The garden is part of Iowa City's Open Gardens this weekend. This is a display put on by Project Green, a local garden club that has been around for so long they do not mention it on their website. (I think it is about 50 years.) The idea is to get certain local gardens to open up to the public for certain times one weekend during the garden season. This weekend is chosen since it is the time for lilies.
This year there are 25 such gardens, in the Iowa City and Coralville area. The gardeners have agreed to open up for 4 hours each, on Saturday or Sunday. It is 4-8 on Saturday and 10-2 on Sunday.
It is a rather humorous idea to me to open for 4 hours each day, as our garden is always open. But I agree to participate each year as there are some people who need a written invitation.
Preparing for the event takes some work. People with a garden of manageable size weed the entire thing. I choose to weed when time allows. (I am not sure what is the alternative.) It has helped that there was some rain in the last few weeks. Officially we are still about 1/3 low for the year. (We have received 12 inches out of a normal 18.) The scuffle hoe has been used a lot. It would be used more if I did not have little spring bulbs just 1-3 inches below the surface in many areas.
There is much to write about this week. So as with any good term paper, or legal brief, let me start by telling you what I am going to do, and then do it.
I want to write about the garden this weekend. That includes showing you the better pictures even if I wish I could show you the smells. The lilium at the moment send out smells all over the garden.
I want to write about a new display, that just went up yesterday.
I want to also write more about Colorado, as technology was limited last week.
The garden this week:
First let me tell you about the Pennants- Here they are. I have thought about pennants for years. Pat and Stewart, in Florida, made them for us this year. (On rather short notice as well.) They, and the pennants, are wonderful.
Our new tree guy, Jason Macartney, helped with attachments. He had just the correct ladder and knows all the best knots.
I will find a good video for next week, when the wind creates the full effect.
5 best pictures from the week of July 2-8
I have put in the poll so you can vote if you wish.
#1 One last Shirley poppy.
#2 Orientpet Time Zone
Daylilies come in many forms. This is a double, located in the front yard.
Other pictures from the garden this week
Colorado
Let me start out with videos, including the one from last Sunday that did not work. On our first Sunday in Colorado Christopher had his chance after the service to try the organ.
This was Lily Lake, on Monday. As were several lakes we visited, it was about 9000 feet up. We adjusted to the altitude after about 24 hours.
Hummingbirds are a fixture at Estes Park. Sometimes your cabin comes with hummingbird feeders on the porch. This time we had to buy them. This little one was particularly fun as you could set it down right next to where you were sitting. The little birds would just come drink, sometimes looking at you.
Other pictures
This was our cabin at the Y camp in Estes Park. It was named Peace.
Julia's Recipe
Stovetop chicken with rice and greenbeans
This dish is a variation of arroz con pollo (rice with chicken), which I have made for years in the oven - a casserole with left over cooked chicken and rice and bacon bits and ham or pork (if any is on hand) and onions and green peppers and tomatoes. And some spices. This version, from Better Homes and Gardens magazine, is faster and simpler and cooks on the stovetop. All good things. I still like the oven version, but this is an alternative. I did make a few tweaks, as I often do.
I cooked the chicken on mediume-high heat about 5 minutes per side, enough to do some browning but not enough to get done. I then removed the chicken to a plate.
Next I added the rice and a dollop of better than bouillon chicken-flavored. It really is easier to do this than to dissolve the bouillon paste in water. The paste sticks a little, but it all comes up when the liquid is added.
Once the ingredients were stirred together, I added the chicken thighs back to the skillet, skin-side up. I covered the pan and reduced the heat to a simmer.
Here it is in the final stages of cooking. Rice nearly done; chicken pretty much done; green beans working past crisp-tender.
On the table. It was a nice one-pot dinner. We had it with green salad and berries with yogurt, as usual.
Odds and Ends
The Saturday portion of the open gardens was a success. I am always amazed at the ability of people to look at the flowers and not see the weeds. Of course I was on my feet for 4 hours after a busy earlier time getting things ready. We have been blessed with cooler weather, which is carrying over into today.
Did I mention that I am tired?
Our trip to Colorado did expose just how our lives are dominated by technology. To control crowding at RMNP you have to get special passes to get into the park at all between certain times. You need a special pass to get to the Bear Lake portion of the park. You get the passes by going online at 5pm and try to get the pass along with 10000 other people. It was tense in the cabin as 2 computer and 3 phones tried to access the cite right at 5pm. We got it. I did have to wonder how people without the machines could get access.
Then when we got our tickets to the baseball game, we did not get those little paper tickets. We got an email with those little squares that can be scanned. Of course Boarding passes for the airplane came the same way.
Did I mention that we are currently without television because the programming is so complicated. I just want a TV I can turn on and change the channels.
I am looking forward to a rest period after the garden period later this morning.
Pray for peace.
It is always good to hear from you.
Philip
2 comments:
A blockbuster post this week: so much going on! The kids, naturally, seem to be having a whale of a time. I imagine the logistics of driving, flying, packing and unpacking and packing again, feeding everybody, and all the passes and various day trips was a little wearing on the adults. But what an experience!
As far as flower pictures, I really think that violet-pinkish coneflower with the golden center should have been a contestant. What a beaut!
The dinner looks terrific, except for ... the chicken skin. Unless it's audibly crunchy, I can't take chicken skin (or salmon skin, no matter what condition it's in). But everything else looked so delicious!
Get some rest!
The videos were stunning — what a gorgeous place.
It’s obvious why you are tired. I think you need a vacation. Thanks for the epic post.
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