Wildflowers. Porches. And stuff.
Jun. 14th, 2007 03:53 pmI really like the Eloise Butler Wildflower Garden. A lot. It is green and sometimes shady, and the bits that aren't shady have prairie things, which I like, and there are benches in good places for benches, and if you bring a
pameladean, things will have a certain order to them, where the flowers and the dragonflies are comprehensible. At least the non-yellow ones are. (
pameladean is apparently a Green Lantern. You heard it here first, folks.) I will want to go back and see that again with different wildflowers in bloom.
The porch guys are -- be still my heart -- fixing the porch. They came yesterday when they were supposed to and did the stuff that could be done yesterday, and then they came back today and are doing more stuff. It's really astonishing what a load off my mind all this is. I thought I had put it out of my head for the winter, but I hadn't. I think it was the lack of snow. Snow makes everything more tolerable, I think. Anyway, I have some faith that the painters and the driveway people will show up roughly on time and perform the work approximately as specified, and this is a great comfort.
It turns out that I have once again chosen a book that will not write itself. Go figure.
The porch guys are -- be still my heart -- fixing the porch. They came yesterday when they were supposed to and did the stuff that could be done yesterday, and then they came back today and are doing more stuff. It's really astonishing what a load off my mind all this is. I thought I had put it out of my head for the winter, but I hadn't. I think it was the lack of snow. Snow makes everything more tolerable, I think. Anyway, I have some faith that the painters and the driveway people will show up roughly on time and perform the work approximately as specified, and this is a great comfort.
It turns out that I have once again chosen a book that will not write itself. Go figure.
Eloise Butler
Date: 2007-06-14 10:12 pm (UTC)Nate B.
Re: Eloise Butler
Date: 2007-06-14 11:45 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-15 03:18 pm (UTC)Dang. How can this happen? So often? (Me neither...)
no subject
Date: 2007-06-15 03:45 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-15 03:51 pm (UTC)The wildflowers I am growing on the balcony are completely anonymous. They came in two packets marked "Wildflowers" and "Wildflowers for the Shade". I planted both of them much too close together in a herb planter, with some lobelia in case nothing else happened. They're now between 1mm and 3 inches high, and they're green, and they're different shapes, and that's really all I know about them. Even when/if they have flowers I probably won't recognise them unless they're in my Idiot Immigrant's Guide to the Simplest and Most Recognisable Wildflowers of Eastern North America. I have wanted to do this ever since we came here, and have just got around to it this year. I remain very excited about the project and may even hobble out and have a look at them this morning to see if they need watering, and today is not a day on which I am moving about very much.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-15 03:53 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-15 03:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-15 03:56 pm (UTC)That's Lobelia Sackville-Baggins, I am taking it?
Also,
I am loving these cross-cultural metrics, and kind of hoping this is a Canada thing, what with the French/English split'n'all...
no subject
Date: 2007-06-15 03:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-15 04:49 pm (UTC)We just need to find the literary equivalent of Byerly's.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-15 05:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 02:21 am (UTC)But then, Jo probably can too.
P.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 02:40 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 06:24 am (UTC)The tall plants with shiny yellow flowers that I said were in the buttercup family were, in fact, tall buttercup.
I'm not sure about the other one, but it could have been a tickseed (which is a kind of coreopsis). I forgot to look at the leaves. Broadly speaking, that plant is a DYC, or Damned Yellow Composite, so called by botanists because there are so many of them.
P.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 11:56 am (UTC)