Monday, May 4, 2026
Geraniums and Garden Updates
This is a type of geranium that we have growing around our back steps, from the patio up to the garden. When I cleared the steps last summer, I trimmed it and put some cuttings in a pot on the patio, and now they're blooming up a storm. That's the lattice back of one of the patio chairs behind it.
Our pink geranium is blooming as well, but the plant looks terrible -- very lanky and straggly. This should teach me a lesson about pruning. I knew I needed to cut it back early this spring but I avoided that task and now it's too late and we just have to live with it. The flowers still look nice, at least.
I just spent about half an hour cleaning up the kitchen before sitting down to blog. To my way of thinking there is nothing worse than waking up to a dirty kitchen, but Dave made stuffed shells last night and I couldn't fit all the bowls, pots, pans and colander into the dishwasher. So I ran what I could and left the rest until this morning. Ugh. And then I wound up hand-washing the big baking dish anyway, because that darn thing -- with lid -- takes practically the whole bottom rack of our modest-sized European dishwasher.
Anyway, it's done now. Mr. Clean could eat off our cabinets.
Dave and I spent all day yesterday at home. I repotted two gigantic hydrangeas that we have growing in containers. They'd been in their pots for years and the soil had gradually broken down and become compacted, so much so that the pots were only about half-full. I pulled the bushes out (easier said than done!), added new dirt and replanted them in the same pots, now full to the brim. We considered putting them in the ground but the only space we have is in the far back of the garden beneath those gnarled old elder trees and our Japanese maple, and I just couldn't face digging through all those roots.
It feels good to settle the question of what to do with those hydrangeas. We've been debating it for ages and finally I thought, "I'm solving this problem."
I've almost finished going through my latest batch of old slides, culling the useless ones and setting aside the good ones. I texted the slide dealer again about acquiring the rest of his stock but haven't heard back. He seems reluctant to sell them all to me, but he won't just tell me that, which is perhaps a cultural thing. I am probably being very American, brashly breezing in and wanting the whole shebang and metaphorically waving my dollars around, and perhaps he's concerned about being left empty-handed, with no slides for his customers to browse. Maybe he likes selling them piecemeal. Maybe he's suspicious of why I want them. I can only guess.
I could ultimately give him back the ones I don't want, which would solve my problem of what to do with them all. But obviously I don't want to do that until I've been through the rest of his, so he doesn't mix them all together. I don't want to keep re-buying the same old slides!
I think I have to assume his silence is his message and I'll talk to him about it the next time I'm at his shop. Meanwhile, there are plenty of old slides and photos out there, and I'll just keep my eyes open. This is a long-term project, whatever it is.
Here's the latest download from the garden cam. The best part, I think, comes right at the beginning, when I had the camera mounted on our maple tree, looking toward the back corner of the garden. In daylight -- so we can see his or her beautiful coloring -- Sharpie climbs up our log pile, jumps to the top of the wall and goes over the fence into our neighbor's yard.
After that:
-- At 0:20 you'll see the tree (and camera) swaying on a very windy day. I had about a thousand clips that looked like that because the movement kept setting off the camera. You can hear our wind gong chiming.
-- At 0:36, a quick shot of a curious starling. I've moved the camera back to a position on the ground.
-- Beginning at 0:43, various vulpine comings-and-goings, Sharpie at first and then Crooked Tail.
-- At 1:19, we get a glimpse of a fox (Q-Tip?) with something stick-like in its mouth. I see this fairly often but I can never work out what they're carrying around.
-- At 1:25, I put down some scraps from a steak dinner. About three hours later, Crooked Tail comes around, sniffs at it cautiously and carries some of it off.
-- At 2:29, just a few minutes later, Q-Tip comes and eats the rest, again surprisingly cautiously. I thought they'd wolf down those scraps.
-- At 3:16 the fox runs toward the camera and I'm pretty sure tries to "mark" it, but fortunately we don't see evidence of that.
-- And finally, some random sniffing around by, I believe, Crooked Tail. (All my fox identifications are tenuous because I have such a hard time telling them apart!)
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Maybe the slide dealer didn't get the message.
ReplyDeleteMaybe the slide dealer did not like your fashion choices.
Maybe the slide dealer did not like your "aroma".
Maybe the slide dealer died.
And as for "modest" European dishwashers, why not try a British one? Our dishwasher happily takes the hardware from a six person Sunday dinner.
It's also possible the size of our dishwasher is directly related to the size of our kitchen!
DeleteI hate waking up to a dirty kitchen too. You remind me of my sister with your night cam as she has one in the woods behind her house in suburban Boston. She records all kinds of critters, even coyotes.
ReplyDeleteI'd have stayed up and washed the estras by hand but that just me.
ReplyDeleteOkay...the next time Dave does a 'dirty dishes everywhere' just invite Bob! There. Another problem solved.
DeleteI am going to make stuffed shells this week. I made my own ricotta cheese!
Re dishwashers, what won't fit in this load will fit in the next.
ReplyDeleteThat's a bit strange about the slide seller, but I wouldn't overthink it.
I would not sweat about the hydrangeas either. They are great survivors.
I never put "bowls, pots, pans and colander" in my dishwasher and always just wash them by hand after the meal unless I have to soak them overnight to get the baked stuff off. I only have to run my dishwasher once or twice a week then.
ReplyDeleteWhy is that pretty pot laying on it's side in the beginning of your video?
The slide guy might be busy, Steve.
I did get up to dirty dishes this morning, unusual, but when I remembered last night, I do all dishes once a day, I was tired. I'm doing them right after I finish reading blogs. Also searching for them, since they've taken to not appearing. This one didn't feed.
ReplyDeleteIt sounds like a wonderful weekend and Sunday. I'm impressed with your hydrangea productivity! Well done. I suspect it will need to be an in-person visit with the slide seller. All will be well in the long run.
ReplyDeleteMy friend David always leaves the dishes from his dinner parties until the morning. The clean up is a bit of an ordeal because he doesn't put the good china and stemware in the dishwasher. He tells me he enjoys the clean up. I'm kind of like you, I prefer a clean kitchen in the morning.
ReplyDeleteBlogger is being moody- I completely missed your previous post and this one did not come up on my list either. The orphans are overjoyed with the flash back link. Their memories are like a gold fishe's. I love the slide photos that you posted, Fancy folk!
ReplyDeleteA dish washer! We have not had a dish washer for 45 years- I had ours removed and used the space for a cupboard instead. We are trained to wash dishes as we use them , especially when we bake or cook. Cleaning is part of the task. That is how we grew up in our mother's kitchens without dish washers so it comes naturally, but putting on a dinner for 20 family members out of our small kitchen takes days to prepare . It is so much work. The kitchen is clean before guests arrive. That is why I only do it twice a year.
I scanned a couple of thousand slides after my father died. I still have a large box of slides to go through. Maybe I will find time in retirement,
ReplyDeleteThere is hardly anything I don‘t put in my dishwasher, apart from a few utensils with wooden handles or so, that would not do well. Same with clothes; if they need to be taken to the dry cleaner‘s, I won‘t buy them.
ReplyDeleteIt really was very windy that day, wasn‘t it! We‘ve had several days of that and were glad that the May fĂȘte was not all blown about - pavilions, umbrellas and so on.
Always good to see the different foxes‘ activities in your garden!
May The 4th Be Strong With You Jedi Cultivator
ReplyDeleteCheers
I can't stand waking up to dirty dishes in the sink; there have been a few times I've had to. My older daughter cooks with every pot and pan in the kitchen! She also makes delicious food, so there is that in her favor. :) You sound very productive in your retirement!
ReplyDeleteI always enjoying seeing the fox in the scuffed up leather shoes. I hate waking up to dirty dishes. SG often tells me, “Just leave them. I’ll do them in the morning.” I never do anymore because he never has.
ReplyDeleteCan you tell if someone else has sorted through the slides between visits? Perhaps you aren't the only one buying them so he is reluctant to sell them to you when he may be able to get a better price from someone else.
ReplyDeleteI used to hate waking up to a dirty kitchen, but I also know that when I'm tired, a job that would take me only ten minutes in the morning, takes what feels like hours in the evening. I'm not going to work now, so I'm willing to do them in the morning when need be:)
ReplyDeleteNext time you see him you might mention that if he'll sell you the rest, you're willing to give him back all the ones you don't keep when you're done with them.
ReplyDeleteThose foxes look well fed. Not terribly hungry, so not motivated to wolf the food down. (Or should that be "fox" the food down?) Didn't grow up with a dishwasher, and didn't get one until I bought this house when I was 40... I love it! I put just about everything that'll fit in!
ReplyDeleteUrban foxes are fat and confident …country foxes are thin and shy
ReplyDeleteI don't like waking up to dirty dishes in the sink!
ReplyDeleteThose are beautiful flowers.
All the best Jan