Sunday, June 21, 2026

God, This is a Boring Post


There's a large white climbing rose growing over the trees in the back of the garden. It's actually grown over the fence from the neighbor's, but I don't mind because it's beautiful and along with our own pink climbing roses, it puts on quite a show. It's past its peak now, and its white petals are fluttering down like confetti, landing on our hydrangeas (above) and everywhere else.

I was home all day yesterday, but as usual, I had several projects. I cleaned out the alley at the side of the house where we store our rubbish bins -- just the area streetside of the garden gate. It was full of campanula and other weeds and the shrubbery was growing into the bin storage area, so I weeded it and trimmed everything back and swept it all out. It looks much tidier now. I didn't clean the side return behind the garden gate but I'm leaving all that campanula for now, because it's still blooming and the bees like it. Besides, no one can see that area besides us.


I also moved our fiddle-leaf fig outside for its annual shower. I noticed on Friday night that it was looking pretty dusty. I hosed it down and I think it appreciated the "rain." That pink geranium at bottom left is one I rescued from a neighbor's yard waste bag on the street. They threw it out, and I grabbed it and brought it home and stuck it in a pot and it's perfectly happy. It's a beautiful color.


Remember how a squirrel was climbing into our peanut feeder? Well, I was afraid it would get trapped in there, and that combined with the RSPB advice not to feed nuts during the summer persuaded me to take the feeder down entirely. But now the squirrel has figured out how to climb into the seed feeder as well! Argh!

I don't think it likes the seeds as much, and it seems to struggle to reach them through the tiny openings for the birds, so maybe it will eventually grow discouraged. (Ha!)

God, this is a boring post. Sorry about that. What can I talk about that doesn't involve houseplants or bird feeders? How about Donald Trump and his completely bungled refurbishment of the Reflecting Pool? I am amused as heck by the incompetence he and his team displayed on that job, with the pool's fancy new coating coming away in sheets (within days!) and the water a poisonous-looking algae-green. Trump was so arrogant, insisting he could do the job right at a fraction of the cost of previous restorations, without properly understanding any complications -- and now he's paying for that arrogance. (Though as usual he refuses to take responsibility, blaming leftist vandals. Even if you buy that excuse -- which I don't -- what kind of properly installed pool coating allows people to cut or tear it off?)

And how about his apparent insistence that the scaffold remain in place in front of the Kennedy Center, so no one can see that his name has been removed by court order? He's such a baby. The entire country is being run by middle schoolers -- and I've worked with middle schoolers so I know.

Then we have politics here in the UK. The sudden return of Andy Burnham to Parliament, after a stint as mayor of Manchester, apparently poses an existential threat to Starmer. To an outsider it may seem peculiar that Burnham, who was only just elected to Parliament days ago, would leapfrog everyone else to become Starmer's chief rival -- but he was in parliament for years before his Manchester gig, including in the cabinet, so he's quite experienced. I think Burnham is an appealing figure but as I've said, as unenthusiastic as I am about Starmer, I'm not sure I want to kick him out. I think there's something to be said for maintaining the continuity of the government, especially after several years of very short-lived prime ministers.

As long as I'm boring you with gardening and politics, why not go whole-hog?


Here's the latest footage from our Garden Cam! Woo hoo! It wasn't a super exciting week, but we have a few mildly interesting moments.

We start with Crooked Tail and then Sharpie, sniffing around in the rain. (That was on June 10, so we're actually going back more than a week.) They don't seem happy with the precipitation.
-- At 0:22, the next night, it's still damp but at least the rain's not pelting down.
-- At 0:35, the following night, it's drier still. 
-- At 0:45, Crooked Tail (I think?) shows up with something in his/her mouth. I'm not sure what it is. Maybe a dog treat from that still unidentified source? There's more back-and-forth by various foxes.
-- At 01:15, a great tit nibbles something from the ground.
-- At 01:20 there's more foxes wandering around.
-- At 02:14, another fox shows up with more food. I'm not sure what it's eating. It settles down for a nibble. (It's hard to discourage our rodent visitors when the foxes keep bringing food into the garden!)
-- At 02:35, Huge Cat makes an appearance. I like its triangular face mask.
-- At 02:49, we see a starling and a "little brown thing" (that's a birdwatching term), followed by a very poised squirrel.
-- At 03:08, a fox walks past and apparently surprises a cat offscreen, because we hear it yowling.
-- At 03:37, we see two clips of a blackbird (and hear a leaf-blower, ugh). The bird gets chased off by a squirrel.
-- At 04:09, a fox begins a long itching/grooming session. It may seem to go on for a while, but I actually cut out a full minute of footage!
-- At 04:55, a magpie seems to be collecting sticks. For a nest, maybe? Seems kind of late for that.
-- At 05:16, pigeon, squirrel and hoverfly.
-- At 05:31, various passing foxes.
-- At 05:54, I turned the camera for another angle on the garden and captured our old friend, the rat. (I moved the camera several times after this just to get different perspectives.)
-- At 05:59, a fox trots past. The video skips slightly.
-- At 06:01, the magpie is back, once again collecting sticks.
-- At 06:14, the foxes make a few more passes, curious about the camera's new location.

And with that, I'm going to retire the Garden Cam for a while. Let's give the poor animals some privacy for the summer, shall we?

21 comments:

  1. I saw a slide viewer and boxes of slides in the house clearance boxes at the car boot yesterday, I almost bought them to send to you for your 'collection'!

    Pouring gallons of bleach into That pool was a crazy thing to do- probably poisoned lots of critters as well as taking the new blue paint off the bottom.

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  2. Not boring, a measured life seen through the eyes of a garden. I am not too sure of Burnham either but he has done a lot of good in Manchester.

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  3. A lovely jungly garden!
    You'll have to set up a squirrel gymnastic challenge.
    Politics...I despair!!
    I think either as PM aren't the best for Scotland...or any of the other side of the house either. As for the other side of the pond..it just gets more unbeleiveable

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  4. An interesting garden video. Was that squark a cat or the demise of a rodent?
    Obviously not your Resident Roland unfortunately. With so many foxes around. it is surprising to see him..
    Small brown birds are LBJs...little brown jobs... apparently there are 37 that can be classified as such!!

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  5. Welcome to our world, garden, books, local walks, some weeks life is just our small world, and reading yours is a change from ours. I feel Starmer is only in the role for the title and salary, he is very good at talking, not so good at listening, we won't know if anyone else is any better. I feel politicians don't serve their communities, they look for leading roles to further themselves, it's a terrible situation.

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  6. The election results were rather interesting. I did not know Burnham has been in parliament before.
    While I knew about the algae in the pool, I didn't know it was falling to pieces as well. #47 is an effing tosser.

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  7. My son,
    This is indeed a boring post and not why I created humankind. I command that you create blogposts that brim with excitement and drama - tales of stolen passports, tombola stalls and reading "The God Delusion" by Richard Dawkins.
    Yours faithfully,
    God

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  8. Just once, I would like to hear tRump take responsibility for something, and say, I screwed up. I don't think he could do that on his deathbed.

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  9. Referring to Trump and company as middle schoolers is insulting to middle schoolers everywhere. I taught middle school for 39 years - they definitely have their moments, but not this extended level of insanity.

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  10. That whole tarp thing just shows what a pathetic child Cankles is. I await the day he is gone and his name is scrubbed from everything.

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  11. Dull days are what we long for when we're in crisis. So this one's okay.

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  12. Never boring - it's always good to see Nature at work in all her different forms.
    Your first photograph is stunning.

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  13. Why feel so negative about your post? It was just fine and that first photo was really beautiful. And don't insult middle schoolers!

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  14. I agree with ACM -- he's more of a toddler or fierce five. He treats rules like our seven-year Cameron plays board games. All of a sudden when Cam is losing, the rules start to change. The other one (9) just gets bored and leaves. (Their parents are trying!) The pool is such a metaphor for draining the swamp -- and making it worse. (For that matter, the East Wing destruction is a visual metaphor for the government as we knew it being destroyed.) I digress. But what a mess we are in and I hope you NEVER are in that way over there. I'd like to know more about Burnham. As for boring, your garden is never boring -- it's teeming with life!

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  15. I do not understand how, with all of the cats and foxes that roam your garden you can still have rats. Yes. I should send you Maurice. You could return her when she's taken care of your problems.
    I think the whole reflecting pool situation is such a perfect metaphor for Trump's handling of everything and the resulting failures that it's becoming a totemic story. And yes. He's blaming vandals. Of course he had nothing to do with it. HIS pool was perfect. Absolutely perfect. A reflecting pool like had never been seen before. No one could believe how perfect that pool was. Until the nasty people with TDS came and pissed in it.

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  16. The Maggie was playing pick-up sticks ... no collecting was done!

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  17. I don't find garden talk boring, probably because I indulge in it myself. As for Trump, the reflecting pool is a metaphor for his whole presidency (I didn't make that up, it's the first line of HCR's current newsletter). total incompetence. Fire all the educated and experienced technicians and scientists because of course he thinks he's smarter than everyone else, hire an inexperienced but loyal to him company/people, demand a rush job and it all fails. I read that it wasn't just that they poured hydrogen peroxide into the pool but they also didn't allow the paint to cure properly before filling it with water. Didn't even apply it properly, just poured the paint on the granite and spread it around with squeegees. So of course he's blaming democrat vandals because when does he ever take responsibility for his failures? And he's got the cops out there arresting people for taking a piece of the already floating paint as a souvenir charging them with vandalism.

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  18. I agree with all the other American posts. Nothing more or say about the Orange One except that I pray our country can recover. I shudder to tho of what Miller et al are doing that is hidden and we won’t find out until they are out.

    So much damage can be and probably is being done secretly that I despair

    What is becoming more and more public with catastrophes like the pool is the graft and total disregard for established protocol. The I AM ABOVE ALL LAWS attitude is blatantly obvious

    The courts are beginning to push back. The slush fund judge has pushed back. Hopefully this will encourage other judges

    Of course the Roberts court is frightening. However the fake Iran war and now the ridiculous agreement that pays 300 billion to them is maybe the straw /camel’s back.
    GOP if both houses are hearing loud and clear from their citizens. The tone deafness of TOO statements about liking inflation and the continued revelations of the tax money now being exposed to pay for the ballroom is turning the tide.

    For nostalgia watch the opening of the Obama presidential center. All four living former presidents and a wonderful celebration with artists who would never appear for the current occupant. And Obama speech was not about himself but inspiring to look ahead and fight for the values of the constitution and the declaration. His center btw is not only a library but a place for everyone to go and learn including the Tory of the south side it has a park and other community features. It’s an inspiring event to watch. I was sobbing at his speech and seeing all those four who even with their flaws were heads above who we have today.

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  19. That reflecting pool disaster encapsulates his presidency: corruption and incompetence lead to failure, then spin, spin, spin. Vandals, leftists, Antifa, whatever. I'm exhausted, especially by those who buy all the lies and condone the grift. Anyway, we might feel our posts are boring (I often do myself) but others' lives are always more interesting to readers. Hopefully!

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  20. The reflecting pool failure just adds to the long list of failures. What does the future bring? More of the same. The courts are taking notice and some action which is a step in the right direction.
    The activity in your city garden is impressive. The number of foxes visiting surprises me. If I see one fox every couple of months on my property, I consider myself lucky.

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