Remember how I staked up the daffodils in the garden? Well, some critter is having fun with the stakes at the daffodils' expense. I went out yesterday and found one of the stakes lying in the grass, the string gnawed in half, daffodil heads strewn about. This has happened a couple of times. It seems an odd thing to play with, but somebody out there is amused by it.
I guess life is pretty boring for garden foxes when they're not being chased by dogs. They need a toy.
And now the daffodil hospital on our kitchen windowsill has several more patients. (I guess it's more of a hospice than a hospital, truth be told.)
Here's what our seedlings look like -- as you can see, I have one corncockle at upper left, and a sprinkling of tiny foxgloves. Still nothing from the honesty (I'm surprised!) or the jimson weed.
And now the daffodil hospital on our kitchen windowsill has several more patients. (I guess it's more of a hospice than a hospital, truth be told.)
Here's what our seedlings look like -- as you can see, I have one corncockle at upper left, and a sprinkling of tiny foxgloves. Still nothing from the honesty (I'm surprised!) or the jimson weed.
I was walking to work on Thursday when I found this plate in a box of stuff left out with someone's trash. It's not really my style -- more "Pioneer Woman" than "Bald Fiftysomething Gay Man" -- but I picked it up anyway. We have a cabinet of useful dishes at work, for office parties and that kind of thing, so I washed it up and added it to our stash.
Prompted by several of you, Dave and I watched "Murder Among the Mormons" last night. We found it interesting and although I have a dim memory of hearing about the "salamander letter" at some point in the past, I didn't remember anything else about the case, so it was mostly new to me. I was a freshman in college when all that went down and I'm sure I wasn't paying much attention to the news. I read Jon Krakauer's book "Under the Banner of Heaven" years ago and that was a riveting account of Mormonism, particularly as practiced in a couple of fundamentalist communities in southern Utah and northern Arizona. It may have mentioned the "salamander" case as well, I'm not sure.
I took my first Covid test yesterday. As school reconvenes on Monday, the administration has asked everyone to get tested and to be tested regularly in the immediate future, in an effort to catch asymptomatic cases. We've all been given self-tests to perform at home. Well, yesterday I had a test administered by a health worker at school -- just so I'd know what to do for the self-testing. It was negative, needless to say. It seems unlikely this precaution will turn up asymptomatic cases but maybe it will.
Dave made some terrific chocolate chip cookies yesterday -- in fact, more chocolate chunk than chip. He broke up a dark chocolate bar and incorporated it, as well as toasted walnuts, into the cookie dough. When he was baking, he exclaimed happily at how well they were turning out, and I said, "Looking good?"
"No!" he said, in mock annoyance. "They're looking fabulous!"
"Oh, so there's glitter on them?" I said. "And feathers?"
The cookies sounded great until the glitter and feathers. But fabulousness doesn't come cheap.
ReplyDelete"As you can see..." Yes I immediately knew that was a corncockle. Excuse me while I go look up corncockle.
We must suffer for our fabulousness. I don't know why corncockles are called that, but they're nice-looking plants!
DeleteThe dish is a child’s dish live seen the design before
ReplyDeleteThat makes sense. The ducks look a bit like Beatrix Potter characters, don't they?
DeleteWhen we had our allotment, the foxes bit the hose pipe into several small pieces, lol
ReplyDeleteLove the plate, another great find.
Briony
X
They play with Olga's toys when we leave them in the garden overnight!
DeleteShould you put that plate up for sale may I please have first right of refusal. Imagine serving someone a bowl of soup and their surprise and amusement at what they'll find at the bottom!
ReplyDeleteI am quite jealous of your "kerb crawling" finds. The closest I come to it here, at the South Coast, is going to the municipal tip/recycling center. There is an area where the staff will put out what is someone's trash, another's treasure. That way, once upon a time, I procured a pupil's school desk, wooden, complete with inkwell and lidded storage space. And a vase so outrageously retro it makes Kitsch sing. Strange thing is that the old school desk, in many ways drab and unassuming to look at, draws (it sits in our hall way) many a comment from visitors.
Some years ago, further down same coast, I lived close to an artists materials' shop specialising in customized framing. Sometimes a frame would go "wrong" (say two millimetres out) and they'd put them out on the pavement, empty, for pennies. Thus a large and discarded beauty I took to a glazier and had their best mirror glass put in. Price of the individual parts immaterial - what is lovely if you see potential, beauty and a use where, maybe, at first glance there isn't.
U
It's great that the staff at the recycling center set stuff aside that others might find useful. I've seen frame shops with those inexpensive "mistakes" on the pavement for just a few pounds.
Delete"The Mystery of the Daffodil Stakes" by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle featuring Sherlock Holmes and his sidekick Olga (The Hound of the Baskervilles).
ReplyDeleteIt was a mmonlit night in West Hampstead and something stirred in the shrubbery, something malevolent and wrong...
Our garden has its share of wildlife but I don't think any of it is malevolent. Not like Florida, where MOST of it is.
DeleteThe plate may not be my style either, but I am amazed at the things, treasures sometimes, you find as you walk around.
ReplyDeleteAnd I kind of like the idea of glitter and feathers to make the cookies more fabulous. As Carlos is the MasterBaker™ at our house, I'm wondering if there are edible feathers and glitters?
I'm not sure about feathers but I bet edible glitter exists. Which doesn't mean I want to eat it.
Delete"Fabulous" is such a fabulous word.
ReplyDeleteI like the little dish. It's sweet.
It was too cute to leave there, that's for sure!
DeleteOK, well, that made me laugh, the whole fabulous thing. and of course you picked up that perfectly fine and sweet dish.
ReplyDeleteGlad it made you laugh. :)
DeleteDon't you have a camera out in your garden? Maybe you can spy the culprit?
ReplyDeleteThe daffodils do look sweet on the windowsill!
We do! I just set it up again so we'll see if we get any interesting footage in the next few days.
DeleteFeathers and glitter = fabulous. I love it and will have to remember that!
ReplyDeleteI made gingerbread pancakes for supper last night, very good.
I love gingerbread! Maybe that will be our next batch of cookies.
DeleteYou made me laugh, Steve... more like a daffodil hospice than hospital. Yes, even the ones we know won't survive get acts of kindness.
ReplyDeleteWe haven't watched the "Murder Among The Mormons" but when I first saw the title while streaming something on Netflix the other day, my brain saw "Murder Among The Morons." Now that's what I've been calling it, with no offense meant whatsoever to the actual Mormons. I just can't stop seeing that title.
I got my first Covid Vaccine yesterday. Yay!!! I hope you get yours soon.
Ha! Funny what we see when we read things quickly. In this case, whatever the perpetrator was, he was decidedly not a moron.
DeleteDear Steve,
ReplyDeleteWell, we are constantly amazed at what you find lying on the pavement on your travels around town. We can honestly say in all our years that we have never found anything remotely worth picking up from the street, but you seem to find treasure on every outing. we love the dish. Indeed, it reminds us of the 'Young Pioneers' here in Hungary who all wore brightly coloured neckerchiefs just like the geese on the dish.
Anyone who can make biscuits declared as fabulous is welcome in our kitchen. We really never want to be in the kitchen, but needs must. However, the thought of fabulous meals being brought hot from the oven to the table fills our hearts with joy. Lucky you!!
Just a suggestion, but perhaps your next bulb planting could include varieties of Narcissus pseudonarcissus, which is a relative of the wild daffodil and is small, short, stocky and strong. What it lacks in height it makes up for in simple beauty, would not need staking and would multiply generously. It might be an answer to that problem at least.
If we replant daffodils we will definitely go for those! Thanks for the tip. The daffodils we have were planted long before we moved in 7 years ago -- it's amazing how reliable they are, coming up every year, even if they are a bit "floppy."
DeleteI like Jon Krakauers books so I will look for this one.
ReplyDeleteI believe it was criticized for its portrayal of Mormonism, because as I recall it focuses partly on some very extreme Mormon believers -- not mainstream Mormons. Still, it's interesting.
DeleteOh Man, The Banner Of Heaven undid me! I was expecting some of the same from the DOC and the (hilarious) salamander letter but got none of that, just highly skilled guy who took it down the wrong fork in the road. Genius , really. Seriously mad, as can be seen at the end when they show his photo through the years. Thanks for the laugh- Glitter and feathers. LOVE!Xx
ReplyDeleteYeah, that guy is the epitome of psychopathic. Dave and I are convinced he and his childhood friend are both gay and repressed, too, which probably exacerbated their craziness.
DeleteThose cookies do sound fabulous to me! I also read "Under the Banner of Heaven" but haven't heard much about that show. I'll have to look it up.
ReplyDeleteIt's worth checking out! Some truly bizarre characters, for sure.
DeleteMmmmmmmm! Those cookies DO sound fabulous. I love toasted walnuts (and dark chocolate chunks!) in cookies. Sorry about your daffodils, but think how much fun the foxes must have had!
ReplyDeleteI can just picture them out there frolicking! Hopefully our garden camera will capture some footage now that I've set it up again.
DeleteOh my goodness, those cookies sound heavenly. I might have to whip up a batch myself.
ReplyDeleteI hadn't heard of that movie you mentioned but years ago, I drove through Colorado City in far north Arizona just to see what it looked like. I was with two friends and we were all on edge the whole time. It seemed like every house was huge and under construction because they have to keep adding on rooms for new wives and kids. We couldn't get out of there fast enough.
Your "hospice" window looks very cheerful.
YES! That's the place Krakauer wrote about -- and neighboring Hillsdale, in Utah. Super weird!
DeleteI'm a little bored. Maybe I can find something to play with in a neighbor's yard. I haven't watched Murder Among The Mormons yet, but I also read Jon Krakauer's book, which was very interesting. He's a good writer.
ReplyDeleteLove,
Janie
Ha! I think your entertainment threshold might be higher than our neighborhood foxes'!
DeleteRighteous Post - Well Done - Heavenly Cookies There Mr D - Enjoy The Week Ahead
ReplyDeleteCheers
There's nothing bad about a chocolate chunk cookie!
DeletePro tip: avoid smarty pants comments when chocolate chunk cookies are involved. :)
ReplyDeleteYeah, true. I'm just appreciative he made them! :)
DeleteWere the cookies gluten free? That [late is granny cute.
ReplyDelete