Early for crocuses here, but climate change is happening.
Some daffodils seem ready to bloom soon, too. Not yet, but here is a picture from last year...
I'm looking forward to that soon.
Early for crocuses here, but climate change is happening.
Some daffodils seem ready to bloom soon, too. Not yet, but here is a picture from last year...
I'm looking forward to that soon.
I thought I was going to buy a new refrigerator today.
Nope. Out of stock, line to order too long (wasn't worth the Maryland sales tax holiday $60 benefit to stand in line for an hour). I want the ancient basement refrigerator gone (too much chipping off frost the the cooler section), the current temperature-recovery-challenged kitchen one moved to the basement, and a new one installed in the kitchen.
I do a lot of fresh food prep, so I am in and out of the refrigerator a lot. I need faster temp-recovery (like to save the milk). The stores had the stainless steel variety, but every appliance in the kitchen is "finger-proof black" so that (SS) would feel out of place.
I'll live with the current stuff for a month or so until the one I want is back in supply. Or until Consumer Reports suggests a better one...
Yeah, there is always a better product a few months away, but that ancient refrigerator has got to go soon! It is like an incandescent bulb in an LED world. I bet it is 25% of my electric bill these days.
Which reminds me; I should replace the 37 year old water heater with a tankless (and maybe heat pump powered one). After all these years, I might be drinking moldy high (bad) mineral water.
Every year, I need to reorganize the potting table. It gerts clutterred...
Before:
Middle:The barrel is filled with sterile potting mix I make. The stack of trays on the left are filled with potting soil ready for seed-planting. The buckets below are filled with leftover vermiculite. perlite, peat.
I have a lot of less-than-usual flower seeds this year (meadow and pollinator flowers), so I will be starting more than usual. But at least I have lots of planting trays with good soil.
OK, nothing major. Just small things I did staying busy and productive... As I've said before "try to do something useful every day".
1. My clock/radio has a backup battery to keep the clock running in a few hours of power outage. One of those old-fashioned rectangular 9 volt types (its a very old clock radio but it still works). The last few times when there was a brief blip in the power, it failed. I get tired resetting it. So I turned over the clock/radio and found the battery. The plug-in attachment was broken. How something that does not move "breaks" is beyond me.
And it took a while to even see that "something was broken. My initial response was to buy a new rechargeable battery. But it would attach. That's when I discover part of the old battery was broken off in the plug.
I have a lot of good tools. One is a tiny, thin needlenose plier (and this one is really "needlenosed"). But I don't have the steadiest of hands these days. So it was really hard to get the plier to grab the old broken-off battery attachment. Sometimes I scream in frustration trying to work at tiny things! And the plug-in didn't offer any firm leverage.
It took 15 minutes to get the broken battery attachment loose from the plug-in. That may not sound like very long, but 15 minutes of frustration is like an hour of real time.
The tiny little bit of broken metal suddenly popped out! The new rechargeable (and newly charged) battery connected perfectly. I can't wait for a 1 minute power outage to see if it works.
2. Checked the snow-blower. That meant dragging out 150' of heavy-duty extension cord to reach the toolshed. And remembering to plug it into the outside outlet before I went, LOL. It has an electrical power-start which I love. I can't pull those damn "cord-pulls" like I used to.
We aren't forecast to have heavy snow this Winter, but surprises happen. So testing the snow-blower made sense. But it wouldn't start. OK, I tend to leave gas in equipment. Purists say to drain gas every month, mechanics say once every 6 months, and there are additives that extend gas life to a year. I don't do that. Most equipment starts when I want it to.
But the snow-blower didn't. I checked a few obvious things. Then looked in the gas tank. Couldn't see a thing! So I found a 3' bamboo stick and put it in to see if there was gas. No gas. I actually stored it properly (drained of most gas and then run til it stopped). I had forgotten that.
Added a little gas and pushed the priming button a dozen times. It started right up. So, I'm ready for any serious snow...
3. Filled the thistle seed birdfeeders ( a daily thing - I have a flock of about a dozen goldfinches here and I bet no neighbor can claim that) and the black oil sunflower birdfeeder (for the other songbirds). Filling the sunflower feeder is wearing me out. I need to drag over the 8' stepladder to reach the top to dump in a bucket of the seeds. It gets harder every year.
What I need is a pole that lowers and raises the sunflower seeder. I've looked for one to buy for years but I never find one. I think I'm going to have to build my own. I 'm thinking a pipe through the center with a rope through it, a couple of pulleys, and a small winch. I need to sit down and draw the details. But there is always something else higher on the To Do List.
4. Went shopping at Walmart. I go there for odd items. Or maybe I should say their "profit-losers". There are some things I buy there that are way under-priced compared to competitors. So I take advantage of that. Fancy Food canned cat food is cheap there. Tidy Litter is cheap there. Milk and Ice Cream is cheap there. Some other things aren't, so I buy them elsewhere. I have NO store loyalty.
5. Bought a steamship round roast at the meat.deli/liquor store. Roast beef is $7.99 a pound and too often "medium-to well" cooked. I like medium-rare. So I marinate and cook my own. I have an electric slicer and do my own sandwich-thin slicing (set into 2-day batches in zip-lock bags). And a few 1/2" slabs for different meals.
6. Took one of my 24"x6"x6" planting trays and dumped the soil into a bucket to mix it up with organic slow-release fertilizer . Put it back in the tray and planted more lettuce. I love salads, so I can't really have "too much" lettuce. Red leaf, green leaf, and romaine. And since lettuce has jumped from $2/pound to $4.50, that's a sensible thing to do.
7. I've been collecting fallen branches. I don't often have fires in the basement fireplace, but a short one would be nice to watch. Sadly, my little electric chainsaw is giving me problems. The chain just doesn't want to adjust in tension properly. A project for another day... But the fallen branches are small enough to cut with my "saws-all".
8. I use a drywall tape tool to scrape the litter boxes clean. It works great for cleaning the edges and loosening everything from the bottom for scooping after.
But it has always "caught" on the middle of one of the litter boxes. So I empties the litter into the other boxes and scrubbed it. There was a slight raised spots in the center.
Hurray for sharp chisels! I scraped away the high spot! Perfection in scraping is available again.
9. Sorted out a 10" stack of bills and notices. I have a very good system of file folders, but I am terrible at keeping up with the filing. I got 90% of them divided and filed in subjects. That was a relief. The other 10% is hard to decide where to file. And I only did it because of possible bad cat.vet records as you see below.
10. Looked up a lot of stuff on email and websites. First, I think my new vet was sent bad records from the old one. I don't yet want to say it was deliberate, but a lot of what the new vet is telling me doesn't match up with my mental recollections of annual visits for shots. I have the previous vet receipts on the dining table and will make a list on times and dates. Then I will bring that to the new vet so that we can compare records.
Second, some poster (elsewhere) suggested "diclophene" for knee problems. The stuff seems almost lethal. I'll stay with generic 4% lidocaine and Walmart 'Equate' equivalents.
11. Almost time to start planting some slow-growing perennial seeds. I mix my own starter-soil . Made a list of the parts I don't have enough of. Time to visit Lowe's or Home Depot.
I had a rather good day yesterday.
Neither knee was troublesome. Wearing the compression brace for a month helped.
Went grocery shopping again. I was out of most fruits and I love those for "dessert". Blueberries, raspberries and blasckberries were on a "buy 2 get one free". Strawberries are expensive lately, but these were "perfect" so I bought a container anyway. Found actually ripe Golden Delicious apples. The grocer thinks "green" is ripe usually. But still waiting to see peaches, plums and bing cherries...
I finally found egg roll wrappers again. It had been a couple weeks. Still looking for cans of straw mushrooms though. Supply-chain problem, I assume.
Filled the bird-feeders. The thistle seed feeders for the goldfinches is easy enough. I buy a 50# bag and store them in gallon containers I keep in the basement refrigerator. The black oils sunflower seed feeder is harder to fill. I have to drag out an 8' stepladder (which is getting harder every year) to get high enough to pour a bucketload of seeds into the feeder. But the cardinals and many other "nice" birds love them, so I do it. Also refilled the 2 suet feeders.
I grow lettuces and celery and bok choy in trays under lights in Winter. They are "cut and grow again" crops. But they eventually die, so I had to replant. Some red and green lettuces were getting to harvestable size, so I carried the trays upstairs to the Southern exposure plant stand (and I assist them with a light).
Did 3 loads of laundry. Might not seem like a lot to some of you, but that was a lot to me. Going up and down the stairs was a pain (literally), but got that all done for a week.
Dinner was stir-fried chicken with bok choy, mushrooms, green and red bell peppers, and onions, Sauce was chicken broth, cornstarch, minced garlic and ginger, a few minced hot peppers, and sesame oil/soy sauce added after.
Played "toy-toss" with Lori after. She is the only one who likes toys much. Laz likes wand toys sometimes, but only to chew on the strings.
Cleaned the litterboxes.
Do I lead an exciting life or what? LOL!
So, more and later pics when it was in its prime...
First, I have to say that I am bad at remembering names. If I see a flower name, I can usually see the image in my mind. But seeing an image doesn't get me the name all that well. I envy those who can do both.
Stoke's Aster. It may be my favorite perennial. It lasts darn near forever (I think these are 20+ years old), blooms dependently, and never seems to have a weed problem.
Not sure. Lobelia? Salvia?
I love Purple Coneflowers!
Rose Of Sharon? They didn't last long.
Moonbeam Coreopsis, I think... They didn't like the garden competion much, so I moved the survivors to a large deck pot where they have resided happily ever since.'Autumn Joy' Sedum in final color...
A domesticated hybrid Goldenrod. It died after several years, but I sure liked it.
Some Aster?
LC's burial spot, surrounded by lovely flowers...
And Skeeter's...
So that was the perennial bed in the early years. Nothing lasts forever, though. Spring will be the time to fix problems.
I went through my photos and picked out early and prime-growth pictures of the fenceside perennial bed. I'm glad I separate my processed pictures into years/month/subject. I have one folder for just "Yard/Garden", LOL! But there are too many to post all at once, so there are 2 posts.
About 30 years ago, I decided to establish a flowerbed along the fence, about 50' long and 6-8' deep. I had a rototiller, but it wasn't a good one. It would go in reverse (even though there was a lever for that) and would only go 6" deep at best. I hired a guy with a BIG DRIVABLE ONE and he got down 12". I dug in amendments (compost, peat moss) myself afterwards.
I planted annual flowers and a few shrubs for a few years, but that got massively tiring after a while. So I decided to switch to perennials. I knew little about them, but studied garden catalogs and made some choices. Some worked well, some not so well ("perennial" can be a bit vague sometimes - from 2 years to nearly forever). A few years later, I studied more concerning "expected lifetime" and chose those 10+ years. I also added a small 5' plastic pond.
Some are 20+ years and still growing well. So here are the early pictures of the bed. There may be some repeats of one flower or another, but I will try to delete those.
I have a severe problem with Periwinkle. It is a broadleaf evergreen vine that keeps its glossy leaves in winter. It’s fast growing, making a six-inch (15-cm) thick weed-suppressing mat, rooting from junctures in its long tendrils as they spread along the ground. It has a pretty blue flower, which saved it from immediate attacks. Had I known what it was like, I would have killed it immediately!
It is very difficult to eliminate. First, the roots grow several feet deep, so it just resprouts when pulled or cut. Second, it is basically immune to most herbicides (water-based, like Round-Up) because it has a waxy coating on the leaves that repel water. It takes an oil-based one (and those are seriously nasty). Third, even small bits of it will rereoot on ground-contact. Fourth, the stuff grows more vigorously than English or Poison ivy (and I have those too from the Southern neighbor).
I didn't plant it! It spred into my yard from the yard East of me. That place seems to get new residents every few years. One from 2 or 3 times ago planted it and it came through the fence. It was a relatively ignored area with a few hardy shrubs.
The neighbors after the one that planted it were able to get rid of it by mowing. Their yard was void of any landscaping. Constant mowing exhausts the roots and it dies. I am not that lucky. It is growing in a narrow strip between the fence and garden. A regular push mower can fit, but it is a real pain to maneuver. A gas mower is powerful enough, but mine died a few years ago and I bought a good electric one. But it can't handle such a tall thick mat and I have to lift it around a few obstacles.
It can be killed with oil herbicides, deep repeated digging, regular mowing, or smothering under black plastic. Through my failure to kill it where it entered the yard, it has gotten among my perennial beds. I can't use any of those methods there very well. I could dig up all the perennials, pot them, and watch for any growth in the pots. I'm getting too old for that.
I may have to redo most of the perennial bed. It is old, and most of the flowers have been dying off anyway. The Euonymous and Butterfly bushes need to be removed due to age or growing out of control. The dwarf apple trees it is growing around have never produced edible fruit (squirrels and insect pests ruin them every year). In fact, if I cut down the dwarf apples, I can use the wood in the smoker/grill.
That would allow me to get in the whole area to mow the periwinkle rototill it, and then cover it with black plastic for a year. Apparently, that would be sufficient. Or I could just get a landscaping service to do it. And then replant it myself the next year.
I can still do that myself. And I know a lot more about good perennials and bushes than I did when I planted it 25 years ago!
But dang, periwinkle is an evil vine!
Tomorrow, the perennial bed at its prime...
I am not really a fan of US football. But I do follow the local team sometimes out of habit. Some teams have good years and bad ones. The Washington team is "sort of" mine and they have had bad years recently.
And some teams have established rivalries over the years.
The Dallas Cowboys and the Washington team (formerly Redskins, now Commanders) have that sort of rivalry. In the last regular season game yesterday, they matched up. The Commanders had nothing to lose and the Cowboys had everything to gain by winning and the game seemed pointless for the Commanders.
I expected a massive loss for the Washington team. But you sometimes forget pride as a motivator. It is sometimes easy to think of athletes as just "paid professionals" just earning (ridiculous) salaries. But they get where they are mostly by drive and willpower and competitiveness.
And as much as some get traded around from team to team, they do seem to bond among each other wherever they are. Teams that are a group succeed. Those that are just a collection of individuals don't. And that applies the men's teams and women's teams (I love women's college basketball).
So, yesterday, with nothing to gain, the Washington Commanders beat the crap out of the Dallas Cowboys.
Hurray! 😂😅😆😊
After complaining about minor problems, I meant to list things I managed to do anyway. OK, I'm a couple days late...
1. I have 2 birdfeeders. One is thistle seed for the goldfinches. Actually 2 feeders there on a movable pipe stand. Those are easy to refill. I buy thistle seed in 50# bags and store them in gallon plastic jugs for easy refill.
2. The other is the black oil sunflower seed feeder for the cardinals, jays, titmouses etc etc. That one takes the 8' stepladder to refill and is awkward even then. The stepladder was in the far backyard where I was repairing the garden enclosure chicken wire crushed by heavy snow 2 years ago.
I dragged it to the sunflower feeder liming all the way. It could have been worse. I might have had to just drag it. But I got it set up. I had the bucket of sunflower seeds at hand and dumped them in. And I refilled the 2 suet cages. I can already see that the birds are appreciating both.
3. Indoors, from outside, my tray plantings of lettuces and carrots and celery were a mess and there were aphids. I clipped off what was useful of the lettuce and sprayed the carrots with an organic soap. Took a week to eliminate them. They don't seem to like celery.
4. I have a 2' x 4' plastic box I mix new soils in. But this time, I dumped the empty trays of freeze-killed lettuce in. Watered them slightly and pulled all old roots and a few weeds out. Mixed in some organic fertilizer and refilled them. Re-planted them. Seedlings are emerging now. Hurray.
5. But that meant they needed light. I turned on the light stand power and timer and discovered half the bulbs were burned out. The lowest ones, of course. It is really hard to get down on my knees to do bulb replacement. I spilled a bowl of thistle seeds indented to the pollinator garden and had to sweep it it all back into the bowl. More bending at the knees...
6. I got the light stand lights replaced so all are working. I buy them by the case. If you want to know, 2500 lumens and 5000K is the best combination for seedling growth. Since they are on 14 hours per day, they only last a year though.
7. So, after the lights were working, I had to replant some trays. And because the trays can overflow with watering and the are electric lights below, I had to get trays under them to catch extra water. And I have to match trays and emerging seedling to height. You want the seedlings to stay close to the lights.
8. So I had to move trays around according to their height. Lifting objects above my shoulder is literally a "pain". But it had to be done and I did. Ouch and all that...
9. I dragged 2 trash barrels of mown leaves to the compost bin. The previously composted material had dropped 8" so there was room for more. Carrying them there was "left foot forward, then right foot forward". Repeat for 100'...
10. I collected fallen branches, slowly. I cut them apart with the bowsaw. I have enough for a small fireplace fire when I want one. I had thought to do it New Years Eve, but I was too tired then.
11. I did some shopping at Walmart. For whatever reason, they sell Fancy Food real cheap. While I was looking for the varieties The Mews like, 2 ladies were also there. One commented on my cat mask and asked about what I knew about getting their cats to eat.
I mentioned that sprinkling a few kibbles on the top got their hunger activated. Also that dipping a fingertip in the canned stuff and rubbing it on their nose made them lick it and activated eating. They were thrilled at the advice.
12. I repaired the vacuum cleaner. Had to take it mostly apart at the bottom, but found the input chute was clogged. That was a real pain to clear but I finally managed it. Works great again now. So I suppose I will have to clean the whole house now.
I used to post more often here. Mostly about projects, sometimes about world events, sometimes about complaints. Well, I kind of got inactive for a while. I simply stopped doing projects for a while...
It's health issues. I'm not ill, but I've been having increasing physical problems that make it harder to just "do stuff" and it is really annoying . Let me make it clear that I understand many people my age (72) have far more serious problems and a significant % of the world population would dearly love to have "only" my problems.
So this isn't a competition. But my issues are MY issues and I'm having some difficulties adjusting to them. A bit of background and a list:
1. Back in the early 1960s, my town sent out DDT fogger trucks to kill mosquitoes. No one thought DDT harmed humans. We kids rode or bicycles in and out of the fog behind the truck just for fun. Shortly after, I started to develop slight hand tremors to the point where building plastic models became difficult, "glue everywhere". The past decade, those have been getting worse.
2. Two decades ago, my right knee started failing occasionally. I had to be careful on stairs. Thge past 2 months, my left knee has been a problem and it has gotten worse. I even bought a velcro strap knee compression support. It helps, but I walk kind of stiff-legged lately.
I'm pretty sure I know what the cause is. I sit with one ankle up on the opposite knee (either way). I think it used to be called the "English Sitting Position". Which is probably OK in itself, but when you have cats on your lap, it puts a torque on the knee (of the ankle on the other knee). After decades of that, I think I have ruined both of them.
But the result is that I don't exactly run around the house or yard "doing stuff" lately.
3. I'm getting too many muscle cramps! At night in bed, I get them in my thigh, calf and ankle on either leg (randomly and never more than one place at the same time. But they feel like my muscle is about to tear loose from the bone. I say "bad words" when that happens. Sometimes no problems for a couple weeks, them every night for days. Doesn't happen in daytime. I can't think of a cause for them. I get enough water.
In daytime, I get rib muscle cramps if I twist around to look behind me or lift something awkwardly.
I get finger-clenches, too. Holding anything tightly for even short periods can cause it. Which means most garden tools can cause it. Just holding the steering wheel for a while can cause it. But it doesn't happen immediately. Usually doing that stuff is OK at the time. I pay for it in the evening making dinner. I prepare a lot of fresh food, which involves a lot of knifework. All of a sudden, my fingers on the holding hand clench and I can't hold the knife. Typing for an hour or more also causes problems later the next day. I don't know what causes the delay, but it is predictable.
I use a lot of Aspercreme and Lidocaine ointments these days!
4. I've been sleeping badly. Not that I'm not in bed. I am sometimes in bed 10-12 hours but getting maybe 6 hours sleep. Partly, a heated waterbed is addictive and comfy, but I've had heated waterbeds since I was 25 and kept normal sleeping hours most of that time. I used to be a morning person, but now the idea of getting up at 9 am feels weird. Sometimes after being up 10 hours, I just want to go to bed again at 9 pm but that means I would be getting up at 6 am and I don't know what to do at 6 am. I don't know what has changed.
5. So I haven't been as active lately as in the past. And therefore have less to post about here. But I think I need to take advantage of my medical insurance. I got a card from them encouraging me to visit a doctor for a "basic exam". I think I will take them up on that big time.
My primary Dr (geriatric internist) didn't seem to understand what I was asking for as a "physical" 2 years ago (may have to change Dr). But I'm thinking of many things to be done.
Full scale physical exam and many tests. I made a long list based on several websites (I may post it separately in another post). It may take months to get it all done. But I've put some things off too long and my New Year Resolution is to get them all done this year. If there are problems, better to discover them now than later (and it is really already "later").
Maybe some things that trouble me now can be fixed. But more importantly, maybe some things that would trouble me more in the future can be fixed or avoided.
Eating small amounts of meat and lots of fruits&veggies doesn't prevent all problems. It helps, but isn't a cure-all. 😟
I finally got about 3/4 of the daffodils planted. I have a front yard island bed surrounding the Saucer Magnolia tree and a 3' boulder ...