Hot steamy Sunday
8 years ago
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- 8 years ago
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Hot Sunday bloomers
Comments (12)Kay, Secret Friend is a great looking daylily & it blooms well. Occasionally a bloom doesn't open well, but most of them open fine. My biggest complaint is it hasn't multiplied much. I think this is the 2nd full year for it here & it is still just 3 fans. I hope it multiplies some, I would like a nice clump of it. Of course, it might be my fault, maybe I set too many pods on it, but I don't really notice it on other plants. Yes, I think Clown Parade is a favorite for everyone here Rita, just so beautiful & blooms so well. Dipsandtets, you won't be disappointed in Clown Parade! Thanks brittie & Sarah! Debra, I think Blue eyed Butterfly is pretty but when it polys it has such a great look. It seems to do that pretty often. Christine, I used to hate the orange & gold ones, just so "common". But of course I ended up with a few & realized that those are the ones that stand out in my garden. They attract everyone's attention. I still love the delicate colors & pastels, but I have lots of the ones that say Look At Me! Thanks Val, I say the same thing when I look at people's pictures. I can't say I've NEVER seen a daylily I didn't like, but I can count them on 1 hand. Even then I would probably say it would look good in the right setting :) Cindy, Primal Scream just glows, doesn't it. Somoe daylilies just don't look as good in a photo as they do in person....See MoreSteamy Sunday shots
Comments (16)Nat, I'm glad to hear that Wild Horses is doing well for you. Here it has increased will, but the scapes average 7 buds which is too low for me. Most of my bud counts seem to be down this year but this one has always had a low count. I have put up with it because its so pretty, but I'm running out of patience. Sounds like I'm not the only one. Julia, the scapes on Star Over Oz lean slightly, but not enough that I find it a problem. I love the green throat too and it is big. Maryl, I wish the bud count on Classic Romance would improve. I don't think I can make any decisions this year because lots of the counts are lower. Val...See MoreLove County Burning Hot Sunday....and Burning
Comments (7)Carol, You know, we lived here for about 5 years before I saw a single pasture fire that burned more than a small (maybe front yard-sized) amount of land and a couple of bales of hay. I guess those must have been good rain years, because since 2005 the wildfires have been unbelievable. I was out before sunrise setting up and turning on sprinklers, and pruning up limbs on a couple of small trees. (Part of firescaping is that all limbs be pruned up 8' above the ground so fire cannot climb up into their canopy. It is hard to do this on very small young trees that are only 8' or 10' tall themselves.) Later today, I will cut back the cannas near the house all the way down to the ground. Then, I am going to cut back all the half-frozen (top half froze, botton half didn't) four o'clocks on the north and northeast sides of the house and the ones under the pecan trees too. I'll spend the rest of the day cutting pasture grass and weedeating fencelines, edges where the forest meets the grassland, and the bar ditches. I'd rather cut it now than risk having it burn later. I was walking the dog Saturday and noticed our trees are about as colorful and lovely as they get here in southern OK, but my neighbor's pastures are that dry, tawny-gold wheat color and I am hoping they will cut down all that dry grass before it burns. If we learned anything here at all these last few years, it is that tall dry grass burns a gazillion times faster than very short grass. I think all of today and tomorrow will be just doing yard maintenance and clean-up, but maybe by Wed. I can get into the fenced garden and clean it out. I still have snakes in there, though, so I'd like to do that on a colder day. I do need to clean up all my containers as well, removing the dead foliage and putting it on the compost pile, and stacking up the pots for the winter. The white squirrels in Texas make the news every now and then. They have a couple of them on the campus of the University of North Texas at Denton and they cause quite a commotion on campus. The students feed them, take their pictures, etc. They even have a calendar of photos of "their" white squirrels that they sell to raise money for something on campus....maybe the library. Some years they have only 1 and other years there are 2 or 3. When one of the white squirrels was found dead a few years ago, they had a funeral or memorial service for it. I guess it gives the college students something unusual to be interested in while there at school. All of our squirrels here in Love County are just run-of-the-mill squirrels--no exotic white ones! I have a small tomato plant--maybe 8" tall--in one container on the garage/barn's concrete slab. It must have reseeded from a cherry tomato growing in a larger pot nearby. I thought it would freeze when everything else did, but there it sits, lovely and green, though not blooming. At times I am tempted to put it into a larger pot and try to keep it through the winter, but I know from experience that winter tomatoes don't get enough heat to develop good flavor, so doubt it would be worth it. A snake and trees in the roof gutter! Well, now you know why you haven't seen snakes on the ground....they are living up there in the penthouse on the roof. Personally, I'd rather NOT see snakes at all. I have gone back and looked at our rainfall totals for all the years I could find them, and all I can say about our rainfall here is that it see-saws erratically, from 36" to about 40" in a good year and then from 19" to 24" in a bad year. This is a bad year, but it actually started in August 2007, so it is also a long year. Some long-time residents here who are in their 80s and 90s tell me Love County used to regularly get annual rainfall totals in the 40s and 50s, but it began changing in the 1970s or so and the years keep getting drier. I think there was one year in the mid-1990s when we had over 50" of rain here, but that seems long ago. When we first moved here, everyone raised something: wheat, pecans, peanuts, watermelons, muskmelons, etc. And, in just the 10 years we've been here, most of those crops have been discontinued. For a long time, though, many of the ranchers raised winter wheat, planting it in late August to late September and counting on the autumn and winter rains to make it grow. If they have cattle, they can graze the cattle on it for part of the winter, then pull the cattle off of it in spring, let the wheat head up and harvest it in May/June. Since 2005, there's less and less wheat planted every year, and an article in the Marietta Monitor a few weeks ago said almost nobody was planting wheat this year---input costs are too high, and with no rain falling, there's no guarantee the wheat would grow. Our main crop around here anymore is just native hay which hasn't done all that well in this rain-challenged year. For weeks now, one of our local TV weather guys has repeatedly referred to our "desert-like weather conditions" and it is the most accurate description possible. We're having very cool nights, very hot days, and very dry air with low humidity. Even when cold fronts come through, all they bring us is wind and cool, dry air. We need some warm fronts from the south with warmer, moist, humid air. Oh, well, there's always the hope that next year will be better. In the meantime, all we can do is try to keep the place from burning down. Dawn...See MoreSteamy, hot, 84 outside 9:40 pm
Comments (10)It is almost 11:00 pm currrent weather is 92 in Fort Worth. 102 was the high. Should be cooling to 83 before the sun comes up tomorrow, and we get to do it all over again! Would love some of mother natures free water for the yard right about now. It has been over 2 weeks of triple digit temps. Add my hot flashes to that, and we are about at 150 degrees. Trin...See More- 8 years ago
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