Showing posts with label flowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flowers. Show all posts

Saturday, August 8, 2015

August Doldrums


Things have been pretty humdrum since coming back from our adventure. Though compared to some other real adventurers, our trip was just a walk in the park. I just finished reading Death in the Sahara by Michael Asher, a French expedition's attempt in the late 1800s to cross the Sahara ends in the death of almost all the expedition team. They were surveying for a railroad that was to go from Algiers to Timbucktoo and were harassed by Tuaregs there and back. Now I am reading The River of Doubt by Candice Millard, recounting Teddy Roosevelt's South American tour and exploration of an uncharted river. Teddy would have poo-pooed our Peruvian Trip, his only instructions to the man in charge of putting together his South American tour was that he refused to be the "thousandth American to visit Cuzco".

Current Blooms:
 Dwarf Coreopsis in one of the troughs
Another Coreopsis, this one at the edge of the Peony Garden, not a dwarf, but shorter than the yellow specimen we have in another garden.
 Japanese Sedum in a trough with Mountain Rock
 Thyme and Dwarf Campanula (white flowers) in a hollowed out rock

Beers in the Fridge:
 Nice and crisp, can't decipher the aroma, once rinsed sweat sox? Great on a summers evening reading the paper.
 Wasn't planning on buying a Peruvian beer, but earlier in the summer the store on my way home just happened to have a case of Cusquena blocking the aisle and I felt obliged to partake. The bottle caps have a drawing of Machu Picchu and the bottle has interlocking Inca stonework on it. It is not bad, just a tad sweet for me.  The Hofbrau Original is very good and reminds me of our trip to Munich.
Also have Sweet Action on hand, currently my favorite summer brew.

What I took on my Summer Vacation:
 Most of these items went in my North Face large duffel. There is a Bill Bryson book there, but I didn't actually take any of his. I took Travel with my Aunt by Graham Green, Monsieur Pamplemousse by Michael Bond and 2 books by Georges Simenon. I pretty much used every item of clothing except the bathing suit. I also packed a pair of approach shoes which took up some space. It was neither as hot nor as cold as I had expected it to have been, but I was prepared for both.
In my day pack I took the first aid kit, our medications, gadget wires and chargers, snacks which I took too many of, a point and shoot, my iphone and the rain jacket.


Sunday, April 13, 2014

Making housework fun with an air compressor

Another nice weekend, though I did work most of Saturday.

Took our first bike ride Saturday and I lost my Fitbit (activity monitor) so I went back and walked the paths we rode and found lots of other stuff, but not my Fitbit. Back home we tried syncing to the Fitbit and it connected, so the smart one downloaded an app to her iPhone and we searched for the glorified pedometer near the truck and in the house and we finally found it clipped to the spokes of her bike in the basement. The fit bit had been clipped in my pants pocket for our ride and must have been transferred when I unloaded the bike at home.

Sunday, we cleaned the windows and screens on the first floor. We washed the screens in the tub and dried them using the air compressor. It worked a treat. I inherited the air compressor when the farm shut down and I generally just use it to fill tires. This positive experience has got me thinking I should look for other household chores that could be made more fun using an air compressor. Drying dishes, dusting bookshelves and ceiling fans immediately spring to mind.
After we had Mimosas along with mini grilled cheese sandwiches for lunch.

Now to this week's flowers;
Periwinkles, as suggested by Beverley Nichols(dead author)

Lewesia in bud
Grape Hyacinth
Grecian Windflowers "Anemone blanda", West Foundation Garden
Glory of the Snow "Chionodoxa luciliae", past its prime, also have blue which looked worse, Front Garden
Variegated Brunnera, Front Garden
Sweet Woodruff, Border Garden, smells great when there are a lot of blooms.

Sweet Woodruff is used to flavor May wine, a German beverage using Rhine wine or other white dry wine.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

June Flora and Fauna


Edelweiss in trough.

Genetian Gracilipes in trough

UFO

Erodium in trough.

Phlox (2 of 5 left, planted May 2010)

Geranium cinereum 'alice'

Eastern Wild Turkey (Meleagris gallopavo)

Southern Wild Turkey (Melikadrikus GruppoCampari)


Jack Daniels (Now we're talking)

Jack D Honey liqueur, on my to buy liqueur list. Will try making Mint Juleps with it and straight over ice.