yet another crisis

I guess I’ve resigned myself to the dog’s insistence that we get up at 5:39 a.m. so he can have breakfast. I hoped this was just an aberration, but it’s happened every day for about a week now, and even though we got up at 5:40 this morning I can’t believe this indicates a trend to waking up at an hour I would consider acceptable.

“One or two people, though maybe not as many as that” (favorite line from Oliver’s Travels) ask me how I make it through every day. Though I know it’s not meant in this way, here is my answer. Back when I was working, and we had a house payment and a car payment and all that, grinding this wonderful substance from beans was one of the few luxuries we allowed ourselves. The border collies we had then even had a “bean dance” they would perform every time the coffee was ground.

I started by digressing, but here’s another thing that keeps me going: gardening.

I’m beginning to wonder what the plants in my garden really think of me. It’s true that I’m an extremely fickle gardener, and the plants are supposed to understand that when they come into the garden, but sometimes they don’t seem to care. I posted a picture of this hideous thing a week or so ago, and it didn’t faze the plant one bit.

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Pinus uncinata

The sheer ugliness of it, the long sinuous branches that seem to have no intention of growing in anything resembling a direction, its refusal to grow up instead of out and backwards, have been bothering me for several years. I can see it out the kitchen window, which makes it worse.

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The pine also gets a bud worm of some sort, which makes it even uglier, though you can snap off the dead buds and a wasp will collect the larvae burrowed in the stem. Then there are all these snapped-off buds that add to the beauty.

I made a decision a few weeks ago, aided by my owning some heavy duty and extremely sharp tools I got from Hida Tool a while back that would help do the job quickly and painlessly. Faster, in fact, than a power tool. (By the time you got your power tool started, I would be done.) I won’t show the actual operation, to spare any squeamish readers, but trust me, the whole thing was done in less than ten minutes.

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still freezing

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willows in the open space, wherein Coyote lurks

Some pictures from today. Warmer than yesterday, except for the wind. The wind coming off the mountains is often warm, but not right now. The dog, who comes bundled up without putting anything on, had a fine time on his walk.

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yucca pallida; very tolerant of being under large amounts of snow for long periods of time (some yuccas aren’t)

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agave mckelveyana recoiling in horror at the temperature. you would too if you had to sit outside all night. it’s fine, though.

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winter comes to the Jardin Exotique

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cylindropuntia imbricata x kleiniae wearing its holiday decor

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still hard to believe that echinocereus knippelianus tolerates my garden ….without proper shriveling.

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what a hardy cactus is supposed to do, lose water to prevent cells from freezing. this is echinocereus coccineus White Sands form.

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Saxifraga x kellereri ‘Johann Kellerer’ (really); in less than a month this will be covered with raspberry-colored buds. blooms very early,

I bought a few roosting pockets from Garden Talk (a.k.a. Nicke’s), and maybe I’ll get some more, since they were investigated within a day of being hung in the lilacs. I feel sorry for the birds having to freeze their little rear ends off in weather like this.

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Of course feeding the birds sometimes brings other visitors. I guess this is feeding the birds, too ….

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Cooper’s hawk, I think; taken through doubled-paned, not very clean windows.

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