Greetings and salutations, everyone; yes, once again it is I, your popular host, Mani the purebred border collie, here today to bring you our latest news. You may remember me from such posts as “More Boring Stuff”, among so many, many others.
Here I am in a characteristic pose.
It was forty-five degrees today. (That’s 7.2 Celsius.) Pretty toasty in the sun, and let me tell you, the sun here is very warm, because we’re closer to it than most people are.
The snow is melting, slowly.
This is what it looked like night before last, at about midnight, when it was Tinkle Time. It was cold.
We’ve had an issue with rabbits getting into the garden, and the guy I live with was pretty upset with me when instead of going outside for the last time at night, to tinkle, in the freezing cold, I spent a long time chasing a rabbit around the back yard. (I didn’t catch it, but it was good exercise.)
It’s going to get warmer and warmer, but then maybe snow a little at the beginning of next week.
It was so nice today that the guy I live with raised the plastic sheets that were covering the snowdrops planted in pots.
Very stylish-looking, isn’t it? The guy I live with thought he might start a blog called Elegant Garden Design, but I wasn’t really sure about that idea.
The plastic was just to help keep the soil from freezing when it got very cold, because that slows down the snowdrops, and he mainly wants them to increase.
The soil is frozen solid where that two-by-four is; the wood is so he can kneel down to look at the snowdrops. I worry every time he kneels in the garden, because he might not be able to get up. (The other pieces of wood are there so he can lift the plastic without having to kneel down, or were to keep the plastic from blowing away.)
But see the little white dots? This is what they are.
And in the front yard, there are snowdrops that have escaped from the main flock in the shade garden:
The guy I live with said that some plants use glucose to create heat so they can push through the snow. This is called thermogenesis.
There’s still not enough energy in the zillion snowdrops in the shade garden to be able to get through the snow, but maybe some warmer temperatures will help with that.
I don’t know why that cage is still there. It was to protect some colchicums several months ago.
Crocuses can do thermogenesis, too, but this poor thing got frozen first. This is Crocus laevigatus. It’s normal for it to flower in late December.
There still could be some more flowers, but the guy I live with says probably not, which is okay.
Someone is coming out this weekend to give a quote on a new furnace (another form of thermogenesis, maybe), and now that it’s become nicer, the guy I live with said he’s “firm in his resolve” not to let the nice weather make him think we don’t need a new furnace. The thing is fifty years old, with some corrosion and all sorts of weird wiring.
And I’ll get to watch all of this.
So that’s our news, I’ll leave you with a picture of me in what I think you’ll agree is a pretty relaxed mode.

Until next time, then.




