Monday, September 20, 2021

A Domestic Rainy Day


Remember how I said our zinnias were looking a bit sad? Well, this may be part of the reason!

When I got up yesterday I set three goals -- finish my Newbery book, mow the lawn, and make a banana pudding. Two out of three ain't bad. I finished the book and I made the pudding.


I'm still trying to use up the box of Nilla Wafers we bought ages ago -- they'd already been sitting around a while when I made my last banana pudding, way back in June. (And yes, they're stale, but when they go in a pudding it doesn't matter.) I think I have about one more pudding's worth.

The book, "Roller Skates," was a rather sunny tale about a privileged girl growing up in New York in the 1890s, hanging out with the working folks and traveling around the city on, yes, roller skates. There were a few tragic scenes but they weren't explored very fully. The whole thing reminded me of a Shirley Temple movie. (The book is from 1936.)

Some of you suggested yesterday that I not pressure myself to read. But I find that I have to deliberately set aside time to do it -- otherwise there are just too many daily distractions, and I really, really want to complete this Newbery project this school year. If I read one book a week I should finish up next spring, and I'd like it to be faster than that.
 
I did not get the lawn mowed. Right around lunchtime it started to rain, so that scotched my plans. I also didn't walk Olga, but it wasn't for lack of trying. She was excited to go until she went outside and felt dampness on her paws. Then she turned tail for the front door.


Here's some of what's happening in the garden. Outside the back door we've got a couple of geraniums, the coleus and, growing up between the paving stones, some purple asters (aka Michaelmas daisies). That geranium on the right needs a trim, but I'll wait until spring.


The sunflowers are opening, finally. Looks like one of them is a brownish variety.


And our wildflower bed is still going strong, with blue cornflowers, yellow crown daisies and admittedly not wild nasturtiums. The white flax has gone to seed -- you can see the little round pods. I'm just going to let them go. Flax next year, maybe?


I started to cut down the yellowing burdock plants, but then I found several of these guys on the stems -- can you see him, peeking out from behind a leaf? It's a green shield bug. So I guess I'll leave the plants for now!

39 comments:

  1. A "where's Waldo" moment, trying to see the bug. I am not sure how to save our geraniums over winter. Mr. Google will probably have an idea. The rains have come and everything has melted. Looks sad like the only tool the gardener had was a hammer.

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    1. I bring our geraniums inside for the winter. Are yours in pots?

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  2. Maybe the author of Roller Skates was hoping it would be made into a Shirley Temple movie. It’s so funny that Olga abhors rain but adores mud. That shield bug, and your photo, are amazing!

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    1. It IS weird how Olga loves mud and even wading in ponds, but hates rain! Maybe because she has control when she's wading or rolling in mud? Is my dog a control freak?

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  3. I remember reading that book & being fascinated by the concept of going everywhere, every day on roller skates and having marvelous encounters and adventures on said skates. I think I put mine on and traversed the length of our child-friendly street's sidewalks a couple of times before getting bored, taking them off and finding something else to do.

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    1. OK, well, there's a testament to the effectiveness of the book! Maybe other kids will be similarly motivated today. I didn't know roller skates even existed way back in the 1890s, when the book is set.

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  4. How about purchasing a dog treadmill for Olga? I copied this from "Doggy Planet":-
    "In this day and age, with demanding jobs, family commitments and just the grinding style of life – finding time to walk your beloved dog may be difficult. Not to mention other variables such as horrible, cold and rainy weather – not the ideal conditions to take your dog on a walk.

    Nevertheless, your dog's health will be of the utmost importance to you, and this is where a dog treadmill can really help in assisting you to keep your dog healthy and young at heart."

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  5. Everyone in blogland has an opinion and many like to foist that opinion on other grown ups that know themselves very well
    Do what you want x

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    1. Well, I don't mind people making suggestions. I'll always do what I want anyway. :)

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  6. Rather late in your season for sunflower blooming, yet you haven't had such a bad summer?

    The banana pudding looks...interesting.

    I can see the bug. We have them here too, although it is many years since I have seen one.

    I wonder how a coleus would go on our windy balcony. It's a couple of decades since we have had one.

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    1. It's been a cooler summer than usual, I think, which may be why the sunflowers seem a bit behind. I'm hoping we get some good flowers over the next few weeks, at least.

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  7. My grandmother would layer the cookies and banana coins and pudding. Yours is making me hungry.

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    1. Yeah, that's exactly what I did! Some varieties require meringue and baking, but this one is just instant pudding layered with bananas and cookies -- the easy version. :)

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  8. I think it’s amazing and wonderful for a school librarian to have read all the Newberry. books! Who better to give a recommendation.

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    1. My biggest problem is I forget the books after I read them. If you asked me what "The Whipping Boy" is about, for example, I couldn't tell you -- even though I read it. My memory is terrible. I remember the ones I really like, though.

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  9. I haven't had banana pudding since I was a child and mother used to make it. And it's been that long since I've had a Nilla Wafer.

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    1. It's a Southern staple! My babysitter used to make it when I was a kid. As far as I'm concerned there's no reason to eat a Nilla Wafer except in banana pudding.

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  10. Your flowers are still looking quite beautiful there. Love that darker sunflower.

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    1. It's nice, isn't it? I'm eager to see it after it matures a bit more.

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  11. so much here hasn't bloomed or if it did it bloomed sparsely. I blame the deep freeze. the oxblood lilies are the latest. so few this year. I hope the bulbs didn't freeze. and we really need rain.

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    1. I'm sure that freeze knocked a lot of plants back. Not to mention insects and animals.

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  12. I WANT BANANA PUDDING! Sorry I'm shouting, but I might have to buy some vanilla wafers & pudding mix & make one!

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  13. The insects appear to be pretty happy with your yard. Lots to eat and enjoy. I love the color of that sunflower and I see a few more buds ready to bloom.

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  14. I want banana pudding too, even with stale biscuits! We have lots of baby snails, ad I found a shield bug on the bedroom door last night. I rescued it and put it outside where it belongs. It was a duller green than yours though.

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    1. Apparently this is the season for the shield bugs (aka stink bugs). Apparently they burrow into the leaf litter and overwinter, coming out again next year. Who knew?

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  15. That's certainly a good, southern dessert! Do you cook your custard for the banana pudding or just do the boxed pudding type?

    That little green bug is really camouflaged well.

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    1. No, I just use boxed instant. I'm not ambitious enough to make cooked pudding. :)

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  16. I love the photo of your wildflower bed - those colors really pop!

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  17. Shield bug? Is that like a stink bug, only green? I don't like them whatever they are although they are welcome outside. I love vanilla wafers--with frosting!

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    1. Yeah, stink bugs and shield bugs are basically the same thing. I don't know if ours stink and I'm not going to kill one to find out! Staying outside is imperative for all bugs, as far as I'm concerned. I like insects but only in the garden.

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  18. re your Vanilla Wafers: I just read today that brown rice lasts for about six months, white rice for 25 to 30 YEARS! I absolutely love your flowers.

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    1. Yeah, the stale wafers really aren't a problem. They get saturated with pudding anyway and soften up, so it doesn't matter.

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  19. Zinnias are my absolute favorites and I grow a huge patch of them every year and enjoy cut flowers for months. This year they have a blight that's particular to zinnias and apparently very common. The leaves are covered with black spots with a white interior. I read that I have to get rid of all traces of the plants and then not plant them there for 2 years. UGH!

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    1. Yikes! I've never heard of that! Does it kill the plants? I should cut more of ours. I just leave them outside but I think we'd enjoy them more indoors. (Of course, then I'd be depriving the snails.)

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  20. Your flowers are beautiful. I love love Nasturtiums. Enjoy your day, hugs, Edna B.

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