Friday 16 December 2011

Christmas decorating


It's impossible to believe it's nearly Christmas. Part of it is, I think, because it falls on a Sunday this year; Christmas on a weekend seems so sudden and truncated, as though you were just fitting it in between regular working hours.

And the other part, quite possibly, is because it was 12 degrees Celsius outside today, and I ran across the street without a jacket and without feeling the least bit cold, and it's a lot harder to find Yuletide cheer when it's sleeting; you really have to work for it.

Christmas snuck up on me this year. Truthfully, though: Christmas sneaks up on me every year. November tends to blow through my calendar like the wind it is famous for and then, well, there it is. And another truth: everything has snuck up on me this year. Understandably so, I would imagine. We did, however, manage to get a tree last weekend, and to decorate it:


It's a bigger tree than we've had before, so we had to get some new ornaments — it was looking a little sparse. My favourite (aside from the obvious) are the "12 Days of Christmas" ones.



I also made a vignette for the fireplace. We're working on getting the "wood burning" part of it working properly again, but it's a multi-step process and the saving of the funds for it is ongoing.


We also went to the Christmas market at the distillery district last weekend, but the only photographs I managed to take were those of the reindeer. The culprit was the excellent poutine: I was occupied in the eating of it, when I wasn't pushing the stroller, and had no hands for the camera. (I regret nothing.) In any case, it was a fun time but the impetus for it was kind of silly: as I was growing up, my family didn't do the big Christmas celebration (they still don't), and every year, that was a little disappointing. So now, of course, I have all these fantasies of giving the baby that perfect, beautiful, Germanic Christmas that I never had, filled with Christmas markets and falling snow and Santa Claus.

Except, you know what? She's a baby. She doesn't care. She fell asleep, and then she was cold, and then she was hungry, and then we went home.

Her feelings are probably healthier than mine.

Saturday 10 December 2011

update

So, it's December. Apparently November was National Blogging Month (or some such) — by-the-by, why is November always the designated month for all things creative? It's also the month for novel writing and sweater knitting (and moustache growing, but that's different) — is it really that bad? It is a dreary month, no doubt about it, but is it really that much worse than, say, March? — anyway, November, blogging, it didn't happen. Much like the four months previous to that. I had all these plans (I always have plans, granted) — it would have been five months, exactly, since my last post, on the 30th, and wouldn't it be nice to post then? Undoubtedly, yes. But obviously that didn't happen.

Whew, what a preamble. At any rate, five months, give or take, and in the immortal words of Inigo Montoya: let me explain. No, there is too much. Let me sum up.

We had a baby. That was more or less expected, although the timing was awkward (and tilted, rather dramatically, toward the unexpected column). It was a fun first two months. However: everybody is well; everybody is sleep-deprived. That was more or less expected, too. And that really is the sum total of the past five months.

(The garden? What garden?)

I finished a bunch of knits. A cardigan, some small things. Having a baby is actually really great for stash-busting: it's hard for me to get to the yarn store, and shipping from WEBS is expensive, so I've been using stash. It's actually been kind of fun, except now I really have to evaluate: exactly how many hats/scarves/cowls do I need? (Answer: probably significantly less than what I've already got. It's a little bit of an addiction.)

ETA: I've been holding off on posting this until I could add a photo of the baby (because everybody loves a photo of the baby!). But Picasa is eluding me this morning, Pd is sleeping and thus cannot help, and the baby is, sadly yet understandably, not yet technologically ept. So you're just going to have to go without, sorry.

Thursday 30 June 2011

someone promised me a rose garden

I had been meaning to blog more often this week, but it's turning out to be a much busier and difficult week than I anticipated. It's almost over, I know, and it's a long weekend to boot — but we've got so much to get done around the house that it doesn't feel like a holiday. We are getting all sorts of things installed next week, and my grandmother is coming in exactly 8 days, so it's rush-rush-rush now.

When we bought the house (in the middle of winter), we were told that there was a rose garden under the snow. It didn't appear last year — there was one lone bush of wild roses, with a few blooms — but I didn't think too much of it. But this year:

DSC_2799

DSC_2800

DSC_2802

DSC_2801

The scabrosas (the last two) are a particular surprise. I had assumed that they had been regular thorny hedges.

Monday 27 June 2011

cut peonies are better than no peonies at all

We were up at the farm this weekend (for a reason I'll blog about later), and the best thing about being at the farm in June, specifically — aside from the company which, happily, isn't confined to a single month — is that the peonies are in bloom, and my father-in-law always lets me cut some for my table.

DSC_2797

One of these is from the parent stock of the root I planted last fall. We're not really sure which one — even my father-in-law isn't — and I've given up on finding out this year. That little plant looks like it's still alive, at least, but it's little — I'd say maybe a foot tall, which is kind of dispiriting for a peony. I'm not sure if it's because this is its first year — supposedly, they don't bloom in their first year — or if it really is struggling. Apparently peonies don't like to compete with things, and my garden is a plant-eat-plant kind of place.

Similarly, I am kind of demoralised right now. I spent an awfully long time weeding and taking care of the garden a mere two weeks ago, and now it is overgrown and scraggly again. I know, intellectually, that that's what happens, but instinctively I felt very defensive every time Pd pointed out a weed or an overgrown bush — I did work in the garden; I have kept my resolution (so far) — this isn't like last year at all! And yet.

Friday 24 June 2011

flowers, and a cat

I usually take a quick glance at the garden when I leave for work in the morning, and yesterday I received a nice surprise:

DSCN0730

I had given up on its blooming. It seemed healthy enough, but it's been growing much more slowly than its cousin, which has been blooming for about two weeks. It's not in an ideal spot — less sunny as it is closer to the porch, slightly shaded by a forsythia, and much wetter — I found out recently that part of our downspout drains into that bed — so I had reconciled myself to only one blooming calla lily this year.

When I bought the bulbs (they came in one package), I had thought that they were going to be full-size callas, but it looks like they're miniatures. Which I prefer, in any case.

DSCN0716

The basil is also blooming. I know I should be plucking its flowers to encourage growth, but as it's an annual and will die off anyway (and I've got more than enough leaves to use this summer), I can't be bothered.

DSCN0715

Besides which, I am hoping that maybe it will seed itself into the plot and grow back after all — although I doubt that, in this climate. But perhaps I will be able to salvage enough to pot up to last me through the winter.

...
Also, and I should have mentioned this yesterday, Tuesday turned nine years old.

DSC_1965

We didn't do anything special to celebrate (uhm, she's a cat), but I thought I would note it for posterity. Happy Birthday, Cat. You are just as adorable and annoying as you were eight years and ten months ago, but I love you anyway. And I can't believe I've spent the last almost-nine years dealing with your fur on my clothes.

Thursday 23 June 2011

identified at last

Last night, I was in the den — which faces the street — with the windows wide open when a neighbourhood nature tour-type group came by. (I don't actually know who they were — I looked out the window and there were a group of adults, 10 to 15 of them, with notepads, and a person, obviously a guide of some sort, talking.) They had stopped in front of our house. I didn't want them to see me, so I stood next to the window, out of sight, but when she said, "This small tree is one of my favourite kinds of trees. Can anyone tell me what it is?" I pricked up my ears.

And so, a wee bit of eavesdropping and a confirmatory trip to Google later, I can now tell you that the tree in front of our house is a Saskatoon berry.

DSCN0035
This is an old photo from April, 2010, i.e., before the yard started blooming. It doesn't look like this right now.

This apparently explains why this one particular robin keeps trying to attack the tree (or perching on it — and then falling off because the tree branches are wee and can't take its weight. It's actually very funny). Supposedly the berries are edible, but difficult to get because they are popular with birds; as soon as they're ripe (in early summer), the birds swoop in and get them all.

I feel very proud of myself and my detective skills. It still counts, doesn't it, even if it required a large dose of serendipity?

Tuesday 21 June 2011

colour therapy

I have been really into bright colours lately — odd because I'm very much a neutrals kind of girl. (Remember, my house = moody blues and greys, exclusively. Well, almost.) My wardrobe is still neutral — I am not giving up my love of grey-blue — but the house might be undergoing a slight metamorphosis. Here's a sneak peek:

DSCN0718

It's just one room — one wall of one room — I'm not really that adventurous. I will admit that I had instant regrets after painting it. Pd convinced me to see it through, and it is almost exactly what I envisioned — but I'm not sure if it was the heat or the hormones that made me envision something quite so outside my comfort zone.

(And I know: outside my comfort zone is allegedly good for me, but I'm not sure I want to grow as a person any more. I'm perfectly satisfied with my character, built as-is.)

Happy solstice, everyone!

Monday 20 June 2011

LEGO paradise

A few weeks ago, Pd and I happened to be in Etobicoke, so we took a small detour to Sherway Gardens to visit the LEGO store.

DSCN0685

It's smaller than I imagined it to be, and had about the same atmosphere as the Apple store — lots of people milling about, adults playing with toys.

DSCN0682
The famous wall o' bricks

Supposedly, when they first opened, they had had a LEGO R2D2, which I would have loved to see. Unfortunately, we had to make do with a stunning Tower bridge:

DSCN0683

Pd told me that, apparently, LEGO's patent on their bricks had run out, so that anyone can make LEGO-fitting bricks. Thus, the company has pivoted its emphasis from making plain architectural bricks to what he calls "set pieces" — boxes that people buy to build specific things. I don't know if this is true, but the store certainly didn't carry any of those giant plastic buckets o' bricks that I remember, and each section of wall had a theme.

There was the Harry Potter wall, which was very, very tempting.

DSCN0679

The Star Wars wall, next to the Pirates of the Caribbean wall.

DSCN0681

I love LEGO buildings — even the set pieces — but ultimately it's a bit of a let-down, really. I mean, you have to compromise on size, of course, but why is the Hogwarts Great Hall so small? Why does the Death Star only have four levels?

(I complain, but still: I would have happily spent my mortgage payment at that store. They have Diagon Alley! And the Queen Anne's Revenge!)

Thursday 16 June 2011

victory!

DSCN0724

They're actually not completely ripe yet (the side hidden from the sun isn't as red as it could be), but I had to take them or abandon them to the slugs. They had, it turns out, already taken a smaller one from a nearby plant. So I plucked them this morning and by tonight they should be ripe enough to eat (!). They're not very big — about an inch long — and the cultivar is the common Ozark Beauty, which is everbearing. This means, of course, that I have another harvest to look forward to — if I can keep the animals away.

(I know; I should have had a net. They ripened faster than I anticipated — only a week or so ago, they were still very small and green. And this first crop was so close to the ground as to the berries literally lying on it, so I'm not sure how much protection I could have given them from the slugs.)

Finally, a sidenote: I think I've discovered what I'm sensitive to in the garden: it's the strawberry leaves. (Not the fruit itself; just the leaves.) Apparently it's not uncommon, and the rash is mild. (It is, however, taking forever to fade — it's still visible on my skin.) Dr Google had a picture and it's definitely the same kind.

Wednesday 15 June 2011

berry watch 2011

DSCN0721

I am keeping an eagle eye on these. (The terra cotta is to keep them from touching the ground, just in case it gets too wet.) So far they have been undisturbed, but I am fully committed to swooping in just when they're ripe and thereby depriving the Evil Squirrel (and/or any winged allies). There are others, but these are the furthest along.

Sunday 12 June 2011

Everyone but everyone was out gardening yesterday (including me). I guess we all wanted to be take advantage of the lack of searing sun before the forecasted rain hit (although the latter never actually did). It was nice. Pd asked me if I spoke to anyone. I didn't, really — everybody was gardening, not talking! All you could see were people bending over.


DSCN0717

The last mystery shrub in our garden has bloomed, so I can finally identify it: it's a weeping weigela. (Don't ask me the cultivar, though. It's pink, that's all I can tell you.) It's actually very pretty, but it makes that entire corner the only shade spot in the garden. There's also a hosta under there — not that you can see it, really.

DSCN0713

And yes, towering ferns. I have a sneaky suspicion that they are ostrich ferns — or maybe that is just hopeful greediness talking. I will have to more sleuthing between now and the next fiddlehead season.

Thursday 9 June 2011

happy-making

Is it perverse, or just sad, that I sort of want it to rain, just so I would have the chance to use my new umbrella?

DSCN0701

Not that I would have wanted to be outside in last night's storm(s) by any means. But it was cool to watch, from the snug dryness of my kitchen.

I've been lusting after one of these for some time — it's made by Marimekko, and my favourite stationery store carries them. (I don't see the connection — they also carry laptop and messenger bags, but nothing else by Marimekko — but I'm not going to question it.) It's in one of my favourite colour combinations, and it's just generally happy-making. And when else does one need happy-making but when it's wet and dreary outside?

...
Edited to add: Incidentally, and apropos of absolutely nothing, it seems we live in a neighbourhood of scavengers, and I LOVE IT. A few weeks back, we replaced our sink — yes, the big 40-inch one we just put in last year. It cracked. (And not in a purely cosmetic, around-the-drain webbing way that some old porcelain sinks do, but in a gigantic, covering half-the-sink hairline fracture kind of way. When it happened, it was so loud that I thought Pd had somehow dropped a dictionary in the bathtub — I know, that makes no sense, but I was half-asleep and that was what my brain thought.) Anyway, we contacted the company, and after some back-and-forth (and some delivery miscommunications), they gave us another one. So the bathroom looks exactly the same, just with a proper sink.

Anyway, we put the (old) sink out on the curb for the garbage pick-up, and ... someone took it, within a few hours. We didn't see them do it, but obviously it didn't just wander off. It's a bit perplexing — I mean, it's a beautiful sink, but with the fracture it's also pretty useless. We think maybe someone took it to use as a planter. Which, okay — more power to them, but that thing is heavy. How did someone manage to cart it away without any warning?

This week, we put out our old washer and dryer — the ones that had come with the house. (We had replaced them with High-Eff ones — yes, these have been sitting in our garden shed for over a year.) And, again, someone took them. And, I know — washers and dryers are expensive machines, so it's not a surprise. But these ones were so old that even Habitat for Humanity and Goodwill didn't want them (which is why we've had them for so long — we kept trying to find a charity who was willing to come by and cart them away). We hadn't Freecycled them because I figured, who would take what Goodwill wouldn't? But I guess that was a mistake.

Someone also took the microwave that came with the house, the one that didn't have a handle any more and looked like it had been manufactured in the 70s out of brown Bakelite. (I don't know if it worked still or not. I was too scared to try.)

So, you see. Scavengers. Which is good, but you have to act fast. Someone put out a child-sized Poang chair the other day, as Pd and I went for a walk, and we couldn't decide whether or not to rescue it. By the time we came back, it was already gone.

Tuesday 7 June 2011

tidbits

Quick garden update:

The tulips are gone, but pretty much everything else is in bloom, including the irises:

DSCN0688

A four-year-old came by and stared at me while I was taking the picture. Finally she asked me why I was taking pictures of flowers, so I told her, "because I want to show my friends what they look like." Then she gave me an even more perplexed look. Her mother tried to diffuse the situation by pointing out that we have irises, too, and they're purple — her favourite colour. No dice. That kid is going to be the Queen of Making Other People Feel Awkward someday.

DSCN0692

The strawberries are coming along nicely, don't you think? I'm very excited, and determined that the Evil Squirrel will not have them. He's come back, to check out the garden; I think it's his territory. (One squirrel looks about the same to me as any other, but Pd says it's the same squirrel. I asked him how he knew, and he said, "the pattern of mange." This does not make me feel better.)

Finally, does anyone know what this is?

DSCN0673

It's getting too hot to work in the garden on the weekend, which is bad, because I really do need to get out there and weed. And does someone want to tell me why the rhubarb suddenly looks flattened? It's splayed and ... well, flat. A lot of the stalks are just barely ripe, so I don't think it could be the weight of the leaves. My current theory is that a family of raccoons fell on it. It's not the most plausible theory, but it's the most amusing one.

Wednesday 1 June 2011

for a messy person, I handle clutter remarkably poorly

One of the concessions I made about the pregnancy and renovations was that I wouldn't take part in anything that was too dusty. The problem, of course, is that, until this week, it's been too rainy to do any of the cutting (of drywall, subfloor, or floor) outside — not to mention that they've been measuring and cutting as they go, rather than all at once — so, while the boys have been renovating, I've been elsewhere.

Mostly the kitchen.

No, really. It smacks a little bit too much of traditional gender roles, but, I mean — these people are in my house, literally rebuilding a room for me. The least I can do is feed them. That's one reason. Another is that, honestly, I really can't eat pizza that often — not even in undergrad. Which means that somebody has to cook, and that somebody might as well be the one person who isn't laying floor. That's another reason.

And finally, I think I have been a little bit obsessed with keeping the kitchen tidy because it's literally the only place where I can do that right now. The second floor is a write-off, including the bedroom. And the living room is slowly devolving, because I've been either buying or scrounging around for books and magazines, and after I've finished them there's no place to put them away (yet). So they're sitting in piles. Ditto my spring and summer jackets, and shoes — I've needed them (for obvious reasons), but they're such a pain to get in and out of the second bedroom right now that I just leave them out. (When I don't have to dodge around bookshelves and office chairs, it's much easier to put them away.) So the foyer, which leads off the living room — also a mess.

Meanwhile, the dining room has turned into the de facto office, as the actual desk is in the bedroom (but partially blocked off), and the filing is in the second bedroom (almost entirely blocked off). So the dining table now has all the stuff that we need to keep track off, like the contact for the window quote guy and bills that we've paid but need to keep. And that pretty much covers the entirety of the house, except for the bathroom (which is too small to store anything other than bathroom necessities, thank God), and the hallways ... which have paint cans lining their walls. Both floors.

(There is the basement, which I am also not supposed to spend too much time in because of the whole toxoplasmosis cat litter thing.)

So, you see: I am going mad. Cooking is good, because it distracts me and makes me go mad slightly more slowly. And the payoff is usually eatable, which is a plus.

The whole point of writing all this was to preamble a great spaghetti sauce I wanted to share with you, but this post is far too long and wordy as it is, so it will have to wait until tomorrow. Here's a renovation update, instead:

DSCN0670

Last weekend was a painting weekend — they had finished the drywall and initial mudding on the long weekend, and Pd finished the rest of the mudding through the week. I'm going to hold back on the reveal until the whole thing is done, but you can see the aftermath (and some of the colours) in the picture above. They put the flooring in last night so, if we manage to do a second coat of the paint in the erstwhile den tonight, we might be able to move furniture back into the two rooms by this weekend.

After that we'll have another room to paint — we need to stagger them as we've moving our bedroom from one room to another, and while we're using low-VOC paint, they still need to air out for a few days before we can sleep in them — and then more furniture moving, and then unpacking/decorating. Everything needs to be done by the end of the July long weekend. It doesn't sound like a lot, but we've plotted it out, and we might squeak in just under the wire — essentially, we are saying that we need to set up half the house, from scratch, in a month. While working full-time and subtracting two weekends lost from prior work and social commitments. I'm not saying it's not do-able, I'm just saying that it's ... well. Ambitious.

Monday 30 May 2011

epic knitting

Last week, during the long weekend, I finished all of the squares for the patchwork blanket.

DSCN0622

I seamed them all together — I had decided to knit individual large squares, rather than knit every little square on, so that I could get a specific grain on the pattern, which in retrospect was extraordinarily prissy and stupid and I don't want to talk about it any more — remember how I said the ends would be epic?

DSCN0643

I wasn't kidding.

I finished off one or two of the large squares — which is something — but then I got extraordinarily bored and needed pre-bedtime knitting, so I decided to pick up the stitches for the edging instead and knit on that.

DSCN0645

It's going a little slowly. Each side has around 145 stitches in it — I wasn't terribly fussy about how many I picked up — so it's not fast knitting by means. Also, the longest circular needle I had was 80cm, so the blanket is all bunched up and I can't spread it out to show you what it looks like. Nor is it commute-friendly knitting because, while it is sufficiently brainless, I generally don't want to haul 144 teeny mitred squares on the streetcar with me. So it's at-home knitting, exclusively, which is slowing it down even more.

And by the time I finish, I will still need to weave in the ends.

...
I also finished the Aeolian shawl, which Ravelry tells me I've been working on since July 12, 2010. Granted, it was never meant to be a fast knit; I had wanted a challenge and Estonian lace shawls don't tend to be transit knitting (although I made an exception last week), but still. It's a well-travelled shawl, too: I brought it to Las Vegas and Iceland (where I did not knit on it once. I may have knit a row on the plane — but really, only one).

DSCN0659

It wasn't just the knitting that was epic, though. I finished it on Saturday — in the end, it took me over an hour to cast off. We were at a friend's house, and the only thing big enough and flat enough for blocking in my house right now is the bed, so I decided to block it on Sunday morning.

However, I slept in a little, and by the time I had soaked the shawl and had had breakfast, a friend had come over to help with the renovations. I didn't want to leave him to work while I fiddled with a shawl, so I left it soaking in the Eucalan and went to paint, planning to block it later. But then Pd pointed out that it wasn't going to have a chance to dry properly before bed if I did it after work, so I woke up early this morning, and:

DSCN0665

It took me an hour. I was kind of late for work. It's not like I could just stop. I even ran out of T-pins, and had to dig into my sewing kit for the dressmakers' pins. Each point had five pin points:

DSCN0666

... which I didn't even stretch out properly; some of them overlap each other. You see how the nice rounded bays between the main points are bunched up instead of laying flat, as they're supposed to. I couldn't stretch it out any more, though; the thing has taken over the whole bed.

DSCN0668

The yarn is Fleece Artist Saldanha, a limited edition yarn I got at the Frolic and, as always with Fleece Artist, I have no clue what the colourway is. Whatever it is, I don't think they make it any more; none of their 2011 colourways have this much pink in them. I have no idea how big it is, exactly; just that it's gigantic (obviously). I think I love it. Everything hinges on the blocking at this point.

...
And now, I have no knitting. This is so weird. I underestimated how long it would take me to finish all the squares for the blanket — or maybe I just didn't think it through. But I am supposed to be knitting from stash, exclusively, and it's been put away because of the renovations. Also, I don't have a pattern lined up, and the needles are underneath a drop sheet right now. I had been knitting on a laceweight Whispy Cardigan (Rav link) until recently, but that's been finished, too. Actually, I'm wearing it right now — I finally got around to blocking it last night, but it didn't dry completely, so for the first part of the day I've been walking around smelling like eucalyptus-scented wet wool. Nice.

Thursday 26 May 2011

gardening for food, take two

Argh. It turns out that I am either sensitive or mildly allergic to something in the garden; we don't know what. I did a lot of work in the garden this weekend — not just the flowers, but the herbs as well, and more to the point, there was a lot of weeding and pruning — so it could conceivably be anything. (Except tulips. Or, actually, herbs, because I touch those on a regular basis.) I noticed that I had been spouting random little red bits on my arms since Sunday, which I dismissed because I'd been pricked by several rose thorns, so I thought they were just scratches, like small cat scratches. But no. We realised last night that it had escalated to a minor rash. It's mostly on my right arm, so it is probably from something that I brushed against while pruning — I had been wearing gloves, but no sleeves — which means it could be the roses. Or the forsythia. Or the spirea. Or the weird unnamed shrub thing under the roses. Or the rhubarb leaves. Or even the lavender.

Seriously. There was a lot of gardening there.

DSCN0624

More herbs! I picked up a bunch of seedlings for the herb pot and garden before the weekend. Front row: Greek oregano from the big box store, "Dark Opal" basil and chocolate mint from Urban Harvest — the mint was an impulse buy; I don't usually use mint but it smells exactly like my favourite kind of fundraising chocolate, so how could I not? Second row: rosemary and lemon thyme, again from a box store, and Genovese basil, again from Urban Harvest. And the strawberry pot, of course, with its giant garden sage.

There should also be a small-leaf basil hiding in there somewhere.

DSCN0628

The chocolate mint and some of the small-leaf basil went into the herb pot, which will remain outdoors for the summer. Hopefully it will last. I learned recently that basil is an annual in pretty much all of Canada, so I feel less bad about its ignominious demise, but I'd still like to make an effort. I don't think the thyme is coming back, though. Ever.

The rest of the herbs went into the garden. I'm hoping that the lemon thyme and oregano will establish themselves as ground cover (enough, maybe, that I'll be able to steal some and propagate them back into the herb pot for winter). The weather has obliged by dumping a lot of rain on us since Saturday, so at least I know the roots are nice and wet.

DSCN0629

I also transplanted the two tomato seedlings that sprouted. They don't look nearly as good as this right now. The cooler weather and lack of sun this week is probably not doing them any favours.

And finally, this is why I've been trying to be diligent about harvesting the rhubarb: its giant leaves were stealing sunlight from these:

DSCN0626

Strawberries! With blossoms! A lot of them, even! Well, it seems like a lot to us, anyway — last year we didn't even get one. (We got maybe half. It wasn't really fully formed.) They were planted right in front of the rhubarb patch — it's the sunniest place in the whole back yard — and now some of the bigger rhubarb leaves have started to shade the plants (you can sort of see it in the picture), so I've been picking them off. I'm not fond of rhubarb, but I do like strawberries. I know my priorities.

Pd and I aren't counting our berries before they're berries, though. We have some rapacious squirrels in the neighbourhood, and it's conceivable that they might beat us to them. One of them chewed through our window screen in two places this weekend, trying to get in to the kitchen. (We think it was lured by the scent of the banana loaf I was baking.) Walking into the kitchen to find a rat-with-a-bushy-tail hanging upside down on your window screen, with bared teeth and crazed eyes, is kind of terrifying, let me tell you. And the cats were useless; completely uninterested. Which is probably a good thing, in hindsight — they probably would have gotten beaten up.

Wednesday 25 May 2011

flower garden update

Even though it's sunny today (at least, it is right now; that might change), it's still much too cold, so here: have another tulip picture:

DSCN0635

These are definitely the last, but also, I think, the best. They're called "Carnival de Rio," and are my favourite so far — of course, I've said that about each and every cultivar this spring. What can I say; I'm fickle. But these are lovely. (And I particularly love the tiny, dwarf tulips that sometimes appear, like a conjoined twin. So cute!) They're even taller than the Banja Luka tulips, and have less of a that garish, plastic sheen. And they keep closed a bit better; their shape is more tulip-y.

DSCN0637

Sadly, the (brief) heavy rainstorms that came through on Monday pretty much destroyed their petals, so even though they're still around in my garden, there will be no more pictures. I don't expect them to last more than another week.

But! This means that all of the bulbs I planted last October bloomed (!), and bodes very well for next year, when I shall be able to execute my plan for a tulip-filled strip on the side of the yard. It makes next year's plan reasonably easy — essentially, we just need to do more of the same.
...
I don't talk much about the flowers in the garden because I'm not always sure of what's there — for example, there are some odd spikey things that Pd and I think are lilies, but could also be weeds. (When we went for a walk, we kept looking at other people's gardens for similar plants, and then trying to evaluate whether or not they were placed deliberately — does this particular gardener look like he knew what he was doing? Or is that a random weed growing there? It turned out to be about 50/50, which honestly was less than helpful. But we think the odds are tipping towards proper lilies.) Anyway, though, I can report that the trillium are growing again, which makes me very happy:

DSCN0627

They were a little later this year, because of the cooler weather, but it's always such a lovely surprise when I find them — an unexpected gift. (Although really, I don't know what could happen to them, in the interim — they are so wedged in the fence that they are pretty much protected from me, wild animals, elements — everything.)

The calla lily, too, is doing amazingly well:

DSCN0634

Here is what it looked like two weeks ago, when I transplanted it outside (it was started indoors). There's a rough size comparison if you look at the wooden ID stake at the back.

DSCN0594

(It was bent that way because I was negligent about constantly turning it while starting it inside, and it tilted, naturally, towards the sun. It straightened up fairly quickly, though.)

It is occupying the spot by the door that formerly housed one of the peonies — did I mention that I lost one? The other is doing reasonably well, I think, even though it's very small so I'm not sure if there will be any flowers this year. The other, though, never got much further than the bud stage, which was disappointing as it had been the first of the two to bud. It became reasonably clear that it wasn't viable when the other started leafing and this one just ... lay there, so I pulled it out for the calla lily. (it was in a nice, sunny spot — prime real estate. You can see that the lily loves it.) It looks like the root may have rotted. I don't know what I could have done to prevent that — I didn't water it any more than Mother Nature did — but, considering how late I left it and how little I know of what I'm doing, one out of two isn't bad.

There are also two other calla lilies — another started indoors, which was transplanted out at the same time, and a bulb planted three or four weeks ago. The bulb has not broken ground yet, which is not entirely surprising considering the weather, but I'm keeping an eye out. The other transplant is also doing well, if not gangbusters like this one; it's in a slightly shadier and wetter spot.

I really do feel like this year I have a better grasp of what I'm doing — but it's still early days yet. Plenty of time to flail.

Monday 23 May 2011

photoblog: victoria day weekend

Our long weekend: rebuilding a room; stopping to play with flowers; knitting for the future; long walks on the beach; and relaxing with my love.

DSCN0639

DSCN0637

DSCN0645

DSCN0647

DSCN0656

How was yours?