I barely left the house yesterday, so here's another picture from my walk through Fulham on Wednesday. I thought that corner shop with the clock face was intriguing. Looks like it's for rent.
And here's a mystery. I passed a little plot of land off Colehill Gardens that was positively engulfed in weeds, but in among the weeds I could see chairs and benches. It looked like a small park or open space that had been allowed to run wild. Google Street View shows it 13 years ago as a cleared (if still rather viney) space containing tables and chairs. I wonder if it's a fenced garden belonging to the adjacent houses, or perhaps to a single owner, and they have simply chosen to let it be a wild space? On Wednesday the gates were locked and it looked like no one had been in there for a long, long time.
Here's our own garden, which looks only slightly less wild. Although I was home all day yesterday, I was working. My mission: to get the dahlias out of the shed and prepared for another growing season. Having inadvertently used lousy compost last year, I was determined to give them a better life this summer, so I bought new soil and repotted every single one of them. I also pulled apart and rinsed the tubers, and divided some of the plants so they'd have more room in their pots. Hence, we now have 13 pots containing dahlias, which is a completely insane number.
A lot of the tubers had rotted since I last examined them, which is strange. I don't know if I overwatered them last summer or if they got damp (or froze) in the shed over the winter, but in any case I clipped off all that rotten material when I repotted them. I didn't lose any entire plants, as far as I could tell.
It took a couple of hours and two trips to the hardware store for soil, but I finally got all that accomplished. Some of the tubers already have little sprouts emerging.
Dave and I also went on a houseplant cleanup binge. This started because we decided to get rid of a big, misshapen ZZ plant we had in the foyer. It wasn't looking too healthy and I've never liked it, because it was so heavy I could barely move it to clean. We lugged it outside, Dave chopped up the apparently diseased plant for the yard waste bin, and I put the still-heavy empty pot at the back of the garden with the proviso that whatever we put in it needs to be an outdoor plant in a permanent place. I am never moving that pot again.
Getting rid of the ZZ gave me access to the windowsill holding the Rhipsalis cactus (above), which I realized has a mealybug infestation. So I moved it out to the patio and rinsed it off. I'm planning to let it live outdoors for a while. That usually helps bring bugs under control.
I also moved a bunch of other plants outside for the summer -- two rubber trees, our big aloe, the gigantic yucca in our bedroom and the jade plant, which also has some kind of pest problem. I'm hoping some outdoor time gives them all a boost. I have been feeling a bit oppressed by the quantity of our indoor plants so this is a welcome change. I can actually access the dining room windowsill now, which needs a good cleaning of its own.
ISN'T THIS EXCITING?!?!?
What is exciting is my cosmos seeds are beginning to sprout! Woo hoo!
I also found another dead rat in the garden yesterday morning, which was very weird. Two rats in two days. I buried this one too. Is Pale Cat leaving us gifts? Is someone flinging them over our garden fence? Are they ingesting poison somewhere and coming here to die? I don't see one this morning, so hopefully that grim streak has now been broken.
Last night, aching from the day's exertion, Dave and I went to the Barbican for a performance. One of his students gave him a Barbican gift certificate for Christmas in 2024, and all last year we failed to use it. It actually expired, and when I realized that, I e-mailed the Barbican to plead for an extension, which they generously granted. One of my Spring Break goals was to use this freaking gift certificate, so I found a performance of movie and TV soundtrack music, part of the London Soundtrack Festival, and we went.
It was called "Homegrown Heroes -- From Bond to Thunderbirds." The first half was a collection of themes by various composers, performed by an orchestra of seasoned studio musicians, from well-known productions including "Wallace & Gromit," "Enola Holmes," "Atonement" and, indeed, "Thunderbirds." The second half was devoted to the work of composer David Arnold, and if you've seen movies such as "Independence Day," "Godzilla" or "Stargate," not to mention Bond films including "Quantum of Solace," "Casino Royale" and "Tomorrow Never Dies," then you've heard Arnold's music. He was actually there, receiving an award, which was an interesting and unanticipated brush with fame. Not that I shook his hand or anything.
Oh, and apologies to those of you who have apparently been counting down and thought yesterday was my last day of work. I'm actually on Spring Break this week, so my countdown has been paused. Work begins again on Monday, but only for three days -- next Wednesday is my final day before blissful retirement.





And you'll love it I always say to people, Retirement is the best job I've ever had!
ReplyDeleteI'm looking forward to saying that!
DeleteI’ve been enjoying these corner shots. The architectural details on that shop/building have great potential. Retirement can’t come soon enough... I hope.
ReplyDeleteSo many shopfronts in London have great style, and yet many high streets have trouble keeping them all full. Everybody shops online now.
DeleteIt sounds like a good days work, sorting out the dahlias and the indoor plants. I had to put two of my houseplants into the compost bin last week. The first was a cactus that Alan had overwatered so much the trunk rotted right through, and the other was my Aloe Vera. It's been droopy for ages, Alan laughed at it last week and said it looked like a spider from a horror movie. Once he pointed that out, that's all I could see 🫤
ReplyDeleteSometimes you just have to pull the plug. I'm at that point with a few of ours.
Delete13 pots... not an insane number - but certainly an unlucky number. Your dahlias may be cursed. As for your "blissful retirement"? Oh the absolute bliss of arthritis, a knee replacement, memory loss and an old man smell as you mutter, "It wasn't like this in my day!" to anyone who will listen.
ReplyDeleteFortunately I don't believe in unlucky numbers. :)
DeleteI see Steve's Booksellers in that shop ... Steve's Plantseller? Steve's Photography Shop???
ReplyDelete"Meet here for City Walks with Steve"
DeleteAll three. Walks by appointment only.
DeleteHa! I love how you all have planned my next chapter. :)
DeleteDahlia tubers could have been too cold.
ReplyDeleteRats sound like poisoned elsewhere.
It easy to get overrun with houseplants..and difficult to refuse another or deny an offshoot a pot!!
I agree about the rats. I think they got into poison somewhere.
DeleteGood luck with your dahlias. They're another thing (of many) with which I have no success.
ReplyDeleteMost years I do pretty well with them, but last year I had a terrible problem with powdery mildew.
DeleteOut of curiosity, how are you getting all that soil? Are you carrying it home one bag at a time or do you have some sort of wagon you pull?
ReplyDeleteI buy it in bags and carry it home. Fortunately the hardware store is just around the corner.
DeleteWow! That's a busy day off for you. You will be so surprised to hear that I actually did some yard work yesterday! I've been finding lots of excuses to not get out there but I've been inspired by the many blogs I read that mention their love of gardening so I'm hoping to do a better job of it this year. Depends on the weather... ;)
ReplyDeleteGood for you! When you see results from your gardening you'll be inspired to do more. :)
DeletePhew. For a moment I thought I'd missed the big day. I had forgotten about spring break.
ReplyDeleteYou're getting a head start on retirement, aren't you?
Yeah, this week is sort of "retirement lite."
DeleteMany-many plants to care for.
ReplyDeleteTOO many!
DeleteGreen grass, flowers blooming, men in shorts, it's true then? Spring has arrived someplace on this planet:)
ReplyDeleteThe seeds that I planted indoors are doing well but I want to be outside. There is still ice and snow covering a lot of the yard but hopefully that will be gone soon.
How excited are you about your retirement date?
Well, it arrived briefly, but now it's chilly again. My seedlings are back indoors too!
DeleteSo many dahlias are especially good if you really like them!
ReplyDeleteI do really like them, at least when they do what they're supposed to do!
DeleteSometimes certain things get away from us and we are snowed under. It happened with me. It was hard to get rid of plants I had for years. Yes and mealy bugs visited too..
ReplyDeleteMealybugs are the worst. My plants get that and scale, and sometimes thrips. Ugh.
DeleteYour dahlia display is going to be outstanding. Having lots of flowers in a large grouping makes a strong and lovely statement.
ReplyDeleteI also find, putting houseplants outside for the Summer gives them a boost. The rain, warmth and sunshine encourage growth too. It is all good.
Due to freezing nights, my houseplants will remain inside for now.
Yeah, a season outdoors seems to make a big difference for many plants.
DeleteThe abandoned garden is intriguing. Maybe the owner(s) moved away, died or are unable to care for it any longer.
ReplyDeleteGood that the gift certificate could be extended, and you and Dave got to see the performance - AND one of the composers!
Perhaps someone who lives near those gardens will stumble onto my blog and clarify the situation! Maybe if I check back later in the summer they'll be in better shape.
DeleteThat's SO many plants and so much work. It sounds like you got a lot accomplished though. Have you thought of working part time in a nursery, or would you bring home too many plants? :)
ReplyDeleteYeah, I think working in a nursery would be like working in a dog shelter -- WAY too much temptation for a "rescuer" like me!
DeleteWhat are the pretty blue flowers growing in that wild space?
ReplyDeleteAnd you made me laugh, 13 pots of dahlias, insane!, which is probably why you find plants discarded by other gardeners.
What bad timing of spring break to make you wait a week for your last three days.
The flowers are green alkanet (Pentaglottis sempervirens), a relative of borage. It's actually a widspread weed, but the bees love it. We have tons of it in our garden but we try to keep it under control!
DeleteI feel like you should rent the corner shop & sell scavenged plants and the other items you find on your street. That would be an excellent source of blog fodder! Although I will also enjoy your posts as you find your way during retirement.
ReplyDeleteI think "Steve's Scavenged Stuff" might not be a good business model. LOL
DeleteFinding a dead rat would give me the willies for weeks!
ReplyDeleteIt's not the most pleasant experience.
DeleteWhat a fascinating building with that clock above the door and a background that doesn't match anything else on the building. I wonder what was in there before the "for rent" sign went up.
ReplyDeleteLots of garden work going on at your house. You should have an abundance of dahlia blooms sometime very soon.
I think it was a restaurant but I'm not sure. It's probably on Google Street View.
DeleteYes, it was a pizza restaurant called Pappa Ciccia.
Deletehttps://maps.app.goo.gl/nVhEd6f9CCNf6Xa5A
It actually looked pretty good as a pizza place.
DeleteI had one dahlia years ago that I never remembered to lift for the winter. It didn't care, came back year after year pushing its way through whatever was there. The others faded long before, despite care and attention, ingrates.
ReplyDeleteSome of them are quite durable. There were a couple in a garden not far from us that came up every spring for a long time, with no apparent lifting -- and then suddenly didn't.
DeleteI'm pretty sure I have that exact chair that is hidden in the foliage. (along with three others and a table)
ReplyDeleteA common model worldwide, apparently!
DeleteI hope all your Dahlias so very well and give lots of blooms. That Rhipsalis looks too messy for me, I wouldn't have one of those anywhere, not inside nor outside. Mealy bugs do not like windy conditions, so if you can put those plants where the wind blows on them that will help, also mealy bugs probably breed in the pot soil so if they continue to reappear, you might want to get fresh soil in those pots.
ReplyDeleteThe Rhipsalis isn't messy at all, except when it's done blooming and drops all its flowers. Most of the year it just hangs around. Good reminders about the wind and the fresh soil!
Delete"DO very well"
ReplyDeleteWow -- 13 dahlias (and well done!). I hope they survived the rain or will. I'm reading backwards. And well done on the plant culling and moving. Probably feels like you have far more room in your house now! (I do like that clock in the first photo.)
ReplyDelete