another busy day

Hello again everyone; it is I, Chess the purebred border collie, filling in for the guy I live with, who’s been very busy lately. You may remember me from such posts as “Something Completely Different” and “Life With A Nut”, among other delightful posts. Here I am in a characteristic pose.

081301

The guy I live with calls this an “all too characteristic pose”, with my toys strewn all over the place and a biscuit I forgot about. Like I could forget about a biscuit. I’m saving it for later, of course.

Well, I’m not exactly sure why we have to post today, since almost nothing has been going on for days on end. It’s been dark, thundery, and rainless. The guy I live with says people don’t say “it’s been rainless”, but I do.

It hasn’t been completely rainless, as you can see from all the flowers on Tecoma ‘Orange Jubilee’, which got knocked off the plant just last night.

081306

The tecoma isn’t hardy, which the guy I live with says is too bad, just like he says it’s too bad we don’t live in Southern California where they don’t have thunder and can grow these, and tabebuias, too. But, the tecoma can be left outside on freezing nights, like if you forget to bring it in, which he says is a good thing.

A while ago I mentioned that the guy I live with had food poisoning, which is nothing new around here, but he said that one well known folk remedy was to plant fifty lavenders, so that’s what he’s been doing, while I’ve been guarding the house. There’s another reason for all this lavender acquisition, and it has to do with a French gardening book he got recently, over which he swooned when he read it, and decided to post a review of it in the near future. “In French, of course.” I think this is all really dumb, but no one ever asks me. It’s all he’s been talking about.

He weeded today. He had his iPod, and “up root weeder” as it’s called, from Hida Tool in Berkeley, and just went about his business, weeding away. This is the weeder. Maybe he showed this before but this is a better picture.

081303

As he was weeding, he came upon something which he thought was very interesting. He even said “This is interesting”. I didn’t think it was, but then, I remember how he used to talk my mommy into coming outside to look at things like this, and she would say “Uh huh” and turn around and go back inside. One or two winters ago, during one of his moments, he decided that the thing to do was to sow some twenty year old seed and stick a label in the ground. This usually results in nothing, but in this case, he found a young Convolvulus phrygius very close to the label. 081302

Of course the Linum tenuifolium on the right is much too close, but in the guy I live with’s defense, he scarcely thought he’d get a Turkish convolvulus from seed just tossed on the ground.

(I’m almost done, so bear with me.)

He said to post this picture too.

081304

He says this is “four thymes in one place”. He doesn’t know the names of any of them. I’m not sure this is all that interesting, really. That’s Gypsophila fischeri on the left.

Last winter was bad for a lot of plants in the garden but good for thymes. They had a good thyme, you might say. He ordered a whole bunch of thymes after he saw four he couldn’t recognize. I guess he has the idea that if he has more thymes, but with labels, having four he whose names he doesn’t know won’t make him feel so silly. A percentage thing. I’ll let him go in believing that.

And here are the tiniest acorns you probably ever saw, on Quercus undulata. They’re the size of peas. I don’t like peas very much. They roll around when I try to eat them, since I don’t know how to use a spoon.

081307

 

There’ve been a lot of hummingbirds whizzing around lately, and so I’m supposed to show this picture, too, which is a picture of some pods, and ties into the tecoma picture very elegantly, or so he says. (They’re in the same family.)

081305

The guy I live with grew this trumpet vine for years, and never realized they made pods, until one day he was out in the side yard, where this is, and said, “Look, pods.” That’s how his mind works.

My mommy really wanted the yellow trumpet vine and several got planted but not much of anything happened, as usual. Our neighbor planted the really red one, and so did my mommy, and only our neighbor’s trumpet vine lived. The guy I live with likes trumpet vines almost as much as hummingbirds do, and the sight of these pods reminded him that he never got a yellow one to grow. He says he shouldn’t just have the regular orange-red one.

I think I know what’s going to happen next.

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

as above, so below

Greetings everyone, it is I, Chess the purebred border collie, here again to entertain you with the most delightful and informative posts a border collie can provide. You may remember me from such posts as “He Fixes Something” and “Tick Talk”, among others. Here I am in a characteristic pose. You can also see the ancient creaky rattan furniture (even older than the guy I live with, if you can believe that, and fun for border collies to climb onto), and I would suggest that you note the colors of the wall behind me. My mommy picked out those colors, but they’re full of portent at the moment. Symbolic, even.

080905

Well, the day started out quite nicely, with our walk and all, and the guy I live with did stuff, and then the UPS guy showed up, and guess what was in the box?

080901

That’s right, lavenders. And some mints and stuff. These came from Goodwin Creek Gardens and the first thing the guy I live with noticed was that they sent these UPS ground because it was cheaper, which was nice of the nursery since he clicked the three day delivery box, and there was a note that some of the plants were small so they sent him a free plant.

He explained to me that small plants establish more easily because there is an equal balance between roots and top growth, so the hormone balance is good, and the plants will be happier than ones with too much top growth versus roots. An even more difficult situation exists when the pot is nothing but roots, so almost none of them can absorb enough water to hydrate the top growth. “As above, so below” he said, and while this reminds me of Hermes Trismegistus and Jakob Böhme, it didn’t have anything at all to do with that, so he wasn’t getting all mystical on me. That was a relief.

The lavenders are mostly white or pink ones, and several of them are actually what they call lavandins, rather than “regular” lavenders. Regular lavender is Lavandula angustifolia, and it has a very wide distribution, growing even in the Pyrenees, which makes it the hardiest species. A lavandin is Lavandula × intermedia, and cross between L. angustifolia, and the less hardy but even more drought-resistant L. latifolia. Some people think that one produces better oil than the other. All the guy I live with thinks about this is that you can scarcely make herbes de Provence without lavender.

There is a chicken dish which you make with herbes de Provence and lots of butter that ….well, I better not start talking about food. The guy I live with says that both Lavandula lanata and L. stoechas are also hardy here, but, he says “not if they die.”

All very interesting. And speaking of hybrids, there’s also a Buddleia ‘Lochinch’ (B. davidii × B. fallowiana) in the flat there. He already has one, but this one was in bloom, and there’s not much like the scent of a buddleia, at least to the guy I live with. They have some really big ones at the Bad Place, not ‘Lochinch’, but they smell nice. He doesn’t feel like spelling buddleia with a J like most people do now. It’s hard enough to get people to pronounce plant names correctly, like they were words in English instead of in Klingon, without having this J business to deal with.

080902

And, oh, let’s see, it got really scary this afternoon, the way it does every afternoon at this time of year now. The guy I live with says it didn’t used to, and even though I wonder if “it didn’t used to” is real English, the good old days do sound better to me. He says that August used to average 8.3 days with thunderstorms, but I’ve heard thunder every day but one so far. I even heard it when we started out for our afternoon walk, and I had to go back inside. Those stories of seeing my skeleton if I got hit by lightning were not encouraging. We waited for a while and then the storm blew to the east and we were able to go on our walk after all. It hardly rained at all. Whew, huh.

080904

What else? The oriole feeder is still attracting lots of orioles, but also some non-oriole visitors. You should see them when the guy I live with takes the feeders down for “rejellification”. He uses one of those grabber deals to get the feeders, even though the hornets don’t seem to have any interest in stinging him….yet…but they do follow him back to the patio to see what’s what with the grape jelly.

In fact, he got a call about having the garden on tour, and the person on the other end of the phone was shocked when he said he didn’t grow any “edibles” (what a ridiculous word), but he does have quite a few stingables in the yard, besides the hornets. Yellow jackets, wasps, bumblebees, bees of all kinds.

080903

So that, like I like to say, was our day. The guy I live with got his lavenders, and now has to start thinking. That’s a process which makes me go into another room. One day I’ll tell you about the thinking process, and what’s involved, but right now I’ll say goodbye, and sign off with a picture of the moon this evening.

080906

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | 17 Comments