Blog Archives

A tangle of topics

 

     I finally got outside with the camera today and took some shots of the gardens and pond.  I posted 3 of the best ones on our garden and pond page. 

     The pups and I enjoyed the gorgeous, warm day we had today.  They played circus dogs and jumped through the Hula-hoop until I ran out of cookies to give them.  Then they ran about until they were near collapse.  I did some more cleaning out of the gardens, once again over filled, and emptied the wheel barrow four times.

     Yesterday, Dear Hubby’s best friend cleaned out all the gutters on my MIL’s house while DH played gofer on the ground.  This was a job that hadn’t been done in years and it took most of the day.  The high winds didn’t help much.  Yes, it’s a real friend, who will climb on a roof for you when the wind is gusting at 48 mph and all you can do is stand on the ground and watch.  DH is fortunate to have such a good friend. 

     My cousin, Carol has posted a new painting on her site, Carol’s Art Blog.  I am so impressed with her work.  The gal has talent.

Wild weather for the beginning of April

 

     We had plenty of crashing thunder, wild lightning, and monsoon-like rain today.  The pups weren’t thrilled with being inside but neither were they particularly thrilled with being outside.  Patty hates rain, she thinks she’ll melt or something.  Gavin doesn’t mind it too much but the drenching we got, was not his idea of fun either.  The rain battered the heck out of my daffodils but they might stand back up after they dry out a bit.

     Tomorrow the weather people are predicting wind gusts of up to fifty miles per hour.  I spent what little daylight (with no rain) we had left, battening down the hatches.  I’m sure I probably missed a few things and will find them moved tomorrow.  With my luck, they’ll be sleeping with the fishes in the pond and I’ll have to run a salvage operation.  Is Jacques Cousteau’s son still around?  Maybe I’ll give him a call.

     The poor magnolia will probably lose many of its not yet opened buds if the winds get too high.  I don’t remember ever having as much wind as we’ve had this year.  I do hope this will be the last of the high winds or I’m going to have to take some more bungee cords out into the yard to keep things from blowing away.

Oh, my aching back!

 

     We had such a sunny and warm day today I couldn’t resist doing some yard work.  I cleaned out the garden surrounding our pond.  Four over loaded wheelbarrows later, I was feeling it in my back and my knees.  It was worth it though, that garden looks a lot better. 

     By this evening, we had clouds and rain again.  We’re getting more rain tomorrow so the rest of the gardens will have to wait.  Down the side of our yard, I have this one-hundred and twenty feet long by four feet wide flower garden that I have to clean out.  Then there’s the twenty feet by three feet garden across the back of the yard and two small circular gardens under the magnolia and tulip poplar trees.  The way I figure it, if we keep getting rain like this, it’ll be sometime in June before I have them up to snuff.

     The magnolia is beginning to bloom and if I ever get around to dragging my camera out, I’ll have some new pictures to post on my pond and garden page.  The pictures I have up don’t show how the privet hedges are gone (I dug them out—all 135 feet of them) nor do they show the new fencing we put in last year.  Sunday is supposed to be sunny again.  If I get the rest of the gardens cleaned out so they look nice, I’ll take pictures.

I need to get out the camera and the rake

 

     I was out puttering in the garden by the pond today.  The crocus are so gorgeous I should get some pictures of them.  I might wait until the daffodils begin to bloom they are loaded with buds right now.  However, with my luck the crocus will be finished blooming by then. 

     I need to drag out the rake and clear the leaves from all the gardens.  The rhubarb is starting to peek out of the ground so I did clear the leaves away from the plants.  I can’t wait until it is ready to pick, rhubarb custard pie here I come!  All the blueberry bushes are loaded with buds.  I’m relieved I was worried that the bitter cold we had this winter might have killed them.  The yard is greening up and it looks nice. 

     Gavin and Patty have been kicking up their heels in this weather.  The pups have been looking for the squirrels and rabbits to chase but I think the critters wised up and when they hear the back door open, they dash out of the yard.  I had to re-home a small garter snake yesterday.  The snake was heading for the pond, Gavin stepped on it and he didn’t even notice it.  The snake no longer resides in our yard.

     On another note Dear Hubby took the basket I made into his mother today.  She was delighted with it.

Of mourning doves and dogs

 

     My dogs aren’t supposed to be bird dogs.  It’s not something that BTs were bred for but lately you’d think they were.  For some odd reason I have two mourning doves who are hanging around the pond.  After several days of them taking flight from under Gavin and Patty’s noses, the dogs are looking for the dumb birds, even pointing them.  I say dumb birds because they don’t go far and return to the same place as soon as we walk away from the pond.

     The dogs know I have a strict rule of no birds, no chasing them, no hunting them, and no killing them.  But what’s a dog to do when they no longer fly away but run along in front of them?  (If you recall from an earlier post, I won’t let the pups run loose in the yard until we can repair the fence this summer.)  The doves are driving the pups crazy with this ground hugging nonsense.  Although I think if the birds took flight, it’d really chafe under their collars.

     Every time we go out now, they drag me to the pond where they will point out the doves.  I keep telling them they aren’t bird dogs they’re BTs.  I think they are suffering from delusions of Setter grandeur or Brittany fantasies.

MIL update, Gavin, and miscellaneous thoughts

 

     Dear Hubby’s mother has come down with a cold but she’s still working hard in her daily PT.  The feisty old gal is quite resolute about getting out of the Rehab Hospital.  It’s been a little over a month since her fall and she is showing no lack of determination.  Dear Hubby is there every day while she does her PT, which I think is a great help in motivating her.

     Gavin’s ear looks good and he’s been enjoying daily romps with Patty.  Although, now when she gets a bit nippy around his ears she does get a scolding.  You can practically see her roll her eyes at you.  “Geez, I can’t grab his ears and you yell at me for dragging him around by his collar.  What’s a girl to do?”  The no collar rule stems from having to buy Gavin new ones too many times after she’d chewed through them (while they were still on his neck.)

     We had a gray drizzly day today but it was warm.  In between sprinkles, I did some clean up work on the pond.  I won’t be able to do the major work until spring is in full blast.

March, an amazing month

 

     A few days ago, we had snow on the ground and today the mercury hit seventy degrees.  I love the capriciousness of March.  It’s the Yin and Yang month of the year.  Winter and spring battle for four weeks.  We root for spring to win since by March we’ve had enough of winter.

     Tomorrow spring will rule for most of the day but winter will make a raid on our evening.  We will wonder if spring will rally in the next few days.  My budding gardens say yes.  Grass is slowly showing signs of life.  Faster would nice so I don’t have dogs tracking in mud.

     The Koi are hungry they beg for food now, and our frogs are beginning to creep out of the pond to hunt, more signs that spring will soon win the battle.

     It won’t be long and I’ll be digging in sun warmed soil planting flowers and vegetables.  By my back door, my chives are starting to peek through the mulch in their pot.  The mint and lavender will soon follow suit.

Spring fever

 

     I do wish that spring would stop teasing us and stay for more than a day or two.  It was almost balmy here for a day and now there’s snow predicted for the next two.  It’s just wrong.

     My daffodils, crocus, and hyacinths are beginning to poke their little green heads up through the mulch.  It makes me oh so ready for the weather to warm, the flowers bloom, to open the windows and let the fresh air in.  I yearn for my magnolia tree to bloom and for the scent to drift into the house.

     I look forward to days warm enough for me to clean up the yard and gardens and to nights where I can sit by the pond and relax in the moonlight.  I want to listen to the waterfall and fountains, the bullfrogs and crickets, the horn of a passing train in the distance.

     I’m tired of hearing the furnace running, the radiator pipes cracking and popping, breathing stale air, and feeling shut in.  I’m sick of ice, snow, sleet, and cold. 

New look

Anyone who knows me knows that I have a habit of changing things.  I do hope you all enjoy the blog’s new look.

Frost and squirrels in the forecast

     I’d hoped to squeeze another week out of the nice weather before I had to dig out some of my more delicate plants.  It didn’t happen.  Last night we had frost.  Now I have to find the time and energy to dig out all my black elephant ears and calla lilies. 

     Today I had planned to move some of my tulip bulbs to another part of the garden.  However, after discovering a trail of bulb crumbs that led to the base of the magnolia tree, I found that the squirrels had beaten me to them.  They had not only dug up and eaten the tulip bulbs, but they’d buried peanuts in their place.  Someone is feeding the tree rats again.  Not only have I found buried peanuts but also there have been walnuts, hazelnuts, and Brazil nuts.  The squirrels raided my tomatoes.  They absconded with all we had left on the plants.  All of them still green, but we’d looked forward to having those fried.  They even sampled one of my jalapeño peppers.  The blasted tree rats are eating better than we are. 

     The pups keep trying to catch the squirrels but have found gravity doesn’t help them when it comes to climbing trees. 

     We’ve begun to prepare the pond for the winter.  Sometime this week I’ll drag the netting from the back porch to cover the pond and keep out most of the leaves.  I’d better hurry because the leaves are dropping faster than the temperature.  We found out that we have to keep the netting raised about three or four inches from the ground, so the frogs can move about until they go into hibernation.  Last year the bullfrogs were not amused when we had some temperate weather and they couldn’t leave the pond to hunt.  I had to raise the edges of the netting to allow them access.