Tuesday, July 21, 2015

It's Hot.

It's hot. The plants are crispy. The grass is slippery and yellow. We fear our water bill.
 
That said, due to Jess's five a.m. watering, things are miraculously still alive. Remember the sweet pea post? Here they are! Still alive and smelling sweet by the garden gate (and the garbage bins.)
 

 
The begonias are thriving in the shade (shade?!) of the porch. Jack knocked a pot over the other day, but I smooshed the roots back into the pot and everything seems to still be kicking right along. Sigh.
 

You can barely see the bird on top of the plant stakes - I bought this at a garden show several years ago and it's my favorite thing in the yard. That and the tea cup and saucer vine growing on it.
 

 
Okay, some things are still green - hence the fear of the water bill. Eeep. On the left are two bean towers, on the right are the dahlias so far, and behind them is a glimpse of tomato row which is finally taller than the two of us.
 
 
Hello, giant onion blossom! We have harvested jalapenos, onions, and radishes so far from this bed. That's it. No tomatoes yet, but I have a feeling we are soon going to be up to our eyeballs in them.

 
We cut the green plastic out of an old green house and are growing beans, cucumbers, and gourds along a twine grid along the frame. Looking pretty good so far.
 
We harvested our first few beans from this line tonight. For a quick treat, steam until tender, toss with a few dashes of walnut oil and toasted walnuts. Yum! 

 
Gourds! And fossilized grass. :(

 
There's corn in our yard. Corn. And it seems to love the heat because... it's growing like never before.

 
I caught Jack snacking on the corn leaves.

 
Tomato row with the an apple tree in the background.

 
And Jess with a confused Jack looking on.
 
Look at that grass. Yikes.

 
 


Sunday, July 12, 2015

The House That Built Me

I walked around our family home yesterday while everyone else was gone and said my good-byes. It'll go on the market next week, I think.
 
The front door with Mom's favorite flower.
 
 
Hi Jack. When we turn onto the street the house is on, Jack starts to bark. He knows. He is always so sad when he realizes there is no one inside. This photo is after he did a sweep of the house. He did find a tennis ball though, so it wasn't all for not.
 
 
I have memories of picking the tiny daffodils that grow in this rockery in the spring, inevitably putting my face and hand through spider webs as I reached through the bars to turn the water hose on, and lighting the railing up like a candy cane during Christmas time.


This is the clock that hung on the wall by the hallway forever. In the days before cell phones made us crazy to-the-minute timekeepers, our house never operated on a by the minute schedule. This clock never quite told the right time. Dad's alarm clock never did either. I also couldn't read the time on this until I was about 13. (I think it fell off the wall during the move, which accounts for the misshape.)

 
Every day my dad would leave for the bus stop before we left for school. As a kid, I would almost always watch him walk away through my bedroom window. I'd peer through the curtains, see him walking, and bang on the glass until he turned around. He would turn, wave, and keep walking. He repeated that exactly three times before disappearing beyond the mailboxes (across from that blue house.)
 

This is the rec room downstairs and it certainly didn't always look this nice. I fondly remember wood paneling and tan and black bricks on the wall. My mom had a giant yellow velvet rocking chair (talk about 70's!) that I would sit in most nights before dinner and watch Looney Tunes on a gigantic old fashioned television. It was partially the size and comfort of the chair that would invite me to curl up in the tiniest ball possible, and also the fact that the basement was SO creepy as a child. Especially alone.
 


The worst thing was if you had to use the restroom while playing downstairs. Heaven forbid you walk all the way up the stairs to use the regular bathroom up there. No, you ventured through the utility room and into Dad's bathroom/dungeon. This is the utility room and the monster furnace. Growing up, there was always, ALWAYS, a bucket of this special concoction that bleached my brother's baseball pants sitting in the corner here. The other moms at baseball were always so jealous of my brother's spotless pants. :)
 

 
My dad sat on the bench in the corner when my brother and I were outside. If I couldn't find Dad, he was sitting in that corner on the deck. When we were little, we rode our plastic tricycles in viciously fast circles on the lower portion. Mom and Dad put a gate on the deck when my brother took a sudden detour and rode his tricycle down the steps. :)
 
 
What are these things called? Arbors? Whatever it is, my cat got stuck on it all the time. I would laugh and laugh as Dad climbed up to fetch her. The Japanese Maple in the photo grew as much as we did. It was probably three feet tall when we moved in. Now it's about 11 or so.

 
Basketball sucks. I think I was destined to hate it because, as a tall kid you get the, "DO YOU PLAY BASKETBALL?" question. A lot. You get it a lot. That said, it was fun to play H.O.R.S.E. with my brother and dad down here. Our uncle put the hoop in as well as a big fort with a slide - the fort got torn down ages ago but hopefully the next family gets to enjoy the basketball hoop. We played a lot of other ball games but there was a real risk of losing the ball over the fence and into a sea of blackberry bushes. Ball recoveries were fun and treacherous expeditions.
 
 
Yes, I pushed my brother into a dog igloo and down these stairs. He responded years later by pushing me out of the cherry tree on the right. I bounced all the way down the stairs. Fond memories.

 
Speaking of the cherry tree. Before some contractor did a hack job on my poor tree, she was a thing of beauty. Big, feathery cherry blossoms looked like pale pink clouds in the spring, and man, I climbed that thing to the tip tops and would sit up there and feel totally invisible. I constantly had that orange bark on my clothes.
 
 
Spring and summer evenings, my brother and I would play outside until dark. I'm sure Mom was always watching out of some window because the second one of us got too loud, or started to argue or cry, she was out on the deck like a flash. When Dad got home, the glow of the lights inside would cast across the deck and onto the lawn, letting us know it was almost dinner time. Often times, the sound of a vacuum or the Mariner's baseball game would drift out of the back door.
 
 
I never thought my parents would sell this house, and it's hard. One of the hardest parts, which only animal people truly understand, is the fact that my cat is buried in the back yard. I am so conflicted - I feel like I should have her exhumed and cremated but I also want her left at peace. It's hard to realize she will be all alone there, in a stranger's backyard. I did scoop some of the dirt up after I put the flowers there. I'll put that in an urn, I think.
 
 
So there it is. Kind of thrown together, but it feels good to have it written down.


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 



The House That

Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Is Everyone Tired of Tulip Pictures?

I'm typing away tonight with beet and blueberry stained fingers. Roasted beet and quinoa salad with fresh greens and tomatoes for dinner tonight - a cozy meal while we watch this springtime thunderstorm roll into our neighborhood. Thankfully that held off until we got home.
 
It's time to get the first photos of the garden up! It's mostly tulips, pansies, ranunculus, and other early bloomers.
 
We hypothesize that slugs may have claimed the majority of our tulip crop this year. Still, we had a few plants flourish. Here are a few favorites: 
 
 
 
 
 
Apparently Jess included some kind of zombie steroid fertilizer in these pots. The result? Massive pansy/ranunculus production!
 
 
And from a bug's perspective. ;)
 
 
African Daisies. 
 
 
I don't know what these are, but they look like the flowers with faces from Alice in Wonderland. Okay, Jess says, "Nemesia."
 
 
 And the oh so lovely smelling Hyacinth!
 
 
Here are the apple blossoms. Mass amounts of apple sauce, here we come!
 
 
Poppies in the front yard.
 
 
And the veggies! We have mostly seeds or seedlings at this point, so not much for photos yet. We did, however, plant Tomato Row. Oh, it's glorious. Jess and I didn't eat dinner until almost 9 p.m. on Monday night because we were both sitting in the back lawn deciding which plants to keep and which to "adopt" out to friends and family.
 
I posted this photo of one of our chive plants on my Facebook page the other day and was promptly instructed by a friend to "pluck those flowers off the chive plants!" I ask you, have you ever topped a salad or scrambled eggs with chive blossoms? Not only are they a pretty garnish, but talk about concentrated onion flavor. So delish. (But he was right, not plucking the blossoms off make the stalk thick and woody. Bleh.)
 
 
We guesstimate about 14-18 tomato plants now live in Tomato Row. Last year we had these metal fencing sections formed into silos for our potato crop. A home for the potatoes to grow also proved a spectacular habitat for mice and spiders so we decided to ax the potato towers this year and put the fencing to a different use.
 
We dug a trench about six inches down and planted the fencing and the posts first. Then we set out the plants - determinates more towards the apple tree which will eventually be heavy with fruit and block some sun, and indeterminate plants in full sun. What are the differences between determinate and indeterminate plants? Besides the height, I have no idea. Here's a link for more detailed reading.
 
 
I climbed one of the apple trees for a better view. Also because it's fun. I spy a Jack butt photo bomb.
 
 
Here is a bowl of radish seedlings! How happy they look.
 
 
And strawberries. This morning I noticed a few white blossoms... yay, yay, yay.
 
 
 

Saturday, March 21, 2015

Sweet Peas

 
Happy Spring, everyone! Here come the sweet peas for the season. We may have... MAY have gone a bit overboard.
 
How many do we have here, six different varieties? I lost count after Jess dumped them all out of her shoe box full of seeds.
 
Okay, step one was to soak the seeds - a sopping wet paper napkin on a plate does nicely. (Although it takes up your entire kitchen counter space.)
 
 
After a couple of days (it probably says 24 hours on the packet but we left them longer,) they start to look like this:

 
Jess pulled the weeds and added compost. We made two rows and added the seeds.

 
Added water:

 
And if they are anything like this freakish moonflower that we started by seed, these sweet peas will be popping up any day now!!


Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Take Jack to Work

 
Sometimes if the day promises to not be I-Want-To-Cry-Busy, I take the boy to work with me. We get a nice walk/fetch/play session in before I have to work for a few hours, and then another break an hour or so before lunch. (At lunch, I usually take him home.)
 
Frosty morning fetch.
 
 
Practicing directionals :)

 
For extra fun, we go to Sky Nursery at break time.
 
Everyone, I believe it's springtime.

 
Ohhhhh, the sea of ranunculus!


 
Jack posing with his Easter Bunny friends.


At lunch. "Hey, you going to eat that?"