Slowly my body is getting better. It seems like it is taking a while. I am not all the way better yet, something I should remember. This long weekend will be a test.
But it rained some more this week and the temperatures were such that going outside later in the evening, for 10 minutes of weeding, was comfortable. So I have been doing repetitions. Weed the front yard. Weed the side yard. Find something else to do.
I even succumbed to an internet ad...for a mail order tree. What?
Well you may recall we are replacing the dying pink crabapples with kousa dogwoods. The third one was eaten by deer in the late fall and appeared dead. I had chopped off the top part when I noticed growth from the bottom. It was only mostly dead, and not yet time to look for loose change. (What am I talking about?)
I was going to replace that mostly dead one tree with a new one from our local nursery. But after the derecho from last year trees were hard to come by this spring.
So there it was last week. An ad that popped up on the internet for 20% off all trees. I looked and they had kousa dogwoods for under $100. The 20% reduction covered the mailing cost from North Carolina.
I watched some videos and we planted the new tree yesterday morning.
Now the watering begins.
That and worrying about the fact that it is going to get to 90 degrees the next few days.
Now I must think if there are any more trees that would look good. Maybe a Japanese Maple. There is free shipping if you buy at least $119 worth of plants/trees.
The other news from the garden is that our little peeping frogs have graduated to grunting. They are bull frogs. It gives new meaning to having a frog in your throat. Here is a video.
Daylilies season is here.
This is Sedum Atlantis. It is a newcomer to the garden this summer. So far so good.
Julia's recipe
vaguely creole fish
As I have said, we get fish from a community-supported-fishery in Sitka, Alaska delivered to our door. Frozen of course. Some of the fish is familiar - salmon, halibut, cod; some not - rockfish, sablefish. Rockfish and sablefish are both mild and white. I can't tell them apart except that sablefish comes skin-on, which is not a plus in my book. Sometimes I make chowder with sablefish as one can plop the fish into the soup whole and then scoop it out of the soup after it is cooked to remove the skin and break the fillet into smaller chunks.
But recently, I decided to make a vaguely creole fish dish with onions, green pepper, tomatoes and garlic. And cajun spice mix and wine. This is more or less my recipe, although I am sure lots of folks have figured out that smothering fish with such a mixture and baking it is a good idea. My mother made a version of this dish with pork chops instead of fish. I probably should give her credit for the general idea.
The ingredients:1 piece of white fish (skinless would save some trouble) - 12 oz. or so;
1 can of diced tomatoes (or 1-1/2 cups cherry tomatoes if you have a supply);
1 green pepper (about 1 cup cut in strips about 2" x 1/2 ");
about 1 cup onion cut into half-moon slices;
about 1 teaspoon smushed garlic;
about 2 tablespoons olive oil;
about 1/4 cup dry white wine
about 1 teaspoon of kosher salt;
about 1-1/2 teaspoons cajun spice mix;
and about 1/2 teaspoon black pepper.
On the plate. We served it with rice and the last of the season asparagus from the farmers' market. Plus the usual salad and honeydew melon.
Odds and Ends
The plant sale continues on the back driveway. Someone brought the nicest looking trimmed bearded iris on Thursday. They even had them labeled. The variety is Total Recall. It reblooms. I will give the public a week to buy them up, and then I will buy them myself. Of course I would have to weed someplace to put them. I have always admired reblooming iris.
Be safe and try to stay cool.
Philip
3 comments:
Congrats on the new tree and the improved back, Phil. The fish. Even if the protein is buried, looks great.
I like the video of the spider day lilies.
Kousa dogwood adventure: Stewart and I once planted one in CT alongside our driveway in full sun on an elevated spot. Not a good idea. We gave it a couple of years, but it was struggling. So we decided to move it. The two of us, and two helpers, dug it up (the root ball was about 4 feet in diameter at this time), and we all manhandled it to a wetter spot by a split-rail fence in the shade of some bigger trees.
This nearly killed us but it saved the tree. It became very prolific and happy in its new spot. I assume it's there still. I think it was called Cherokee Princess--pink blossoms.
I just added (to the wrong post, last week's) a suggestion about weeding. Have you tried a standing (non-stoop) weeder? It's basically a long pole with a twisted fork at the end.
I'm glad you're on the mend, even though slower than you'd like. I have to pace myself weeding too - filling up my wagon once a day is about my limit. Pity about the only nearly dead crab apple, but I suppose it's better to get it out now than let it go and end up dealing with who knows what the root graft turns out to be.
Thanks for the tip about rooting petunia trimmings - that may come in handy to fill in some empty spots.
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