Oysters, Let’s Discuss
John Liu
3 years ago
Featured Answer
Comments (32)
Islay Corbel
3 years agofoodonastump
3 years agoRelated Discussions
January Pictures - Let’s See ‘Em!
Comments (85)Kelley - I think if my little valencia every produces I will try to grow from seed just to see what happens. Every January I setup my seeds, heat mat and grow lights in our kitchen to start all my plants for spring. I will add that to it if it every happens! MyerMike - thanks! I have been on here posting the pics since about 2016 when my poor lisbon and bearrs lime were sunburnt when i first put them in the ground. It was my first time planting a tree(we had just got the house) and I couldn't figure out what was wrong with them and I just didn't want them to die. I'd killed plenty of trees previously on a patio that was in full sun. Even my local nursery gave me BAD advice. I couldn't believe it. The good folks here have helped me get my trees thriving. I've since added a few more trees(and I want to buy more every year). I'm so thankful for this forum and all of you! Helped me help my trees. Nules - those lemons and limes are so beautiful! What do you do with them all? I hope to one day have a lime crop like that!!...See MoreLet’s share some progress and positivity!!
Comments (2874)Last week was a bit hectic culminating in the remodel version of The Marx Brother's Night at The Opera as I had various workers coming in to do various stuff as well as a visit from the cable guy to move my modem and router from my bedroom where it had been originally placed when I moved back in October 2018 and still didn't have the room divider built which houses the television servicing the den/office and "living room" My room divider houses what I call my stripper pole television as the TV is mounted on a pole which turns so I can watch television from either my den/office or from the "living room". And of course the television in the bedroom was disconnected from cable and so he has to make another service call this morning. The electrician was here to hang the chandelier in the dining room as well as change switch plates to black and add some smart switches for my bedroom. Naturally when he got here, he didn't like the smart switches I ordered and convinced me that I should go with the Lutron Caseta hub so he'll be back. All this to have the digital equivalent of a "clapper" - if I'm in bed, I don't want to get OUT OF BED to turn off the sconces in the bedroom :-). Because my ceilings are concrete it isn't possible to move any lighting junctions in the ceiling and the one over the dining room table is not centered so it has to be swagged. Probably when my condo was built in 1965, swagging was considered the height of elegance but not so much anymore. My designer had recommended a sock and so I thought okay but when I saw what it actually looked like it seemed ridiculous to have what reminded me of Seinfeld's "poufy shirt" covering the chain. To my "non-designer" eyes the cure seemed worse than the cure so against the objections of both the electrician and designer, I had it removed. The chandelier is an old Art Nouveau chandelier that originally had small chains swagging from the bottom and over the course of time some of these had just fallen off. Amazingly what seems like a simple item to procure requires four months for the lighting people to get. But the chandelier is hung and presumably the decorative chains can be added when they come in without having to take down the chandelier. I had the carpenter who did all my cabinets and other wood stuff fabricate a medallion for my bedroom chandelier. My designer had found one which I loved but the company never responded - oddest thing since there is both a website and EBAY presence. At any rate, I am so glad I held out for this one as I absolutely am in LOVE with it. It's got an Art Deco feel and so even though the chandelier is Rococco Revival, it ties in with other design elements in my room since my sconces are vaguely Art Decoish and my wood furniture is my old Art Deco Waterfall furniture. Anyway long winded Saturday morning missive but if we can't share with all of you on this thread, who else can we LOL? I think the angle I shot at - I was in bed - doesn't do it justice This is the chandelier with the new medallion This is the sconce which is on either side of my bed This is the bed with the sconces - I still haven't finished in terms of the bed treatment. I got a faux mink bedspread which I should start using to finishing it off. This is a shot of the room divider which houses my television as viewed from my den/office. You can actually glimpse my chandelier over dining table to the left completely with tacky swagged chain :-)...See MoreLet’s see some hosta flowers
Comments (82)Irish Eyes just getting started in one of my weedy beds This one comes with a story from years ago. I was at Wade and Gatton, after a great day and getting my order written up, when a car pulls up. It was Dick and Jane Ward, come to visit Van. And my sister and I are standing there with one of their plants in our hands! They were lovely people, chatted a bit about what a nice plant i had picked, LOL! That’s it for my encounters with Famous Hosta folks - other than Van Wade, whose place I visited many times....See MoreLet’s talk about funeral homes!
Comments (47)My mother had purchased her interment site decades ago - in her hometown, where she hadn't lived for the decades since. She had also picked out a dress to be buried in, and had shown it to me several times in the years before her final illness. She was in a nursing home in my town, 115 miles away, with hospice. The nursing home (or hospice, I don't recall which) arranged for her remains to be picked up by a local mortuary after death was declared. I arranged the funeral with the funeral home in her hometown, that had been used by my family many times. They arranged to have the body transported to them, handled all of the paperwork (including obtaining the death certificate from my county), and placed the obit that I wrote in the local paper. 3 of my 4 siblings, my aunt and her best friend, and 2 of 5 my nieces came to the small service that we had in a parlor of the funeral home. There was no one else who knew or were friends with her (and I had no friends that I had remained in contact with) left in town. My niece's husband (they lived locally) arranged for the chaplain from his work to give a little homily and lead prayer; I found a musician to play 3-4 of her favorite hymns on guitar. Then all we went to the interment at the cemetery. One of my SILs arranged with someone she knew to prepare and serve a casual lunch in a facility at the cemetery for us. BTW, that was the only family member who did anything - the others never even offered - to arrange or help pay for it all. Mom didn't have any insurance benefit or funds left to help pay. ETA: I did all this really out of respect for my elderly aunt - that it pleased my sister and 2 of her daughters was nice but really not a consideration. My brothers wouldn't have minded either way, but I was glad that the oldest drove up from Tennessee - I hadn't seen him in many years, and probably never will again - I was 7 when he left home at the age of 18 and we were never close as adults. At the time it was rather a stretch for my finances. So, I did negotiate with the funeral home about the charges; in fact, I declined their caskets and found a company that sold and delivered lovely caskets in Cincinnati at a much lower cost....See Morelindac92
3 years agoLoneJack Zn 6a, KC
3 years agogardengal48 (PNW Z8/9)
3 years agoJohn Liu
3 years agosleevendog (5a NY 6aNYC NL CA)
3 years agolindac92
3 years agomoosemac
3 years agolast modified: 3 years agoHU-753479426
3 years agolast modified: 3 years agoLouiseab
3 years agoantiquesilver
3 years agoLadydi Zone 6A NW BC Canada
3 years agosleevendog (5a NY 6aNYC NL CA)
3 years agoBumblebeez SC Zone 7
3 years agobbstx
3 years agosleevendog (5a NY 6aNYC NL CA)
3 years agosleevendog (5a NY 6aNYC NL CA)
3 years agoIslay Corbel
3 years agobbstx
3 years agomoosemac
3 years agodcarch7 d c f l a s h 7 @ y a h o o . c o m
3 years agosleevendog (5a NY 6aNYC NL CA)
3 years agolast modified: 3 years agoIslay Corbel
3 years agofoodonastump
3 years agobbstx
3 years agosleevendog (5a NY 6aNYC NL CA)
3 years agofoodonastump
3 years agolast modified: 3 years agobbstx
3 years agoJohn Liu
3 years agolast modified: 3 years agoartemis_ma
3 years ago
Related Stories
HOUZZ TV LIVEAn Editor and a Designer Discuss Pantone’s 2021 Color Pick
In this video, Mitchell Parker and Jennifer Ott show how you can use the bright and balanced color combo at home
Full StoryFEATURESHow Tupperware’s Inventor Left a Legacy That’s Anything but Airtight
Earl S. Tupper — and his trailblazing marketing guru, Brownie Wise — forever changed food storage. His story is stranger than fiction
Full StoryLIFEData Watch: What’s Great, and What’s Not, About a Smaller Home
Houzz asked more than 200 U.S. homeowners about life in 1,000 square feet or less. Here’s what they said
Full StoryBEFORE AND AFTERSMy Houzz: Minimalist, Airy Style in a Chicago Family’s 1950s Home
See how these homeowners resolved their layout design dilemmas in a midcentury split-level house
Full StoryHOUSEKEEPINGIt’s Time to Clean Your Gutters — Here’s How
Follow these steps to care for your gutters so they can continue to protect your house
Full StoryHOUZZ TOURSMy Houzz: A Paean to the 1950s and '60s in Pennsylvania
With vintage furniture, a sunken den and pristine original details, this home is a true homage to midcentury style
Full StorySketches of Earl S. Tupper’s Pre-Tupperware Inventions
See the early concepts Tupper worked out before striking it big with his plastic food storage containers
Full StoryPETSIt’s a Dog’s World in These Hardworking Laundry Rooms
Canine amenities include pet beds, crates, bowls, washing stations, doors and even a designated pet water bowl filler
Full StoryMOST POPULARShe’s Baaack! See a Savvy DIYer’s Dramatic $400 Bathroom Makeover
You’ve already seen her dramatic laundry room makeover. Now check out super budget remodeler Ronda Batchelor’s stunning bathroom update
Full StoryCONTRACTOR TIPS10 Things to Discuss With Your Contractor Before Work Starts
Have a meeting a week before hammers and shovels fly to make sure everyone’s on the same page
Full StorySponsored
Islay Corbel