Tuesday, June 16, 2026

The Early Bird Gets the Dickens


Remember how I said the garden was beginning to feel a little claustrophobic? Here's a good example -- the path leading up from the patio. That gigantic dusty miller -- which grew from a tiny little plant I bought back in 2022 -- is encroaching from the right, and we have a rambling rose and the crocosmia "Lucifer" leaning in from the left. You can still see the stepping stones I made during the pandemic from some of the pottery shards I'd collected on my walks, but just barely! We can sidle through here without too much trouble but I do feel a bit like Dr. Livingstone in need of a machete.

I did a bit more gardening yesterday, trimming and neatening and repotting a fern that lives in the back atop our celebrity plant pedestal. The older fronds on our tree fern were in a sort of in-between zone between life and death -- substantial portions were alive and green but some bits and pieces were brown. So I painstakingly trimmed away all the brown parts, thinking it would be good to save what's still photosynthesizing and benefitting the plant. And then a few hours later Dave marched past holding the entire fronds, having cut them off himself and thus negating all my work.

Oh well.


The Brugmansia seems happy, with five flowers (two of them hidden in this picture).


Here's what I found early yesterday morning on my way to buy a carton of milk. Someone discarded a trash bag full of old books, which had clearly been sitting out overnight as the top volumes were a bit damp. I took about half of them (above). I've never read "The Woman in White" or anything by Elizabeth Gaskell, Oliver Goldsmith, Richard Harris Barham or Len Deighton. I might try all of those. I have read "Great Expectations" and I'm not sure why I took it except that I hated to see it thrown out. "Straight to the Mark" is a Victorian novel supposedly meant to teach morality to young people. It could be incredibly tedious -- it was published by a company devoted to religious tracts -- but it has a beautiful cover so I took it anyway.

I left behind some practical nonfiction ("How it Was Made") and religious books, as well as Robert Browning's poetry and half of "Tom Jones" and "The Count of Monte Cristo," which were published in two volumes but both had one missing. The funny thing is, by the time I went to the store and came back with my milk, all the rest of the books were gone too. Someone must have come along behind me and scavenged the rest.


Here's a peculiar set of images I found while scanning slides. Back in 1991, someone took pictures on a beach of a distant person doing what looks like yoga poses. (Or maybe just acrobatic ones.) They're mysterious pictures, aren't they? Did the photographer know that person? Were they aware in advance that the person was going to bend over backwards? Why are they so far away? So many questions. I love the colorless sort of moonscape, though -- it adds to the surreal quality.

50 comments:

  1. Nice to see that The Reed Rescue Service has been hard at work again. Chucking books out like that should be against the law - in fact I suppose it is - small-scale fly-tipping. Haven't these numbskulls heard of charity shops... or jumble sales? Thank heavens for SuperReed!

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    1. I know. I can't imagine why someone wouldn't have donated these to a charity shop.

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  2. I will never understand why people throw away books!

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    1. I have thrown away much read old favourites that literally fell apart while on the final read through. And immediately bought replacement copies.

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    2. Me neither, unless (as River said) they're falling apart. All books have a life span, of course, but if they're still in good shape then why not pass them on to someone who might read them?

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  3. There is a bookcase in the lobby of our building, a small stack of books went down there over the weekend. Someone will enjoy them again. Most of them came from there, or a rack at the library of "free books".

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    1. I love those public "free library" bookshelves, wherever they may be.

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  4. We have small Free Libraries in the neighborhoods around my city. People put up an enclosed case with a windowed door in front of their homes and fill them with books they no longer want. People can take as many books as they want and return them or not. They can also add books they are done with to the case. It's an easy way to circulate books through the neighborhood for all ages.

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    1. Yeah, I've seen those both in the states and here. They're a great idea!

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  5. Interesting haul of books. At school we were told to read The Woman in White and The Moonstone before we got into agatha Christie!

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    1. Wow! I always thought Agatha Christie was the doorway to mystery novels for many people. Collins is good but he takes a bit more effort, if only because his books are so much longer than the average Christie.

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  6. Steve! Be careful! Before you know it your garden will be filled with Lucifer Crocosmia and your house with old books! Ask me how I know!
    My newest strategy for leaving behind treasures that I feel must be rescued is to simply tell myself that if I leave them where they are, it will give someone else the opportunity to come along and find them, thus making them happy. I do this at thrift stores a lot. Especially when the item is something that, although may have worth, is not a thing I will use. But it really is hard to leave behind a pile of old books which look to be in such good condition.
    I wondered the same thing about the photos- did the subject have any idea they were being photographed?

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    1. Ha! The Lucifer has spread a bit, but not like your crocosmia. It IS true that we do not have to save everything ourselves!

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  7. I really loved The Woman in White! You should give that one a go!

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    1. I think I will. I enjoyed "The Moonstone" when I read it years ago.

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  8. Your garden is really lush and colorful right now. I love those giant yellow blooms.
    Glad you rescued those books. They look beautiful and should be saved.
    Interesting and mysterious photos!

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    1. Aren't they strange? I find them very intriguing.

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  9. I went out yesterday evening & did a LOT of lopping in the yard. I was wishing I had a machete too! I was ruthless on the spirea - so out of control, but not as ruthless as I wanted to be. I'll cut more of it back later. It's pretty when it blooms, but really just looks like a weed otherwise.

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    1. Oh, good, I'm glad you got some lopping done!

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  10. Nice bindings on those books. I would not have taken them. We got rid of so many books when we moved out here. We were never going to read them again and no longer needed their presence. As for your garden, isn't that what English gardens are all about?And I laughed about all your painstaking work on the tree fern and then Dave just hacked them off. I do like that series of photos but I don't think she was doing yoga, more like gymnastics. The Wheel in yoga is done from the Bridge, at least in my experience.

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    1. I got rid of almost all my books when I moved to New York, and then again when I moved from New York to London. Now the collection has grown again! But I clean them out now and then and only took these because I genuinely think I might read them. (Well, except for the Dickens, which as I said I already read.)

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  11. Ooh, I would have taken home those books, too! I see what you mean about the garden, but still so beautiful. Can’t believe Dave came along and did the deed after you were so cautious. Gasp!

    I think someone was taking “body” shots from a discreet distance.

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    1. They could be "body" shots, but they're so far away you can barely make out a body at all!

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  12. I love the way the books look although...do they smell? Musty books aren't my thing! LOL The garden is keeping you busy!

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    1. They don't smell as far as I can tell. I don't mind a bit of mustiness but when they're downright moldy I draw the line.

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  13. Your dusty miller looks great. I can't seem to grow as a perennial here -- too much cold/ice/snow. The garden looks good and so does that lovely plant. Three cheers on the book rescue. I have a Gaskell on my pile too! That series of poses is really quite enigmatic. It does look like they were doing yoga on the moon!

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    1. I bet you could put a dusty miller in a big pot and keep it outside in summer and then in a sunny window in winter. (If you really wanted to, that is!)

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  14. You rescued a good collection of beautifully bound books and now we know someone else rescued the rest of them.
    Keeping a pathway trimmed seems to be an ongoing effort when plants are thriving like your plants.
    Dave's aggressive approach to trimming means that plant will require no trimming for a while. A few months ago, I trimmed my deer eaten rhododendrons aggressively just to make them look presentable. Today they are filled with new leaves and growth. Until the deer find them again.
    The photos of the girl posing/exercising on the beach makes a good

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    1. Either that or someone came along and put them in the trash! Who knows?! I agree that sometimes plants need an aggressive trim.

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  15. Highly attractive book covers! The binding, raised letters, the color! A posh design element for photo shoots.
    Dusty Miller ( Drag name) grows madly here. I love the leaves for pressing. They turn out nicely. Your walking stone things are very nice- I would be shy about using treasured shards of porcelain in them- thinking the shards too precious. That is another reason I can not get into some of my drawers- precious found objects!

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    1. I'm amazed how well all those china pieces have held up, being stepped on day after day. None of them seem any worse for wear!

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  16. I read The Woman in White for my first Classics Club list! I enjoyed it and bet you will, too.

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    1. OK, good to know! I will definitely give it a try at some point!

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  17. For many people, when they move, they don't have space in the new place. They get rid of things as best they know how.

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    1. I just think setting things out on the street is a lazy way to dispose of things -- especially because it leaves them vulnerable to weather and passing dogs and all manner of other environmental dangers. Just take them to a charity shop!

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  18. This may be considered sacreligius by many, but I do rebinding of basically worthless old books that have cool covers. I cut out the pages and then bind in new plain leaves, and give them away for journals. I'd love that Straight to the Mark cover!

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    1. Yeah, that IS an interesting idea. If I try to read "Straight to the Mark" and find it intolerable I may mail it to you! LOL

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  19. Those beautiful old books being read by the retired librarian in an overgrown wonderland of a garden...sounds like it be the beginning of a novel of its own!

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  20. The old photo is very interesting, stark, with a single figure in the distance, although a second can be seen in the first photo.

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  21. Those books look like real treasures, and your garden is lovely though I see what you mean about it closing in. But how to cut back flora that is so obviously happy? Even so, your stone path deserves more display room. The stones you made are lovely. I’d like a closer view sometime.

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    1. There's really no way to cut back the vegetation around the path, at least not without destroying the plants. I do try to push them away from the path with supports. I'll snap a closer photo of the stones at some point!

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  22. Those old books are BEAUTIFUL! How could anyone throw those away? Bad Dave, hacking the fern like that. It will grow back though. I like the paving stones you made.

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    1. Yeah, thank goodness tree ferns are pretty tough plants!

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  23. Oh those old books are gorgeous, how could someone just throw them away. They should have put them out with a note 'Free to a Good Home'. At least now they have found a good home with you.

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