43 days until spring
While some parts of the country had very winter conditions, here in Iowa it was mostly just cold.
Elsewhere there was absolute fun.
When was the last time you had that much fun? Can you have that much fun in the garden?
Maybe what you can do is be with someone who is having that much fun. I think about Christopher finding that first blue flower. Or bringing me a little winter aconite.
You can see the important variable.
Back in Iowa we count the days. There is warmer weather coming. There are some 40's in the forecast for this coming week.
We also get ready. Seeds are planted and some have come up. Other give us a chance to be patient. (Even the impatiens seed.) Dormant plants are waking up. Some of the orchid cactus are putting out new growth. That is exciting. They understand the concept "longer days." That does mean I have to think about incorporating them into the watering schedule. I would rather just tell them to wait a month.
Last week in the contest
the winner was the bright blue pulmonaria.
It pulled away on day two and coasted to a comfortable win.
Here was the final vote total. The blackberry lily, with its strong second place showing, did move into consideration for a wild card in the playoffs.
There will be two more weeks of regular voting. Then there will be the playoffs and it will be warmer.
Wild card standings (2 advance)
Week 7 Pink orchid cactus. 34%
Week 3- Phlox and daylilies 29%
Week 10- Blackberry lily 29%
--------apparent cut off-------
Week 4 Lilium fiamma 28%
Week 2 Red Double tulip 27%
Week 6- Brunnera 26%
Possible top seeds-There will be 3 playoff rounds starting in just a few weeks. The top 13 pictures along with 2 wildcards will make that round. I seed the top vote getters so they are not in the same round. Here are the possible top seeds.
Week 9 Pink Shirley poppy 49%
Week 8 Slipper Orchid 46%
Week 7 White Shirley poppy 41%
Week 1 Red Iceland poppy 41%
I will sort out the tie breakers if necessary
This week in the picture contest which is Week 11
#1 Banned in Boston
July 1, 2021
I have had Banned in Boston for 20 years, and it continues to impress. I probably should divide it to give it a fresh start. Mostly it just stays the same size. Let me just say that project is low on the list.
Here is the final Shirley poppy in this year's contest. Will it join the previous three and advance to the playoffs. It is rather... well, pick your own word. Breathtaking? Unbelievable?
My only regret is that I did not save the seed from this particular plant. At the moment I have about 50,000 Shirley poppy seeds with no way of knowing which seed came from which plant. I guess that just adds to the suspense.
There you have Week 11. 2 more weeks and then there will be the playoffs. By that time it will be March, with spring just around the corner.
Bonus section
I have mentioned sometimes the difficulty picking the best image, depending on the cropping of the picture.
What do you think about this cropped picture of the Shirley picture this week?
I am discovering that I can include more pictures in slideshows. Even a year ago the technology would only allow about 10 pictures. Now I will just have to expand my music library.
Here is the Shirley poppy slideshow including the ones that did not make the contest.
Here is the Daylily slideshow.
Right now
I am trying to spend a little time in the basement with seeds every day before work. I am growing several kinds of lettuce, Iceland and Shirley poppies, lupines, several kinds of coneflowers, and several kinds of primroses.
Some seeds germinate within 3-4 days. That would be the poppies and lettuce. Some seeds seem to take forever. (That means they are not up yet.)
Other pictures from the inside garden this week
Hibiscus cuttings will grow roots eventually, even though sometimes they take months. You just have to change the water every several weeks. They will even bloom in their little jars on the kitchen windowsill.
This next picture is a very strange orchid called Stenorrhynches speciosus.
I got it at the Orchid Club Christmas party in 2013.
Plant word for the week
"Pelletize," as in pelletized seeds
They reminded me of yogurt covered almonds. I do not know how tiny impatiens seeds are. But these were easy to handle and I could plant them with my fingers.
That seems to be the point. Tiny seeds are covered with some dissoluble medium that allows you to handle them.
You of course pay more for the seeds.
Here is a youtube feature about the process.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P22K94t6Nrk
Julia's recipe- Cherry Crunch
The link to the website with all of Julia's recipes is
https://mearskitchen.wordpress.com/
I found some frozen cherries in the deep freezer in the basement, which we bought at a local orchard that sells imported (from Michigan) fruit before apple season. I am a sucker for cherries and blueberries in early summer. I recently decided it was time to have cherry something. Pie is, of course, wonderful, but I was thinking of something easier so that Philip could putter around with his seedlings and neither of us would need to make a pie crust. This recipe is from an old edition of Joy of Cooking, and it is very good, especially with vanilla ice cream.
The ingredients:
Odds and ends
I worry about deer, and utility workers.
In the category of "other worries" I saw this article. "The Rampaging Pigs of San Francisco." It was not talking about some new rock band.
I liked the advice in the article that if you are confronted by an angry pig, get on top of your car. The reason of course is that "pigs cannot climb."
The temperatures in January were remarkably up and down. Here is the chart for Iowa City. The chart includes lines for the "average" high and low temperature. Please not that about mid January that line just barely started to rise.
I suppose this section could also be called Odds and Ends and What is Amusing. (Please note that what is amusing is so very subjective.
In that expanded category I found advice this week on watering dieffenbachia. "Water when the soil feels dry to a depth of one inch." How do you figure that out? Do you poke a hole with your finger down an inch?
I will close. It is time to think about what to plant today.
Be safe and not afraid. There is fun out there.
Philip
3 comments:
Very difficult to choose the picture of the week, but I had to go for the poppy. And the later closeup in the bonus section was a knockout. That poppy slide show was the best you've done, IMO.
Also a knockout was the picture of the two individuals on the sled! My favorite part--Maisie's cheeks! What cheeks the child has!
Julia--I really must make that cherry crunch recipe. I'm a sucker for tart cherry pie, and for crunchy desserts. Saving this one in my recipe file, along with so many other Mears recipes. Thanks!
I think this is the strongest week of the contest. Numbers two through five or could’ve won on some weeks. Although I expect the purple pansy to win, I’m going with the hibiscus. I love her first bonus shot of the Shirley. Julia‘s crunch concoction looks delicious and makes me wonder if it’s worth all the effort to make a pie crust. I wondered long enough — yes, it is!
Wow, this week was tough to choose! I finally went with Banned in Boston, nice color and lighting, good contrast between flower and background, and that name. I might have gone with the pansy if the white flower pot were cropped out? The hibiscus - nice photo but it seems to blend into the background a bit. The poppy - if the pink poppy from a couple of weeks ago was a whirling dancer, this one is a bullfighter twirling his cape. If the closeup in the bonus section was in the voting, I might have gone for that one. The crocus - the (harsh?) lighting and cluttered background seemed to overpower the flowers.
Yum - cherry crisp. Rhubarb crisp seems to be the only one I think to make. I started adding cherries to it after having some Dad made that way.
It's been a looooong since I had that much fun in the snow.
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