Entries to Win Afghan

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Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Gray Day and a Little Stinker


It was dark and oppressive all day long. Lots of thunder, a little wind, not much rain. (But a tiny bit.) The edge of one cloud rolled over us about 30 minutes ago.
black cloud edge


Despite it being slightly wet all day, the finches are spending a lot of time at the birdbath. I'm getting a kick out of watching them.

In fact, I am enjoying them so much, I broke our decision not to feed the birds. It's not a big deal. I found a jar of seeds when I cleaned the pantry and decided to at least use it up. So I've just been putting a handful on the deck railing each morning. Last night the wind was blowing the seeds off, so I corralled them in a pot saucer.

Guess who found the seeds within just a couple of days. The chipmunk. I haven't been able to get a better picture of him.

He climbed right in and stuffed his cheeks full of every seed in the dish and took off.
chipmunk


This is the chipmunk that has been trying to come in the screen door. In fact, he can get in underneath it (twice last year- if it's the same one) and once this year. I've managed to scare him right back outdoors each time. But I decided I need a barrier because he might get in when I wasn't watching.

I have a board about 2 feet wide that just fits across the bottom of the opening. So far, this is keeping him out, although if he works at it, I'm sure he could duck under the screen door edge and jump over the board. To get on the deck at all he has to either make a leap of about 3 feet from the outside stairs, or climb up a window screen and leap about 2 feet. (Because the only access to the deck is through the house) I've watched him do both. Until I got a really good look, I was even contemplating if this was a small red squirrel because I didn't realize chipmunks were such good climbers. They tend to stay on the ground, although I've occasionally seen one higher in a tree.

One day, he climbed right up the screen door and hung there looking at me.

I am considering hanging the saucer on a cable that he can't climb down. That might slow him down for a while until he figures out how to leap to it. Probably not worth it for one jar of seeds that isn't even full any more.

I used to dream of having a small pond and a really wildlife-friendly yard- you know, one of those certified Backyard Habitats from the National Wildlife Federation. But I think I have enough wildlife already.

In other news: I did all the editing stuff and projects, but it wasn't a good day to work outside, so I cleaned the kitchen and spent some time on plant records. Makes me feel virtuous, like Archie Goodwin keeping the orchid records in the Nero Wolfe books. (But I do have pretty good records of the gardens.)

See Home Before the Storm

Monday, June 15, 2026

Pinks and Chipper


It always confuses me that my peony blooms so late in the season. When I was a kid, we always took bouquets to the cemetery on Memorial Day, and they were always iris, bridal wreath spirea, and peonies. But here, those three plants don't bloom at the same time at all!

This is just a plain old pink peony. Not my favorite, but it seems to bloom most years now.
pink peony


Another touch of pink- OK, pinkish-purple, is a bunch of house finches that have been visiting the bird bath. The bad news is that I can't get good pictures of them through the screen. The very good news is that this flexible screen is working really well, and I can keep the deck door open most days.
house finch in a bird bath


Also pink- the 'Siskiyou' Primrose in the rock garden is beautiful right now. It doesn't get as tall in my poor soil as it was in the pot when I bought it, but that's actually better for the rock garden. It likes to plant itself all over the place. I'm thinking about whether this might be OK. In the former iteration of this garden there were California Poppies that self-seeded all over, and I just let them come up wherever they wanted. The thing is, they are annuals, so they never took over. This one is perennial and spreads with underground rhizomes, so I think it would take over everthing if I let it go. I would like to get it going in a couple other spaces and confine it to those.


And the chipper? Well, it's not really a chipmunk. It's a thirteen-lined ground squirrel, and I was outside without the good camera, so I had to take its picture with the phone. The phone does not do well with zoomed pix. But I did capture it for you.
thirteen lined ground squirrel


In other news: I did all the usual project things, had a Zoom meeting, got groceries, and continued weeding the rock garden. The weather was perfect!

See A Quiet Day at Home

Sunday, June 14, 2026

Life is Good in Color


Just thinking this morning that Life is Good! I was in my chair with a cup of coffee, doing my wake-up computer tasks. The deck door is open. The sun is shining, but it's cool yet with a light breeze ruffling the quaking aspen. House finches with their bright red-purple heads are enjoying the bird bath. I took my morning "walk" to visit the gardens and see what flowers might begin blooming today.

The rock garden is beginning to explode with the yellows of so many sedums, but this picture I took today has to be the color winner. This is a Red-spotted Purple Admiral on the Creeping Thyme
red spotted purple admiral


But back to the yellows. The taller stuff is the Sedum Sexangulare, but there are bursts of the still-blooming Sedum 'Weihenstephaner Gold' to the right and one Ice Plant 'Granita' to the left.
sedum sexangulare


This is the Bloody Cranesbill with Dianthus 'Kahori.'
purple rock garden flowers


This one has a whole lot of plants. The purple is Creeping Thyme, Sedum sexangulare to the left, the 'Kahori' is beyond that. Just in front of the thyme is the patch of Sedum 'Atlantis' that is slowing getting bigger. A small patch of dark 'Dream Dazzler' Sedum and more Bloody Cranesbill is on the right.
colorful rock garden


This one was from last week. The variegated Vinca was still blooming. Now it's trying to spread runners to take over the world. I've been giving it severe haircuts. More Bloody Cranesbill to the right. It is also getting shaved on this pass through the garden.
colors in a rock garden


I haven't mentioned this pink flower yet this year. This is the 'Siskiyou' Primrose. It is fairly nifty, although it, too, is willing to spread everywhere. I've currently let it take over two spaces until I get something else to put in the second space. More Sedum sexangulare. And just starting to bloom on the far left is the Sedum elecambeanum.
colorful rock garden


Finally, color in the sky last night. Very intense, and making even the clouds in the east turn pink.


In other news: I did all the usual things, plus laundry, and put a piece of decor back on the wall that keeps falling off. Yeah, me. Josh stopped by. He's looking good.

See Mostly Current Colors

Saturday, June 13, 2026

Front Garden Report 2026- #2


Yeah, yeah, I know I just did report number 1, but I found a picture from 2023 and I have to compare. The shots are a couple of weeks different in time, but I think you can easily see how much bare ground is in the picture from three years ago.

Lots of pictures, but I've done a lot on this in the last week!

First, that approximate view today.
garden with foliage color


And this is in late May 2023! Confession- I had totally whacked off that seven sisters rose that I hate, to let it start over, but even so, there just isn't much else to see.

bare flower garden

Another look at the profusion of color in this section- most of it just foliage. I've dreamed of a garden like this for years, and on a small scale, I'm being allowed to pull it off. You've seen all of this before except the orange 'Caramel' Heuchera. I got that last fall and put it where 'Peach Flambe' had been. Moved the peaches farther west. I'll do a whole Heuchera post one of these days.


A couple of specific things to report. This is the 'Loyalist' Hosta that got damaged last spring, and it has totally recovered. It has a 'Frostbite' Brunnera to the left, 'Cathedral Windows' Heuchera in front of it, and 'Krossa Regal' Hosta behind it.
loyalist hosta


I've been moving a lot of things around, which is always a bit risky. But here's the white-flowered poppy- about twice as big as when I planted it two weeks ago. It won't bloom this year but it certainly looks like it's going to live.

I have also potted up two baby pink and two baby orange poppies that came up on their own. Some are going to Marie. And I've found more tiny, tiny baby donkeytail in the rock garden (finally!), so a couple of those went in pots for now.
leaves of oriental poppy


Now let's move to the east. This is where many changes have happened last year and this year. Here's another shot of the far east end. Yeah, I just showed you this, but I added three (one's off screen) small Hosta in the front. I thought they were all 'Blueberry Tart.' The far left front is. But the next one over is similar, but not as blue. So, I have another mystery to try to solve. These were just totally hidden by larger Heuchera leaves on the west side, and I thought they'd make a nice edge in this section because they are low and spreading.
hosta and heuchera garden


Speaking of transplanting, I said I chopped a chunk off the 'Caramel' Heuchera, but wasn't sure I got a good enough bit of root. But I think I did. It's working on a new leaf! For reference, this is the large orangy-gold one above on the west side.
small heuchera caramel new leaf


Other regulars are starting to bloom. The blue Globe Campanula is just beginning. I wish the blue and white would bloom at the same time, but nope.


And this just amazes me. It's the lily that I have no idea where it came from. Last year it had 4 blossoms. This year, it's trying for 6, and it may be having a baby. Stay tuned.
yellow lily in bud


In other news: I got a couple other things done yesteray evening. I fixed a door latch that wasn't working right and finished my column for Mason County Press.

But I woke up feeling awful this morning. Sometimes it just happens. Not much got done in the morning, but by noon I felt better. Somehow, I managed to redeem the day, doing all the editing and a little garden work. The weather was lovely- cool with a light breeze. I think we are going to get rain again this evening.

I wasted a bunch of time playing games while I didn't feel good, but sometimes that's all I can manage.

See Front Garden Report 2026- #1

Friday, June 12, 2026

Velvet and Other Miscellany


A visitor to my yard yesterday is all gussied up in velvet.
buck in velvet


Just as a reminder, the Staghorn Sumac gets its name from the velvety coating on young stalks, reminiscent of the stag.

staghorn sumac

Someone was running big equipment out back today, so I went to see if the railroad was being worked on. Nope. It's on the next property south- behind trees, so I don't know what they are doing.

But recently, new ballast has been added on the tracks. I think they are going to replace the regular rails with welded rail (as discussed in the link below), but not yet. Actually, thats why I went back to check out the noise- I'd love to see this process in action.
railroad tracks


The only other interesting thing was that I noted the tiny boxelder tree back there is starting to look like a real tree. Not a high quality tree, but hey.
boxelder tree


I worked well on all my projects again, and started the second weed-through of the rock garden. It's looking shaggy. A lot of things need trimming!

See Welded Rail Sections