Saturday morning, 6 a.m.
It is dark and will be dark for a while. That is even more so as it is cloudy with a little drizzle.
When this goes to print it will be 4 days until the shortest day of the year. The winter solstice. Check your Stonehenge calendar. It is a special day. After that day, the days will get longer.
In Iowa City not much has changed. This week was a carbon copy of last week. Thursday and Friday were in the 50's with no real cold or rain in the forecast. We gathered more leaves for the city. The little yellow crocus persists.
As does the kale, dusted with a lovely frost.
It is a busy time of the year. The to-do list is long.
Now it is time to think about pictures and talk about a real cliffhanger of a vote.
Last week in the contest
The winner was the violet, by a nose. After several blowouts, this contest was close from the start. The daffodil took the lead. Then lost it. The third place picture was the Shirley poppy. That picture also had good support.
The full vote was
For all you daffodil fans, you should remember that it should stay alive as a possible wild card. There are 13 weeks of new pictures, followed by 3 weeks of playoffs. The 13 winners advance to the playoffs along with 2 wildcards.
46 votes was the most so far this year. I really like to see that number grow. Share voting with someone. You can vote on the same device by refrshing the cite.
I also do appreciate the comments or reply emails. I do like your explanations for why you liked a particular picture.
This Week- Week #4
#1 Purple Siberian Iris May 27, 2023
This is the flower from one of my growing number of hoyas. It probably is "Red Buttons." Publicalyx is the species. It is a fast grower and has this amazing flower. It is described as a good plant for beginners.
I have become fascinated by hoyas. My collection is up to about 16 varieties. Julia describes me as a serial enthusiast. My current enthusiasms include hoyas, sansevierias, snowdrops and martagon lilies. I probably have forgotten someone.
Hoya plants differ in several ways. As it takes a while for them to bloom, mostly I notice the difference in size and shape of the leaves. I suppose they differ as to whether they are big or little.
Some leaves are long. Some are round. One is heart shaped. Most are like succulents. Some that are popular are variagated. There is one cultivar called Crimson Princess that is quite attractive. A relative is Crimson Queen.
Then there are the flowers. That is actually what got me hooked.
They bloom repeatedly throughout the season. They will bloom inside. My mother kept two big plants over her kitchen sink forever. I now have those plants.
When they are inside they do have a resting period. I try not to water them much, and do not fertilize until spring.
The flowers come in colors other than the one in the featured picture. Some are red. Some are almost black. I am growing some of those plants, which have yet to flower. You always need something to look forward to.
Many hoya plants are from the species Hoya carnosa. One is Hoya carnosa compacta which is the Hindu rope plant. The flower clusters look similar. The foliage is all crinkly.
Hoyas provide an opportunity to learn new words.
The flowers grow in an "umbrel". It means there are short flowers that spread from a common point. The word is related to the word umbrella.
The flower clusters develop on a part of the plant called a "peduncle." That is a part of the plant, attached to the stem, where a flower will grow. It appears on a stem. Flowers grow from the same peduncle. You will not have a flower until you first have a peduncle. At the same time the wait can take forever once you grow one.
March 15. As of today that is only 89 days away.
I have sometimes marveled at the different shades of yellow.
The wonderful color in this picture springs out at you given the dark background.
I did try to look up the variety. Bulb companies have mostly taken their fall bulbs down from the websites. I do see that the bulb sales have reached 75% in many places.
Bonus pictures
Hoyas
This is the rope hoya. The picture is from several years ago. It got a touch of bugs last winter. I pruned it a lot and sprayed it a lot. No blooms this last year. I planted the cuttings and everybody was/is fine.
Siberian Iris
Here were some of the iris that were all over wet places in Rocky Mountain national park.
Caladium
All these pictures are from past years. 2023 just had about 15 plants, purchased in May from one of the bulb companies. I need to look and them and remember to order plant in January, if possible.
Right now
Violets play a nice part of the inside season. This is Birth of a Galaxy. It was in the contest last winter. It advance to the playoffs but was not the winner. I like the sparkles in petals.
Julia's recipe
Udon noodles and spinach
I was thinking about how many starch plus spinach recipes I make. Some have appeared on this blog. Some have not, and I will be posting some more in the next weeks. Here is another spinach and noodle dish - Asian influenced. It's from the NYT; it's fast; it's tasty and it's a nice companion to simply prepared protein like roasted salmon or baked chicken pieces.
The ingredients:
1 pkg. (8 oz) wide udon noodles;
1/2 lb. baby spinach;
5 tablespoons butter;
1or 2 or more tablespoons soy sauce;
maybe 1/2 teaspoon sugar;
maybe 1-1/2 teaspoons black pepper; and
2 or 3 tablespoons toasted sesame seeds.
I think this is a video ot browning the butter and stirring in the pepper.
After the pepper was stirred in, I dumped the spinach and noodles into the pot, followed by the sugar and the soy sauce. I stirred it up and then added a bit of the retained udon-cooking water, maybe 1/4 cup. The idea is to have the sauce cling to the noodles. The recipe called for 1-1/2 teaspoon of soy sauce. Not enough. I doubled it, and then added a little more. So the advice I have is - soy sauce to taste.
Odds and Ends
This story was somewhere this last week. The project is out at the old Johnson County Poor farm. That is on the west side of town, west of the highway. They do have quite the set-up out there.
For whatever reason "Rainbow Mountain" also crossed my screen this past week. Do you know about this place? It is not some Walt Disney movie. It sounds like a great place to visit until you read that it is 5,200 meters in elevation. I can just hear you doing the calculation. Yes, it is 17,000 feet. I remember Trail Ridge Road in Rocky Mount National park. That is 12,000 feet. This Peruvian wonder is a full mile higher than that.
https://www.rainbowmountainperu.com/
One more white orchid is about to bloom. It is getting some help. This is the rare ladybug in the inside garden.
The amaryllis remain in the garage. That stays close to the target 50 degrees. I did bring in one that wa potted and dormant inside. We will see if it wakes up.
I try not to think about the condition of the world, which trickles down to the country and the state. We are having to weather through the R politicians, who are preparing for the caucus in less than a month. Lots of TV ads to mute. Guess what? We do not get robo calls from politicians. We are not on their list.
It is a busy time of the year. I have to really work to find the time for my plants. I must remember to check the less obvious corners.
Pray for peace. Find some little thing to do to make the world a better and kinder place.
Philip
4 comments:
That noodle dish looks fabuloso! I like noodles with almost anything, but that looks especially nice. I could do this as a main course, along with a noodle salad, and a noodle pudding for dessert. Thanks for the sizzling video--love those sizzling videos.
I had a terrible time deciding between the Siberian iris and the hoya. Finally hit the button for the iris, then immediately felt guilty. So I left the site, came back again, and placed a vote on Stewart's behalf for the hoya. It's such a charming flower, that little ball of waxy-looking blooms.
Merry Christmas to y'all!
Pat
The purple iris always out performs my expectations. I would have rank ordered it third behind the zinnia and the hoya. Do you have hoyas?
When I saw the Iris, I thought it was all over, but the zinnia won the day for me, after the longest time ever contemplating -- I almost called a mistrial!
I had a similar noodle dish last night for dinner, and it was fantastic. It does occur to me that one of the appeals might have been a similar amount of butter. I'm a fan of the sizzling videos, too.
Nice photos this week, with the focus on the main subject and not much attention competition from the backgrounds. The purple, the bright yellow, the pink & green...all attention grabbers. It was tough to make a decision, but finally the hoya won my vote because the flowers are so interesting. Furry silver-red outside, shiny pink-red inside, with a wee touch of yellow or white in the center.
The noodles and spinach looks good. Sadly finding decent fresh spinach is not easy. The bags seem to be full of sad bruised and sometimes already slimy leaves. Maybe it's just the store I usually go to?
Very cool about the IC farm/garden plots. Rainbow Mountain is gorgeous.
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