3247. thoughtful - 10/4/2005 9:17:47 PM BTW the apple crisp was a delight...walnuts and currants make excellent additions.
And I will be posting a picture of denny very soon. He's got 6 buds of which 4 1/2 are open. When fully open I'll take a pic. It's just extraordinary. I think I would be happy having nothing but orchids in my house.
Only thing is I have a really hard time 'killing' plants intentionally. I cleaned out a bunch this summer, but still have too many. The kolanchoe bloomed several times for me, but now its just looking spindly. The snake plant is there and it's bloomed several times though the blossoms are unimpressive. It is getting rather large. The ivy I have to keep...they're cuttings from a plant given to my MIL when my husband was born, so we have to keep them going. The african violets are just lovely if under cared for. And the donkey tails go back 30 years to when my gf's mother gave them to me. Can't get rid of them.
Too much sentimentality. 3248. The Summer Woman - 10/4/2005 10:05:27 PM Well, after the apple crisp, I kinda hate to post this. But Pelle asked for it:
c 3249. thoughtful - 10/4/2005 10:35:28 PM More to the point, who the heck gets close enough to a bull to do such a thing? Aren't they prone to unpredictable violence??? 3250. PelleNilsson - 10/4/2005 10:59:55 PM Thannks, SW. And, thoughtful, it's a camel. 3251. alistairConnor - 10/4/2005 11:16:50 PM - So, what do you do for a living, Abdul?
- Well actually Mo, I'm a ... (what's the technical term for it?) 3252. thoughtful - 10/4/2005 11:22:48 PM oh. sorry. I guess I'm not up on my animal parts.
Same question though...don't camels get mean? and bite? 3253. arkymalarky - 10/5/2005 12:05:45 AM You gotta do what you gotta do. Bob still remembers from his childhood the neighbor having to do something similar for a bull with vd. I don't think people generally try that sort of thing without help, but the bull doesn't mind. As if there aren't enough reasons not to keep livestock--and please, no Arky jokes about hillbillies and their livestock. I'm sure I've already heard them. 3254. thoughtful - 10/5/2005 6:40:16 PM I think I'll stick with the apple crisp, thanks. 3255. PelleNilsson - 10/6/2005 6:51:32 PM Progress Pic No.1
3256. ronski - 10/7/2005 10:53:17 PM That's colchicum, Pelle. After it blooms, plant it outdoors somewhere about six inches below soil level. In the spring, it will send up several large, dark green, roundish leaves. They will dry and die off late in the summer. The lavender-pink blossoms will follow.
Colchicum, colchique in French, was traditionally used to treat gout, for which it remains effective.
If you're living high on the hog these days... 3257. alistairConnor - 10/7/2005 11:40:57 PM Colchiques dans les prés fleurissent, fleurissent
Colchiques dans les prés, c'est la fin de l'été.
La feuille d'automne emportée par le vent
En ronde monotone tombe en tourbillonnant.
Châtaignes dans les bois, se fendent, se fendent,
Châtaignes dans les bois, se fendent sous nos pas.
La feuille d'automne emportée par le vent
En ronde monotone tombe en tourbillonnant
Nuages dans le ciel, s'étirent, s'étirent
Nuages dans le ciel s'étirent comme une aile
La feuille d'automne emportée par le vent
En ronde monotone, tombe en tourbillonnant
Et ce chant dans mon coeur, murmure, murmure
Et ce chant dans mon coeur appelle le bonheur 3258. alistairConnor - 10/7/2005 11:49:14 PM We have eaten the first chestnuts of the year.
A late rose. Apples, rose hips, etc. 3259. arkymalarky - 10/8/2005 1:52:58 AM We had our first really cool day today. It was wonderful. 3260. ronski - 10/8/2005 3:06:21 AM AC,
Thanks for posting the song. I was going to when I got home. I also love the rose and the asters. Beautiful.
(Chestnuts, I must say, I can take or leave; glace, or in turkey stuffing, or on a NYC street corner in winter -- they just don't do much for me. The trees are pretty, though. And the nuts themselves are pretty, for decoration.) 3261. Ulgine Barrows - 10/8/2005 4:26:48 AM 3255. PelleNilsson, I know those are flowers, but they also look like a dead chicken with its feet stuck up in the air. 3262. judithathome - 10/8/2005 5:03:19 AM It was cool....or cold, depending on what you're used to...here today, too, arks! 3263. prolph - 10/8/2005 5:40:39 AM Alistair:
I've noticed a charming tinge of romance in your posts lately but seriopsly
dout tuberculousis is. Did you all get tuberculin tests? Also there are no more sanitariums to go to. Just medication that works.
Great garden pictire; that's romanric. Patsy. 3264. alistairConnor - 10/8/2005 3:40:01 PM Thanks Patsy -- I'm fine really... I'm going to get a HIV test though -- a formality, but that's modern romance. 3265. PelleNilsson - 10/8/2005 4:55:56 PM Hello Ronski. Nice to see you again. Yes, the scientific name of the plant in question is Colchicum Autumnali which, apparently, the frog eaters have adopted. But do you deny that it is called Saffron Meadow among non-snobbish, non-expert Anglos? If so I have to notify the authorities here.
Meanwhile
Progress Pic No.2
3266. ronski - 10/8/2005 8:29:37 PM The pictures are great. Meadow saffron is indeed the name, certainly in the dictionary, but here in the U.S. I have never seen or heard it called that, only colchicum. It is sold around the same time as bulbs for autumn-blooming crocus, including the saffron crocus, and sternbergia, a crocus lookalike that is bright yellow. You plant them in August, and in a few weeks you have blooms, and they winter over and even spread if happy.
There are no crocus, colchicum, tulips, narcissus, or hyacinths native to North America, but we do have native bublbous fritillaries and some interesting bulblike or cormlike plants like calochortus and brodeia, all from the western U.S.
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