indubiably

Okay, here I am again, Chess the purebred border collie, a dog of above average intelligence, here to bring you the latest happenings in the garden. You may remember me from such superior posts as “The Barrow of Fear” and “A Close Call”, among so many others, all of which are my favorites. Here I am in yet another highly characteristic pose, looking past the guy I live with, you know, like kings and queens and people like that used to, back in the old days. Not looking directly at the person doing the portrait. The essence of nobility.

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I’ll make this as quick as I can, so the guy I live with doesn’t see it. He really is kind of dumb. Not only a nut, but dumb, too. Not dumb as a rock, because he can talk and do all that stuff that rocks can’t do, but still pretty dumb. He has this really good memory which makes him seem a lot smarter than he is.

Just a few minutes ago he looked at his cell phone, which was charging the battery, because it said “battery charging”, and then–no, really, this is true–he spent fifteen minutes running up and down the stairs looking for his cell phone.

He spends a lot of time looking for things that, if he only checked his pockets, he might find faster. He tried to find the food for my dinner down in the laundry room this evening, when it’s in the garage.

He still thinks this is the year 2012.

He thought the word “misled” was pronounced “myzled” until he heard it sung (in Tippett’s opera The Midsummer Marriage) and in fact he spends a lot of time being myzled about so many things.

A little gardening background might be in order here, too. A few years ago he ordered some plants from Las Pilitas Nursery and among them were plants of the grass, Muhlenbergia dubia. After a couple of weeks he decided that where he planted them wasn’t where they should be growing, so he moved them. Since that was in the summer, that’s usually the end of things, and he looked all over the place for the grasses and couldn’t find them. He calls that “transplantosis”, you know, when you move a plant too much and it dies. Really of course it’s just being dumb.

So last week, I think it was, he ordered some plants of Muhlenbergia dubia from another nursery. They wrote him and said how awfully sorry they were, but the plants were sold out, and so he pouted for what I thought was an excessively long period of time.

Just tonight, hardly any time ago at all, he was standing in front of the garden looking at things, the way he does, and he started looking at this grass, and began to wonder what it was. He even said “What on earth could this be?” (He has Hitchcock’s Manual of the Grasses of the United States right here in the kitchen, but I guess opening the book was too much trouble.)

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When he realized what it was, he said “Huh”.

I was right there too, and that’s not what I said to myself.

Hoping for the best, until next time, then.

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life with a nut

Greetings and salutations everyone. It is I, Chess the purebred border collie. You may remember me from stellar posts like “Stinker’s Revenge” and “Baby Blue Jays”. Here I am in a characteristic pose.

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My mommy, whose dog I was until she died, called me her “happy little goofball”, because I’m happy all the time, or almost all the time. Not when it thunders. Which it has only once so far today.

Today has been really cool and cloudy, so I made a point of staying inside and sleeping, most of the day, because clouds are scary too. And there was this other thing ….

Okay, I’ve said before that the guy I live with is kind of a nut. He allows things like this to go on. That’s his plant of Cytisus purpureus being snacked on.

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The guy I live with says they taste like chicken. Not the cytisus, I mean. My mommy used to make leek and rabbit pie, until she and the guy I live with started going on walks, and seeing little baby bunnies, and she no longer had the heart to cook them, even though they weren’t the same ones as the ones in the front yard. When they snuck into the back yard (they don’t live here) the guy I live with said to them that they taste like chicken, bwa ha ha, and they just looked at him, because they didn’t know what a chicken was, and they knew he wasn’t going to do anything to them.

Anyway, today the guy I live with wanted to get some pictures of the orioles that are all over the garden. He says the males are really skittish, and so—-get this—he was going to pretend to be a plant in order not to be noticed and to get a picture.

I have this idea that it’s not so difficult for him to pretend to be a plant, but I didn’t want to see any of this. You have to draw the line somewhere, right? He managed to get some oriole pictures even though they are skittish and he was pretending to be a plant.

These are first year males, or so he says, eating grape jelly in the feeder.

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He tried really hard to get a picture of an older male, but this was the best he could do. Or, I should say, this is what he said was the best he could do. They’re really orange.

 

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Well, that’s the bird part. Now, to plants. Or, to be precise, a plant. Gilia aggregata. Or Ipomopsis aggregata.

A little background first. The guy I live with says these gilias, and there are quite a few that are similar, some with orange or pink or white flowers (which strikes me as odd since this is a hummingbird-pollinated plant) are like the “essence of the West”, and that he wanted drifts of them all throughout the garden, but only got this one. I think it’s possible that someone ate all the other seeds since the guy I live with seems to be incapable of enforcing any sort of law against intruders, and that this fall he’ll just have to sow ten times as much seed.

He says they’re easy from seed, but taprooted plants, which don’t transplant very well from pots into this garden, so he’ll have to figure out some happy medium between broadcast sowing and having everything eaten.

The guy I live with says Intermountain Flora says that “regardless of its possible theoretical merits, the so-called biological species concept as applied in this group does not lead to a taxonomic treatment that can be used effectively” (volume four, p. 108) and so they retain the name Gilia for that purpose. He’s not going to call them Ipomopsis any more, partly because he thinks that’s a funny sounding name, and partly because if the flora is correct, then it’s illogical to apply a name derived from a species botanical concept to a taxonomic treatment.

Isn’t that interesting.

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Okay, there you are. The daily life of the nut I get to live with. It isn’t all that bad, really.

It’s thundering now, and raining a little, so I have to go. Until next time.

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