This is the candytuft plant that Olga used to wipe her face on after eating every night. Pretty much her whole body, in fact. This spring it's looking unusually lush and blooming up a storm, not having been mauled recently by a dog.
This is one benefit of being petless -- the garden plants are unmolested. As much as Olga loved the garden, she did inflict some damage, wandering through the borders and creating a shady bed beneath the peonies. Not a reason to avoid getting another dog, though I'm still leaning toward waiting until after we return from our summer holidays.
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I could definitely get used to this retirement thing! Just about the most urgent activity I performed yesterday was giving Totoro his semi-annual bath (above).
I also puttered around the house -- thereby proving that puttering can indeed be done indoors as well as in the garden. I vacuumed, did a load of laundry and finished "The Haves and the Have-Yachts." I've had a Waterstones gift card hanging around for months, I think since Christmas -- I can't even remember who gave it to me. So in the afternoon I walked down to Waterstones and bought Patrick Radden Keefe's new book, "London Falling," which I've heard is very good. The cashier at the bookstore was generous with her praise -- she said it was more about human nature than just a true-crime story. I'm looking forward to reading it. I loved his book about the IRA, "Say Nothing."
Here's some of what's blooming in our garden at the moment -- the aquilegia (above), which has some little insects in the center of the flower...
...the azaleas...
...and the African daisies, which seem to love that sunny spot on the patio.
I was unamused to find mating scarlet lily beetles near our lilies. I can't bring myself to kill them -- they're so pretty and jewel-like -- but they'll gnaw the lilies to nothing if I leave them alone. So I'm not sure what to do. Last night I threw a couple of them over the garden wall -- our neighbor is having her house renovated and she's gone, so she won't care -- but that's the coward's way out and I'm sure they'll return. I really should just be merciless.
Finally, here's the tulip bouquet Dave gave me for retirement. Since I blogged my other flowers I felt I should show these off too. See the foam flower outside the window? It's going gangbusters as well.
This really is the best time of year to retire. I love having these spring days free and open, with so much to enjoy in the garden.







It is surprising that your first instinct upon becoming a retired gentleman has been to take up voyeurism. Watching scarlet lily beetles mating! That really is the pits.
ReplyDeleteAnd not very exciting.
DeleteAh, morning coffee in the garden, and afternoon tea... I enjoyed the peace after days filled with mangled scales and arpeggios and the outright bedlam of primary school music classes... (I taught samba and djembe drumming aa well as piano)
ReplyDeleteI'm sure for you silence really WAS golden!
DeleteI've always liked Waterstones..even as it has grown, it manages to have staff who take an interest in books of all sorts.
ReplyDeleteYeah, they're a good bookshop, though I do try to use my local individually owned bookshops as much as possible.
DeleteSuch lovely tulips - those colours!
ReplyDeleteAren't they nice?!
DeleteIt still seems strange that book shops still exist, the Bath Waterstones was a priceless gem, we even had our wedding reception in there.
ReplyDeleteWow! That IS a connection!
DeleteThose tulips are glorious. Such rich colors. Totoro looks brand new. I would expect signs of wear at this point. As for the scarlet lily beetles, destroy those suckers!
ReplyDeleteTotoro has actually been broken a couple of times, and though the cracks don't show from the front, they're very obvious from the back!
DeleteThose tulips are so pretty. Dave has good taste! It sounds like your first day of retirement was a good one.
ReplyDeleteIt was indeed!
DeleteYour flowering garden looks already closer to early summer than mid-spring, but with the walls and trees I guess it is sheltered and what people call a sun-trap.
ReplyDeleteTotoro? My American friends whose Main Coon cats I sometimes look after while they're away have named the bigger of the two Totoro :-)
Sorry to correct you but they are Maine [like the state] Coon cats! I had one ... beautiful cats!
DeleteThanks, Marcia - I am all for correct spelling, and while I did know that they are Maine Coon (with an e), I must have been typing too fast :-)
DeleteI think we are generally warmer here in the city than out in the countryside, and no doubt walls and shelter have a lot to do with that.
DeleteWow! It is like a whole different season there! Beautiful!
ReplyDeleteOnce spring arrives, everything happens pretty fast!
DeleteAbout the only present I get these days is a gift card to a book store that my brother sends me on my birthday. It truly is a joy to be able to pick out four or five books to buy and be guilt free if they aren't any good since it wasn't my money.
ReplyDeleteFour or five books?! That's a very generous gift card!
DeleteI give him a box of prime steaks for his birthday so it is an even trade.
DeleteJust don't kill them WHILE they're mating!!!
ReplyDeleteBut what a way to go!
DeleteNature is filled with predators, smash the bugs.
ReplyDeleteIt's true. They're very HARD, though, so smashing them is actually much more difficult than you'd think.
DeleteYour day sounds lovely. Doing as you please and enjoying the new freedom.
ReplyDeleteExactly!
DeleteI hate scarlet lily beetles and take great pleasure in drowning them. They destroyed my lilies and want to destroy my fritillarias.
ReplyDeleteThe tulips are beautiful and I'm glad you're first day was so beautiful.
Oh, drowning them is a good idea. Do you just throw them in water?
DeleteYou seem to be handling retirement well..so far! A friend who was between dogs a while back noticed how her lily of the valley was doing so well, without a husky rolling about in it.
ReplyDeleteIt's amazing plants survive pets at all, considering the damage they do!
DeleteBe ruthless! You have a lovely photo of them so they're already immortalized. I love those African Daisies!
ReplyDeleteI like Pixie's drowning idea. Sounds more civilized than smashing!
DeleteDave's tulips are really pretty. I have such a soft spot in my heart for tulips. Love those African daisies; those are new to me. And good thought, hurling the mating bugs across the wall. They might be back with a vengeance but at least you stopped on little family from hanging on your lilies! Please talk about "London Falling" when you get into it. I'm curious too.
ReplyDeleteIt's a terrific book so far. I'm about a hundred pages in.
DeleteYour flower pictures could be used for cards or anything that requires a picture! They really are beautiful!
ReplyDeleteA little beetle porn with my morning coffee ☕️ ... it could be worse, I suppose! LOL
Now that you've successfully lived through your very first day of retirement ... what's on tap for the weekend?
Beetle porn! LOL!
DeleteI'm not sure what's going to distinguish the weekend from the weekdays, except that Dave will be home.
And so it begins... You sure sound happy, Steve!
ReplyDeleteI am indeed!
DeleteYour garden is a sea of color. Simply beautiful. I love the jewel-colored tulips too! It will be interesting to hear your comments on London Falling. I recently saw an interview with Susan Page who has a new book called The Queen and Her Presidents. It sounded interesting. I might have to get that one.
ReplyDeleteOh, yeah, I heard about that book -- about the Queen's relationships with past US presidents? It DOES sound interesting, and probably the closest we'll ever come to knowing what the Queen was thinking!
DeleteSo many pretty flowers. And a perfect first day or retirement.
ReplyDeleteIt really was perfect!
DeleteBest Day Ever - Day #1 Of Retirement
ReplyDeletePhuc Yes !!!
Cheers
It's all downhill from here! LOL
DeleteAs beautiful as your garden is now, I do believe that in a year it is going to be even more of a gorgeous Eden due to the fact that you will have so much more time to tend it.
ReplyDeleteAnd I love that idea.
The tulips? Delicious.
We'll see how Eden-like it becomes. I'll be in it a lot more, but I still have a pretty hands-off approach to gardening. I like wildness!
DeleteOf course i had to google the bugs and got sent to all sorts of "help" "Get Gardening" on you tube is helpful , as well as spraying sunflower oil on the plants at night so that the sun doesn't bake them...But, sorry to say, They MUST die, the soil needs to be cleaned as well. a lot of work and murder to save the lilies. I am OK with that- harmful things to other things must be made GONE! (trump and scarlet beetles)
ReplyDeleteIf they're that much work I may just surrender the lilies. We get the beetles every year and I don't go through all that trouble to save the plants. Usually by the time the beetles are at their most destructive the lilies have finished blooming so it doesn't matter as much.
DeleteFrom my perspective, Dave's tulips are the loveliest flowers you received. Beautiful!
ReplyDeleteI'm impressed with how well Totoro cleaned up.
Just a toothbrush and plain ol' hand soap!
DeleteI love tulips so you know where my loyalties lie! Spring is a wonderful time to retire with all the plants blooming and projects to be done when it's not the heat of summer.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I want to enjoy the outdoor time as much as possible. At least I'm no longer sitting in an air-conditioned office.
DeleteTotoro cleaned up very well.
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
Didn't he? Much happier!
DeleteYou will find many projects to keep you busy.
ReplyDeleteI already am!
DeleteIs your puttering about the same as our pottering about here in Australia. Marie, Melbourne, Australia
ReplyDeleteYes, they are the same! Here's the Cambridge dictionary definition:
Deleteputter (v.) (US) -- (UK potter) to do things in a relaxed way, without rushing or trying very hard.
Totoro looks pleased to have had a bath. The candytuft is very pretty.
ReplyDeleteI love the candytuft. It always blooms well but this year it's even better!
DeleteLily beetles are so pretty. Ours used to learn to swim in the pond, which was quite unkind, really.
ReplyDeleteI'm going to try this drowning thing!
Delete