roses

lots of roses

14080206

14080207

14080208

14080209

 

14080210

14080212

14080222

 

14080213

14080214

14080211Here’s a view looking almost west. It has a certain lonely look which the guy I live with says is very appealing. I like it better when he’s at home. Which he is now.14080220That’s all for today. I hope you enjoyed the pictures, even if they weren’t all of me.

 

Until next time, then.

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged | 12 Comments

slithering in the bindweed

Hello everyone; yes, once again it is I, Chess the purebred border collie, filling in for the guy I live with, and here to bring you the latest and greatest news from our garden, no matter how scary. You may remember me from such posts as “Slush Fun” and “The Expired Chicken”, among so many, many others.

Here I am in a characteristic after-walk pose.14080110Both walks today were excellent, though the guy I live with says my toenails “could do with a good trimming”. I don’t like the sound of that. If I’d had to have had the surgery, they would have been trimmed then, but I didn’t, and they weren’t.

Here I am on my afternoon walk, heading home. The green is mostly from weeds. 14080111The guy I live with potted up (or, as they say in the UK, “potted on”) some plants for the plant sale to be held by the Rocky Mountain Chapter of the North American Rock Garden Society next month, so he had something to do today.

He also got some bulbs in the mail, and before planting them, took some pictures. He said that with erythroniums it helps to know which side is down, or up, depending on how you look at it. I suppose this is because he planted some upside-down last fall, and had to dig them up and replant them. These are shown right side up, he says.

Erythronium tuolumnense

Erythronium tuolumnense

 

Eyrthronium citrinum

Eyrthronium citrinum

They call these “dog tooth violets”, which is pretty dumb, since they aren’t violets, though I do see a vague resemblance with the tooth business. Anyway, these got planted right side up this time. Whew, huh.

And I have some pictures of plants, too. I think I’ve already showed pictures of some of these, but why not show more, I say. Here’s the colony of Ipomopsis rubra. Not totally in focus, but still a colony.

14080103There was a little tiny Calliope hummingbird out in the garden, but it didn’t get its picture taken, because the guy I live with didn’t have his camera at the time, and then when he went to get it, the hummingbird was gone. Typical.

Here’s Sphaeralcea ‘Desert Sunset’ in one of its many color forms. There are oodles of sphaeralceas around the garden, front and back. 14080102And Penstemon richardsonii. The guy I live with told me he saw this growing out of cliff faces when he and my mommy visited the Columbia River Gorge. 14080101Agastache ‘Coronado Red’. 14080100

Okay, that’s all of the plant pictures. Now, judging by the title of my post, you might suspect that I have something really scary to talk about, and indeed I do. The guy I live with would point out that I was safe in my fort while all of this happened, but that doesn’t make it any less scary, if you ask me.

If you’ve been following my posts for a while, you may have noticed that we have what some people might think is an overabundance of rodents. Not any more. I don’t really want to say why, but today, while the guy I live with was out trying to take flower pictures, this creature slithered into view.14080108He knew what this was right away. I mean besides it being a snake. It’s a western yellow-bellied racer. Coluber constrictor is its scientific name.

It was not small.14080109Talk about getting a case of the creeps. I might not be able to go outside ever again. The guy I live with used to tell me stories about a much larger one that lived in the garden when my Grandpa Flurry and my Uncle Pooka were here, and nothing bad ever happened to them. That doesn’t make me feel any better.

I think I’ll stay in my fort as much as possible, and just wait for winter.14080107

 

Until next time, then.

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , | 10 Comments