Saturday, August 9, 2025
A Displaced Spider
I did some late-summer garden clearing yesterday morning, taking down most of the teasels and the burdock. They were past flowering and I didn't want to give any of them a chance to re-seed. I chopped down all the teasels on the lawn and all the burdock, period.
While working I tried my best to spare any little creatures I found, including several grasshoppers and this rather large garden spider -- a couple of inches long, I'd estimate. It scurried off a section of cut stem and I moved it to another teasel that will stay standing (for now). It was there all day yesterday but gone this morning, so who knows what's become of it. Hopefully it found a new home after being so rudely displaced.
After all the clearing I mowed the lawn, and this is how things look now. Quite a difference from the teasel forest!
That plant out in the middle of the lawn is one of next year's teasels. We seem to only have one out in the grass, which is ideal. I'd like to keep them in the flower beds if possible! (I left several standing in the central bed so they could set seed.)
I also noticed that our canna lily, which normally has dark red foliage, has generated a prominent bright green streak in one of its leaves. I think this is known as a "chimera," when a portion of a plant's cells mutate and generate a different color pattern than the dominant one. I remember seeing this in citrus when I was a kid -- sometimes an orange would appear that was mostly orange with a wedge of green, for example, with a very stark line between the two colors.
Anyway, I'm not sure that's what's going on here, but it's interesting. It makes me think of Tulsi Gabbard.
In the afternoon I went to the optometrist to have my eyes checked. It's been several years since my last exam in 2021 (!) and I suspected I might need new glasses. Sure enough, my prescription has changed -- my distance vision has deteriorated a little, for one thing -- and I have ordered new lenses to put in my existing frames. They're going to be "varifocal" rather than just reading glasses, so I'll wear them pretty much full-time. We'll see how this works out! Fortunately my eyes are healthy otherwise, although my right eye is significantly weaker than my left, which surprised me.
Finally, I met up last night with my recently retired friend Gordon at a very floral pub in Islington (above). We had a couple of pints and some Thai food. He knew I was alone this week and after having lost Olga, I might need some company. People are looking out for me.
I love how the pub doesn't even have a sign, though it's pretty obvious it's a pub!
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Good to be a considerate gardener! The whole is looking lovely.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if you can propagate a lily from a leaf? Just a thought...but they are definitely not my favourite flowers. Lily pollen is not my friend!!
Is the pub sign behind the greenery?
Your garden looks lovely, as does the floral pub. I have a weaker left eye. Everytime I get a new prescription I have to go back within a day because they make too strong a change and I can't read. Being also crosseyed, I can't get used to multi focals at all.
ReplyDeleteI tried varifocals once before I had cataract surgery. I couldn't get used to them and kept tripping over things so gave up. An expensive waste of time!
ReplyDeleteHope yours do the job for you.
The pub is called "The Hemingford Arms". I doubt that that Tulsi Gabbard has ever been in there - nor Kristi Noem. Too busy in beauty parlours, at hairdressers and in the company of cosmetic surgeons. You did a good job of tidying up the garden.
ReplyDeleteThat's the kind of restful garden I could sit in for hours on a warm day.
ReplyDeleteThat pub is gorgeous. The spider would creep me out. I’ve been told by a Spanish friend who lived in England for several years that the spiders are terrifying. She’s never been to Australia.
ReplyDeleteWhat a considerate gardener you are. And so cool of friends to step up in case you're lonely. It says a lot about you.
ReplyDeleteAccording to Reform, that idyllic scene outside the pub in London couldn't happen. What a wonderful sight and so kind of your friend. We miss our dogs so much.
ReplyDeleteType of garden I like. Lush with a path in the middle. Looks very peaceful. Plant biology is crazy to me; unbelievably fast adaptation. Complete chaos, dormancy, then years later they pop up again (Happened with lilies)
ReplyDeleteYour garden rewards your hard work. The pub looks pretty and crowded. I wonder who has the job of watering the buckets, or maybe they have an automatic watering system.
ReplyDeleteGlad you got out in the garden. I imagine you felt better after you spent time there than before. At least that's how it works for me. You ARE a very conscientious gardener. You tend the wee creatures as well as the plants.
ReplyDeleteThe garden looks beautiful and well maintained. It is therapeutic in nature. Good to meet some friends and have a nice time together. Stumbled upon your blog and liked it. Thank you for sharing! :)
ReplyDeleteYour garden looks so peaceful.
ReplyDeleteAnd that pub looks like a fun spot for a pint and some people watching.
I imagine the sign for the pub is hidden behind all that greenery. And your garden is, of course, wonderful. I have several tasks out in my yard but too hot to be out there more than an hour or so at a time. I'm sure the spider found a new spot.
ReplyDeleteThat must be a pretty popular pub! It's overflowing with customers. I love all the greenery in front of it. The garden looks great. It's your own private paradise.
ReplyDeleteOutstanding Pub And I So Appreciate The Nonchalant Appearance
ReplyDeleteWay Cool ,
Cheers
Left eye doing the heavy lifting- good that there are two! The pub 'crowd under the foliage - let's see how close everyone can get.
ReplyDeleteIn every garden photo I am looking for Olga, the good girl. Doesn't seem right.
Spider will have to do, I guess.
At first you might be moving your head up and down as you figure out which part of the glasses you should be looking out of for reading or distance or whatever, but you will get used to them soon. ;) That looks like a popular pub! What a nice, thoughtful friend!
ReplyDeleteI notice lots of bug activity in the leaf that the spider is on. Maybe that 's why he was there.
ReplyDeleteYour garden is looking lovely. I like the curving borders and the wide grassy path between the two.
ReplyDeleteThe pub looks very popular and the greenery enclosing the exterior is robust. What's not to like about a wall of greenery. Enjoying Thai food and a few pints with a friend sounds ideal.
I've always had varifocal lenses and get on well with them. You've worked hard in your garden, I know all about doing that as I have a huge garden and really enjoy being out there.
ReplyDeleteWendy (Wales)
I've seen photos of chimera cats (and other animals) and they look so bizarre, but fascinating! When I see a white streak in hair, I think of Cruella de Vil.
ReplyDeleteI was in the greenhouse a while back and reached for a key. There was a very large spider there that gave me a start. I channeled my inner Steve. He lived.
ReplyDeleteI've been dodging a spider in the shower for the last week, but I was happy to see that it had moved on yesterday. I'm not all that agile, and I was having to do some complicated gyrations to keep from washing it down the drain!
ReplyDeleteI LOL'd at Tulsi Gabbard - ha! And I'm glad you have folks looking out for you. That looks like a fabulous pub.
Have to say...given who the striped leaf reminded you of, if I were you, I'd have been tempted to lop it off. "With relish," as Rizzo would have said.
ReplyDeleteThen again, you are a nice gardener. :)
you are so fortunate to have a lovely garden in the middle of London
ReplyDeleteGood for you sparing that spider, I reckon she/he eats her weight in bugs daily, your garden will thank you. The sidewalk in front of the pub is seriously crowded, that's a lot of folks in a narrow space.
ReplyDeleteThat is a very busy pub, with lovely sitting out weather by the look of it. There must be a lot of work in keeping the greenery looking so nice.
ReplyDeleteI finally googled teasels, so now I know what they are. What eats the seed heads? The rosette they make the first year is interesting. Who knew?
ReplyDeleteI love your garden. I'm glad people are looking after you.
ReplyDelete