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| Flowering Quince |
I just tried to order a new wheelie bin for our rubbish collection. I noticed yesterday that ours, which has long been split along the sides, now has a big hole in it where two splits converged to make a wedge-shaped opening. It's big enough for rats to get through, and maybe even for foxes, so the bin must be replaced.
I looked online how to make this request and was told to log in to the council web site, which I did. I entered my address, blah blah blah, only to be told that although I could get a green recycling bin online, I had to call for a black rubbish bin. Why?!
As my mother used to say, "Everything has to be done at least twice."
The bins are split because our erstwhile upstairs neighbors, the Russians, used to pack about 600 pounds of renovation debris into them every week. Now that the Russians are gone, our rubbish collection is lighter than it's ever been, but we're still living with their legacy -- the damaged bins.
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| Comfrey |
The pictures today show some of what's blooming in the garden. I couldn't work outside as much as I would have liked yesterday, because it got rainy in the afternoon, but I still managed to repot another plant. I also watered everything indoors and did some houseplant maintenance.
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| Clematis in the neighbor's garden |
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| Snake's Head Fritillary, aka Checkerboard Lily |
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| Grape Hyacinths |
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| Bergenia |
Last night, we watched Louis Theroux's new documentary about the manosphere on Netflix. In it, he interviews various guys who would once have been dismissed as mere douchebags, but who now -- through the power of the internet -- have become wealthy social media stars. We have created a culture where saying offensive, obnoxious things is enough to make people rich and famous -- and the more offensive they are, the more rich and famous they get.
I was reminded of a paragraph in a New Yorker article about Stephen Fry that I also happened to reed this weekend:
Once, he was an enthusiastic user of Twitter, but his optimism about social media has waned: “It’s like the opening of the canal system—a wonderful method of transport, you can get stuff made in Birmingham and get it to the sea,” he said. “Then, before you know it, it’s full of rusting Tesco trolleys and turds.”






interesting...the comfrey flowers look right..but the leaves certainly don't????
ReplyDeleteIt us good to see everything starting to bloom
Being able to order a green bin online but not a black bin makes perfect sense...to someone.
ReplyDeleteThe clematis looks good.
I don't know the snake's head. It looks interesting.
I can imagine the way Louis Theroux handled the interviews.
Fry is often up for a good quote.
Your blog title today has probably never been said in the same sentence before!
ReplyDeleteI have a patch of comfrey like that except the flowers have pink tinges - luckily it doesn't spread like the normal purple comfrey