the mushrooms

Greetings and salutations, everyone; yes, once again it is I, your popular host, Mani the purebred border collie, here today to bring you up to date on all the exciting things that happen to us almost every single day. You may remember me from such posts as “The Ghost In The Grapevine”, among so many, many others.

Here I am in a characteristic pose.
You can see that the leaves on the birch are turning yellow.

It was pretty windy today and all sorts of stuff blew onto the patio and everywhere else. I think the wind is because it might rain some time this week, but the guy I live with isn’t very confident about that.

Things have been a little unsettled here for a while now. I’ve had some issues with eating, even after I stopped taking the antibiotic for my cut paw, and that’s upset the guy I live with no end. We had an argument about breakfast just yesterday.
Maybe I’m back on track now, with regular eating, though.

I know he worries about me, just like I worry about him.
He was summoned for jury duty, something he said he’s been dreading for years now, and he’s not sure whether just to leave me here at home for hours (longer than I’ve been left at home before), or have me go to a day care place. I’d have to spend the night.

He said he thought about trying to fake his own death to get out of this, but I think that wouldn’t work. I can tell he’s stressed out.

And it’s October. Not his favorite month, because it was his wife’s favorite month, and he said he can feel that. Her birthday is this next Sunday. I know he misses her terribly, and especially now, because she could stay home with me while the guy I live with did his jury thing.
He says it’s very hard to talk to people about that, because most people don’t want to talk about death, loss, and grief. They can’t relate at all.

The colchicums are almost done here. This is Colchicum ‘Pink Star’. The guy I live with was given some corms to try to determine what they are, and this is what he decided it was.
The first crocuses have appeared. These are Crocus kotschyanus, the one called ‘Reliant’, though I guess it isn’t, totally. Sometimes crocuses form all these little cormlets which take a few years to grow to flowering size again.
These were named for Karl Georg Theodor Kotschy, an Austrian botanist in the nineteenth century.

This seems to be mostly a month for yellow flowers, like the cowpen daisies, which I can see, and red flowers, which I can’t see. I can’t see the color red, I mean.
Salvia greggii is doing very well. We had a little rain a while ago, but everything seems pretty dry nonetheless.
That’s a seedling, from the original planting of ‘Furman’s Red’.
This is ‘Furman’s Red’.
The hummingbirds have all left, for Mexico, which is kind of sad, because we have all these flowers for them.
This is Zauschneria ‘Ghostly Red’. It’s just starting to flower.
This is native to California, where they have hummingbirds year-round, and the salvia is native to Texas, where the hummingbirds would find them on their journey south.
So the salvias flower here after the hummingbirds have left, but are still flowering much farther south. Like at least 800 miles (1278km) farther south.
The guy I live with says that’s the way things go.

The last red flower for today is one that the hummingbirds might look at, but not find interesting. This is Cyclamen hederifolium ‘Corfu Red’.
The guy I live with says there aren’t any hummingbirds on the island of Corfu. He knows that without checking.

The last time we had any rain worth talking about was about two weeks ago, but now we have these coming up in my Private Lawn, which is buffalo grass.
These are mushrooms, if you didn’t know.

The guy I live with said he would have to spend “some time thinking” as to why there are mushrooms in my Private Lawn and nowhere else. It could very well be that something was added to the soil back there at one time, because the garden has undergone so many changes in the last thirty-five years or so. Things didn’t work out, the guy I live with changed his mind, plants died, all sorts of things like that.

Anyway, there are mushrooms. The guy I live with removed all of these the other day.

So that’s what’s been happening here. Not really a whole lot. I mean if you don’t count all the stressing out and stuff. The guy I live with was very good with functioning under stress, when he worked for the phone company, but it’s been a long time since he did that, and maybe he’ll have to get used to doing that again.
I would be very upset if he tried to fake his own death, or if we had to head to Mexico because of all of this. I don’t speak Spanish. And it would be too hot for me.

I guess that’s all I have for today. A bunch of stuff that’s maybe too weird for me. I’ll leave you with a picture of me sleeping on the patio, which has been swept repeatedly in the last couple of days, and needs to be swept again.

Until next time, then.

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the mattress

Greetings and salutations, everyone; yes, once again it is I, your popular host, Mani the purebred border collie, here today to bring you up to date on all the recent events here. You may remember me from such posts as “Our Modern Lifestyle”, among so many, many others.

Here I am in a characteristic pose.Not much has been happening here, though there has been some excitement. It rained a bit a few days ago, though now we’re going to have a week of dry weather.

Mostly what’s been going on here is a bunch of cleaning up of stuff, which in itself is pretty remarkable. The guy I live with removed three troughs just a few days ago. One of them was broken, and the other two had so few plants left in them that he dug out the plants that were left, then removed all the soil-less mix, and very carefully moved the heavy troughs onto the patio, using a dolly. The two troughs will eventually go to the Chatfield Arboretum, south of here.
What happened was that larger plants flopped over the troughs and so a lot of the trough plants rotted away during all the rain we had earlier.

The other thing, and it was a much bigger deal, was that two weeks ago our trash pickup was missed. The guy I live with was angry at first, and then he realized that the person driving the trash truck might have been new, and since we’re the only ones without a trash container (we just used bags), maybe he should have asked for a container quite a while ago. So he asked for one, and it was delivered. The kind that gets lifted onto the trash truck with a crane sort of thing.

The container is pretty big (96 gallons), so it took up a lot of space in the garage.
The guy I live with decided it was finally time to get rid of the mattress and box springs that have been sitting in the garage for about five years, taking up a lot of space.
The mattress was really old. About 65 years old. Yes, I know.
People came day before yesterday to haul those away, as well as an old wooden cabinet the guy I live with disliked, and some other stuff.
So now there’s a bunch of room for the big trash container. The guy I live with even sometimes goes out into the garage just to look at all this new space.

That’s our big news. The guy I live with said it was very nice to get rid of stuff.

Since this is a gardening blog, sort of, I thought I show show some pictures related to gardening.
This is me, if you couldn’t tell, not paying any attention to Aster oblongifolius. These asters are all over the garden and are flowering now. They don’t need any supplemental irrigation. There are some cowpen daisies, too.
The guy I live with is more interested in the colchicums, which are peaking right now.
There are even more colchicums flowering now, but I thought I would just show these.
The guy I live with has been making cages, covered with window screen, to protect the flowers from being devoured by grasshoppers, who eat the colchicums right down to the ground, even though colchicums are poisonous.

And that’s really it for today. The ancient mattress is gone, the three troughs are gone, and we have colchicums in flower.

Until next time, then.

Posted in Uncategorized | 29 Comments