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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
Oh, really? I have some purple comfrey with slightly longer leaves, and maybe smoother ones. Is that what you're expecting?
DeleteBeing 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.
I suspect it's part of the council's effort to make it hard for us to throw things away. They're trying to push us all into recycling as much as possible.
DeleteYour 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
Ha! I thought of that when I typed it out -- it's very yin and yang!
DeleteWe have purple comfrey that is supposedly engineered not to spread. The white stuff is just the opposite -- it came over from the neighbor's garden and now we have two of them!
I’ve been hitting so many websites like that lately. They drive me crazy. What a waste of time. Glorious flower pics. I want that Snake's Head Fritillary.
ReplyDeleteI love the snake's head too -- I wonder if they would grow in Spain? Might be too warm there!
DeleteLouis Theroux is very brave - I've thought so for a long time.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely. He gets a lot of credit for tackling tough subjects and treading where many would fear to go!
DeleteYour flowers down there are more advanced than ours. That clematis is beautiful.
ReplyDeleteIt is disturbing to think that those toxic videos have so many fans out there.
I love the clematis. It used to climb up the house wall but it's been stripped down from there. We do have some growing into our shrubbery, though, and that's fine with me.
DeleteYour season is so far ahead of ours, wonderful flowering going on. I don't get the rudeness and profanity that's popular. I wonder if teen boys love it because it gives them permission? Then they wonder why women don't like them!
ReplyDeleteI think that's part of why many young men like Trump -- he lets them be jerks. Even encourages it, I'd say!
DeleteThough I find the young men's toxicity horrible, the tools were given to them by today's generations, unfortunately no restrictive guiding hand was built in. Did you know that comfrey was a fertiliser, the only unsavoury bit of course is that the leaves have to soak for a few weeks and the water gets smelly.
ReplyDeleteYes, I've heard of making "comfrey tea," but I don't do it because I don't want to chop down the plant!
DeleteI hope someone answers the phone and dispatches the replacement bin, with less difficulty than trying to do it online.
ReplyDeleteWe shall see! I haven't called yet.
DeleteI saw a bit of the Louis Theroux interview on Gogglebox this weekend, he does handle his interviews very cleverly doesn't he. People don't seem to realise what they are answering with.
ReplyDeleteI hope your bin arrives quickly, we have just had to order a new blue lidded (paper recycling) bin, as our junk mail at the new bungalow is building up to an alarming level. Once we get our new front door I will be buying one of those stickers that says 'No Junk Mail Please', it's such a waste of paper.
I suppose it doesn't hurt to put those stickers on the door, but I'm skeptical about whether they really work! You'll have to let me know!
DeleteMy sticker works on my mailbox!
DeleteIf someone puts renovation debris in a regular bin here in Germany, it won't be picked up. It just doesn't make sense why you would be able to order a green bin online but not a black one.
ReplyDeleteOne of the "Knives Out" films has one such character as you describe, the kind of offensive, toxic man who has become rich and famous through Social Media by being offensive and toxic. I shudder to think that such people really do exist. Reality surpasses any film maker's imagination any time.
PS: Grape hyacinths are among my favourite spring flowers!
DeleteThey say they won't pick up construction debris here either, but the fact is, if it's small enough to fit in a bin, they'll usually collect it.
DeleteI couldn't live with myself if I were spreading such toxicity!
I really love the Snake's Head Fritillary. Such an interesting pattern on the flowers!
ReplyDeleteIsn't it amazing? As someone else said, how does nature come up with these things?
DeleteThat checkerboard lily is amazing! How does nature do that!?
ReplyDeleteIt's hard to be more toxic than our hate-filled, horrible president.
I'm sure plant hybridizers had something to do with it, too -- but still!
DeleteOscar Night For Me And So Dig The Life Sprouting Out Back For Ya
ReplyDeleteOne Love ,
Cheers
Did you watch the Oscars? I read about them after the fact but watched none of the show.
DeleteLots of pretties in the garden. When I see posts (which isn't all that often, usually someone sharing it) from men like that I always wonder how's that toxic masculinity working out for ya? Good luck getting laid. But maybe money is a good enough substitute.
ReplyDeleteSurprisingly, these guys had girlfriends. Louis asked the women, in effect, why they were there -- the answers were interesting. Most of them seemed to have a sort of traditionalist view of gender norms, while being willing to overlook oafish behavior in the hopes that it will someday subside.
DeleteI've never heard of a checkered lily. It's very attractive.
ReplyDeleteI don't remember ever seeing them in the states, but surely they must grow there!
DeleteYour plant/flower pictures are so beautiful! They would make a wonderful collage!
ReplyDeleteThank you! Sometimes using the good camera makes a big difference!
DeleteYour garden is beautiful and showing lots of Spring blooms. My snow is melting and no longer exceeds the top of my boots. Yay! I see ground in patches.
ReplyDeleteI find toxic men pompous. Many have no clue about how badly they come across. Yet, they know they can buy what they want and as long as this is possible, they will do so.
In my town, construction debris must be delivered to a particular dumpster by the homeowner (or the homeowner's contractor). A fee is charged, based on the amount of debris.
We have similar rules here. The Russians violated them all the time.
DeleteFritillaria are my favorite flowers, so delicate and beautiful. They're also tough and one of my first plants up in the spring.
ReplyDeleteI looked at the trailer for that netflix documentary you're talking about and it's so sad, not new, but so sad. I hope Jack stays far away from shit like that.
The fritillaries are surprisingly tough, aren't they? Every year it surprises me when it comes up yet again.
DeleteThat checkered lily is a lovely thing. I mean, they all are but that is one cool flower.
ReplyDeleteToxic masculinity? I don't see those guys as masculine at all. In fact, they're more like whiney little boys whose mothers aren't paying enough attention to to suit them.
They do seem to be overcompensating, don't they?
DeleteI love that quote from Stephen Fry. It describes my sentiments about things like twitter very well. I started out thinking it was a wonderful new tool but it quickly became obvious the evil direction it was heading.
ReplyDeleteGreat flower photos today. That checkerboard lily is an amazing sight. Nature is the true artist.
Yeah, whatever promise Twitter once held has really fallen by the wayside!
DeleteThat checkerboard lily -- just amazing. It doesn't even look real! So many wonderful things in your garden this year. And Those Darned Russians! Good luck with the bin!
ReplyDeleteThe legacy of the Russians lives on!
DeleteYour garden says Spring while our weather for today in thunderstorms and tornado watches.
ReplyDeleteIt's always something.
Us too. It has been a wild stretch of weather. The temperature fluctuations have been crazy. It is 60° now. In 4 hours, we are supposed 5 inches of snow.
DeleteI always wonder how wildlife copes with such extreme temperature swings. It must be hard on nesting birds and other critters.
Deletehttps://www.uniladtech.com/streaming/netflix/louis-theroux-hstikkytokky-feelings-netflix-manosphere-849371-20260313
ReplyDeleteYou sent me on an adventure. I appreciate this podcast.
Interesting! I would say the guys seem like posers -- putting up a front and concealing who they really are beneath. It's all about image.
DeleteI love seeing all your blooms! That checkerboard thing is so unique. Everything is out in full force here now. The dogwoods (American) and Wisteria are gorgeous. And of course it's supposed to drop below freezing tonight.
ReplyDeleteWell, I imagine dogwoods can cope with a freeze. Wisteria, I'm not sure!
DeleteBlooming flowers make my day! I have grape hyacinths too (a surprise) and other hyacinths are also blooming. Next will be tulips. I would be angered and saddened by that program; I think Dave and you are brave to watch it. That type of male feels threatened by any kind of equality/equity and now seems to have permission to be angry, insulting and aggressive. Like someone else we know? (and despise)
ReplyDeleteYeah, Trump and Rush Limbaugh and all these other icons of "masculinity" (I'm putting that in quotes because I don't think that's really what it is) are all about giving people permission to be their worst selves.
DeleteGorgeous flowers - and your front garden from the previous post! I am so glad that you have such joyous flowers - we all need beauty in our lives. Toxic masculinity, not so much.
ReplyDeleteWe DO need the beauty -- I agree!
DeleteLovely to see those beautiful flowers.
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
Hope they gave you a boost!
DeleteAnd these "men" have become rich and famous because of other "men" just like them reading and supporting what they have to say. In my world, you and Dave among many others, are what I consider to be men, those others are scumbags.
ReplyDeleteI don't get why these guys feel so insecure and so threatened. What are they afraid of?
DeleteAfraid of being left out (of the crowd) afraid of being called sissy, afraid of themselves because maybe they haven't yet figured out who they are and think this tough "manly" exterior show is what is meant to be?
DeleteStephen Fry has a wonderful way of studying a complicated topic and the winnowing it down to a sentence or two that sums it up perfectly, is undeniably true and leaves such a visual in your mind that the phrase 'social media' will always be linked to turds and Tesco carts.
ReplyDeleteI thought it really was the perfect analogy for our modern social media culture!
Delete