the abandoned house

Here I am, Chess the purebred border collie, ready to entertain and delight you once again. You may remember me from such wonderful posts as “Stinker’s Revenge” and “Drip Drop Drip Drop”.

Here I am in a characteristic pose, about to eat a biscuit, and at the same time hoping I don’t hear thunder. I’ve been hiding downstairs all day and really should go back down there. It’s cooler, too. That’s my “fetch ‘n’ cuddle” behind me, and that’s the guy I live with’s ancient rattan furniture. Older than him, even. Like, really, really old.

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The sky has been dark and scary all day. The guy I live with says it will probably look like this every day until October. Sometimes living in Denver is like being around a person who constantly talks about the same thing. The same thing every day, day after day. There hasn’t been any rain at all, except some sprinkles, for a very long time.

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Anyway, and you might find this funny, someone told the guy I live with that people think the house here is abandoned, because the front yard looks like this.

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He didn’t take a very good picture, but my mommy said the garden wasn’t very photogenic, and she took all the pictures then. Those aren’t weeds in the lower left corner; they’re seedlings of Penstemon brandegei, the big green thing above it. The dark curvy branches are the desert willow, Chilopsis linearis, which I’ll get to in a minute. The ocotillo is front of it is probably dead, but there are so many plants in the garden that are probably dead that the guy I live with doesn’t even worry about it. It’s architectural, or so he says.

The guy I live with says people say this about the house all the time, and they think the house is abandoned because, first of all, there aren’t any cars parked in the driveway or on the street (the car is in the garage), and second of all, there isn’t any half-dead green grass in the front yard. The front garden has not been irrigated since 1987.

The guy I live with says that the people who have the half-dead green lawns are the first ones to start whining when watering restrictions are put in place, and the first ones to whine that it doesn’t rain here, and then when it does rain, they start whining about that, too. They also whine about the cost of water, which, here, is four tenths of a cent a gallon. The guy I live with says people can be weird.

Here’s the new front garden, with me looking out at it. He’s been watering that, so the cactus get a chance to root before it gets cold, and that’s why you can see a hose.

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And here’s the path leading from the front into the back yard. Holodiscus dumosus is just “going over” as the guy I live with says they say. That’s an oak on the right, Quercus undulata.

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It’s really dry here. The guy I live with likes it that way, and also he likes the decrepit feeling that the whole garden has, sort of like an estate that’s gone downhill, the house that trick-or-treaters always avoid at Halloween. It’s so decrepit beyond where the path turns that none of the pictures turned out.  He says the camera didn’t have a decrepit filter on it, but I think he just took crummy pictures. You’ll just have to imagine it.

Before I go back downstairs I’m supposed to show some flowers of the desert willow. This is one of the guy I live with’s favorite plants; the flowers are scented of violets at night. One of the desert willows here still hasn’t leafed out, even though it’s alive. The guy I live with says this is being extra smart. Like me.

This is a flower from one of the desert willows in the front yard. That’s a bee butt, if you didn’t know.

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Lastly, the “red” one in the back yard.

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Oh, wait. He says to show the greasewood. This is very exciting indeed. Maybe this is why people think the house is abandoned. The level of horticultural excitement here, I mean.

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I hope you found this edifying. That’s all for today.

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bunnies on the grass, alas

Hello everyone. Once again it is I, Chess the purebred border collie, filling in for the guy I live with, who says he’s bored. You may remember me from such interesting posts as “My Garden in Spring” and “Wright’s White”, as well as a host of other equally fascinating contributions to the literature of gardening and the experience of being a purebred border collie.

Here I am attempting to look at ease.

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It’s the Fourth of July and people are shooting off firecrackers even though it’s against the law and it’s scary, and there was thunder earlier, so things aren’t as great as they could be. I’m going to try to talk about grass, since it’s boring, and that might calm me down some.

The guy I live with seems to be preoccupied with boring stuff. I guess if he’s bored, he might as well bore everyone else, huh? First, look at what’s happened to the grassy path in back.

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He hasn’t watered it, and it looks pretty dead. He told me today that dead grass in the summertime makes his heart sing, or at least as much as it can since my mommy passed away. Isn’t that strange? He explained that it reminds him of being a little kid and his grandpa’s garden in Los Angeles and how dry the grass got in summer, and that still seems like the normal way of things to him. I know, it’s weird. He’s never lived in a place where he didn’t have to water. He says he’s going to replace this with a mulch path. I don’t know what that means.

Bunnies on the grass, alas. Very clever, huh? “Pigeons on the grass, alas” is from Four Saints in Three Acts, an opera by Virgil Thomson with words by Gertrude Stein. I bet there are people who don’t know that, but I, a purebred border collie, do. The guy I live with talks all the time, so I pick up things. My mommy would just roll her eyes when she heard things like that, though she liked the music of Virgil Thomson. The guy I live with isn’t so enthusiastic about it, but he bought her a record of it when she wanted one. I’m not sure what this has to do with anything.

Anyway, except for a miniature lawnmower at one end, the front lawn (in the back yard) is looking pretty good. I mean if you think this is a lawn. The guy I live with says this is a “progressive” lawn. It’s not making as much progress as he thinks.

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That’s new grass, blue grama, on the right of the path, which is why it’s so short. It has to be watered, since it’s new, and the guy I live with was mildly irked that he used 7,000 gallons of water in June. He read somewhere that the average suburban home uses 10,500 gallons a month, but the guy I live with prefers to be below average. (Yes, I said that on purpose. Border collie humor.) He was going to save water by taking a shower once every two weeks but I told him not to do that. Fortunately he agreed and takes a shower every day, and I get soaked with the hose almost every day, because I get hot. We purebred border collies do not care for hot weather. Or thunder. Or firecrackers. Or posting about dumb grass, for that matter.

To make this an even less interesting post, the guy I live with said to post this picture of a grass. It grew and grew and he thought it was something else, and it turned out be not that at all, but another something else, which he claims is wolftail, Lycurus setosus.

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I guess if that’s what he says it is, it must be that. He’s really excited about it. He thought and thought about this (it was interesting to see him thinking about this; his mouth was kind of open and he just stared at the grass and eventually said “Is that wolftail?”) and since it couldn’t be anything else, and he had seed of wolftail, he put two and two together and decided it was wolftail. He says that originally it was called Lycurus phleoides but apparently this is now a separate species, or something kind of like that.

Lycurus phleoides is said to be confused with Muhlenbergia wrightii but that grass has grayer leaves and the spikes are the color of lead. We have that in the garden, too. So he’s calling this one wolftail until someone tells him not to. Here’s a picture of L. phleoides from Hitchcock’s Manual of Grasses of the United States (the treatment is on the other page), but it might be L. setosus. And then again it might not be. This is really confusing.

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The book doesn’t lay flat the way it should which is why it looks all curvy. There are times when I just don’t understand the guy I live with at all. I mean, why not try to flatten the page a little before taking the picture? Or something.

Okay, so now you know he has wolftail in the garden. It won’t be on the news or anything.

I think it’s time to go now. This was even more boring than it sounded when I first started.

 

 

 

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