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#1
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![]() That's funny. You actually backpacked a cast iron skillet into the mountains? Did you pack it out? That's the really bad part. I still have the damned thing.G |
#2
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![]() "Kiyu" wrote in message ... That's funny. You actually backpacked a cast iron skillet into the mountains? Did you pack it out? That's the really bad part. I still have the damned thing.G Bravo. Wolfgang the important things in life ain't always obvious. |
#3
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Wolfgang wrote:
the important things in life ain't always obvious. .... some (too few, imo) seem to be better than others figuring that out... i feel very fortunate to have opportunities to spend time in the company of those sort of folks. looking forward to next week and september... btw...what's growing in becky's garden this year? jeff |
#4
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![]() "Jeff Miller" wrote in message news:Souxe.48816$%Z2.33643@lakeread08... Wolfgang wrote: the important things in life ain't always obvious. ... some (too few, imo) seem to be better than others figuring that out... i feel very fortunate to have opportunities to spend time in the company of those sort of folks. looking forward to next week Say "Hi" for me. and september... which is approaching at breakneck speed. We are extremely dry down here but, if conditions two weeks ago up in Merrill and George's testimony are to be given any credence, things are looking pretty good up in da nort woods. btw...what's growing in becky's garden this year? We got tomatoes, a couple of varieties of lettuce, arugula, some volunteer sweet peas, pole beans, cucumbers, acorn squash, immature asparagus, strawberries, raspberries, thyme, oregano, three varieties of basil, tarragon, epazote, parsley, cilantro, celeriac, several kinds of bell peppers and chilies.....and a fence that matured just today. Had a bit of a celebratory cookout in the back yard with friends and family. Cullen (perhaps not surprisingly) is WAY ****ed that there doesn't seem to be any way out of the yard anymore. ![]() The front yard is a jungle. We've got so many different perennials (and tall sunflowers) growing out there that the house is barely visible from the street anymore. Spireas have taken over the front stoop......I plan to attack them with hedge clippers, flamethrowers and whatever other means prove necessary first thing in the morning. I only hope the tigers haven't moved in yet. ![]() Wolfgang |
#5
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On Sun, 3 Jul 2005 17:46:29 -0500, "Wolfgang"
wrote: (snipped) Spireas have taken over the front stoop......I plan to attack them with hedge clippers, flamethrowers and whatever other means prove necessary first thing in the morning. I only hope the tigers haven't moved in yet. ![]() If you dislike them, trim them from the outside going in. If you like them, cut out the deadwood on the inside of them (much more difficult) so that they'll live to bloom another few dozen or hundred years. From the outside in a mere two or three years of trimming can see them dead and gone. Cyli r.bc: vixen. Minnow goddess. Speaker to squirrels. Often taunted by trout. Almost entirely harmless. http://www.visi.com/~cyli email: lid (strip the .invalid to email) |
#6
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![]() "Cyli" wrote in message ... On Sun, 3 Jul 2005 17:46:29 -0500, "Wolfgang" wrote: (snipped) Spireas have taken over the front stoop......I plan to attack them with hedge clippers, flamethrowers and whatever other means prove necessary first thing in the morning. I only hope the tigers haven't moved in yet. ![]() If you dislike them Hard to imagine why anyone would dislike spireas......but stranger things have happened, I guess. trim them from the outside going in. If you like them, cut out the deadwood on the inside of them (much more difficult) so that they'll live to bloom another few dozen or hundred years. From the outside in a mere two or three years of trimming can see them dead and gone. Interesting. This is the first I've heard of sensitivity to methods of pruning. This will be the third year running that we've dealt with their attempts to take over the world. We never prune them until after they have finished flowering. As the flowers appear at the end of new stalks, and those stalks grow prodigiously before the flowering occurs, the plants grow from cute little shrubs at either side of the front stoop to monstrous shaggy beasts over the course of the spring and early summer. Today (if the rain ever stops), as I did the last two years, I intend to prune all the new growth back severely, so that what is now a rough hemisphere of approximately six feet in diameter at ground level will once again be about a two foot sphere. In the last two seasons this left some sad looking plants for a couple of weeks, but new growth has come in strong and very quickly.....so much so that they have needed another pruning in the early fall. If they should react badly this time......well, that's just another opportunity to plant something. ![]() Wolfgang who knows that without death there can be no rebirth. |
#7
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On Mon, 4 Jul 2005 10:22:46 -0500, "Wolfgang"
wrote: In the last two seasons this left some sad looking plants for a couple of weeks, but new growth has come in strong and very quickly.....so much so that they have needed another pruning in the early fall. If they should react badly this time......well, that's just another opportunity to plant something. ![]() Wolfgang who knows that without death there can be no rebirth. Maybe yours are a different variety. Or maybe my father and my husband both got too happy with weed killing chemicals. They both love them. Rather my father loved them when he was alive. Or maybe they trimmed the bush at the wrong times. I believe it was blooming when each went at it. Neither telling me what they were doing beforehand, of course. Cyli r.bc: vixen. Minnow goddess. Speaker to squirrels. Often taunted by trout. Almost entirely harmless. http://www.visi.com/~cyli email: lid (strip the .invalid to email) |
#8
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Wolfgang wrote:
We got tomatoes, a couple of varieties of lettuce, arugula, some volunteer sweet peas, pole beans, cucumbers, acorn squash, immature asparagus, strawberries, raspberries, thyme, oregano, three varieties of basil, tarragon, epazote, parsley, cilantro, celeriac, several kinds of bell peppers and chilies.....and a fence that matured just today. Had a bit of a celebratory cookout in the back yard with friends and family. Cullen (perhaps not surprisingly) is WAY ****ed that there doesn't seem to be any way out of the yard anymore. ![]() The front yard is a jungle. We've got so many different perennials (and tall sunflowers) growing out there that the house is barely visible from the street anymore. Spireas have taken over the front stoop......I plan to attack them with hedge clippers, flamethrowers and whatever other means prove necessary first thing in the morning. I only hope the tigers haven't moved in yet. ![]() nothing quite like a good garden. ...and, as i recall, i witnessed the infancy of becky's garden, if not it's birth. glad to know it's maturing well. ...it's among the best household improvements a homeowner can make, imo. jeff (garden gastropod) |
#9
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![]() "Jeff Miller" wrote in message news:Pk9ye.61835$%Z2.14010@lakeread08... nothing quite like a good garden. ...and, as i recall, i witnessed the infancy of becky's garden, if not it's birth. Then you were here at the wrong time......given a single moment in which to enjoy any of the multifarious seasonal blessings of a garden, I'll pick the harvest every time. ![]() glad to know it's maturing well. ...it's among the best household improvements a homeowner can make, imo. jeff (garden gastropod) We were fortunate in that the previous owners did the hard work of laying out and building a good container garden. All we do is weed 'em and reap. Wolfgang |
#10
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Wolfgang wrote:
All we do is weed 'em and reap. I hope you don't mind if I steal that line from you. Chuck Vance |
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