Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Super cool turtle day



Does something seem strange about this picture of my freshly finally bloomed echinacea? I have been trying to get a picture of the butterflies that land on the purple cone flower that is in my herb garden. Tonight when mom came home she pointed out this little turtle laying her eggs in the ground.
My garden is now sustaining both plant life and wild life.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Why can't you just do what you're mother asks!?

In a manner of speaking this post is dedicated to my mother. Your mother too really. I'm sure at some point or another your mother as sighed deeply, looked you square in the eye (this move is to make you both freeful and listen) and then in a shouting hushed tone said, "It's not about liking everyone. Just get along with them anyway, or just get away from them."

This was my mother mantra to me growing up. You don't have to like everyone, but by god as my witness you will smile, and no be rude back. Worse yet was when fights were broken up, the good kind (such as me winning) "Just get along, or I will whip you!" That's right mom! That will teach love for our fellow man alright. haha.

Sometime in childhood we don't think much of why everyonew is different. We make little comments which can be rather embarassing. My neice once pointed and shouted, "Look that man is brown. Why aren't we brown too? How did he get that way?" Sick dread on the uplook only to find he was laughing. Ah kids these days, they sure know there colors at younger and younger ages.

But that really is the thing. In young childrens eyes that all it is a color, a shape, there is no hatred in their voices when they say the things they do. Just the things they see. All of that comes later. In things they hear, things they are taught. If everyone listened to their mothers when their mothers told them, "Treat others the way you want to be treated." would the world be in such a state of mass confusion, fear, and hate?

Oh the world is not all bad, and I don't think that no one listened, but why does each generation look on and say "One day. One day it will get better." Why not now? Does your god tell you to love your fellow man? Does he tell you to do you best? Do you not believe? Do you believe in moral rights? Do you do what's right even when no one is looking? But enough of all that, and yet mre of all that.

The Lorax - By Dr Seuss

At the far end of town, where the Grickle-grass growsand the wind smells slow-and-sour when it blowsand no birds ever sing excepting old crows...is the Street of the Lifted Lorax.
And deep in the Grickle-grass, some people say,if you look deep enough you can still see, today,where the Lorax once stood, just as long as it couldbefore somebody lifted the Lorax away.
What WAS the Lorax? And why was it there?And why was it lifted and taken somewherefrom the far end of town where the Grickle-grass grows?The old Once-ler still lives here.Ask him. HE knows.You wont see the Once-ler. Dont knock at his door.He stays in his Lerkim on top of his store.He lurks in his Lerkim, cold under the roof,where he makes his own clothesout of miff-muffered moof.And on special dank midnights in August,he peeks out of the shuttersand sometimes he speaksand tells how the Lorax was lifted away.
He'll tell you, perhaps...if you're willing to pay.On the end of a rope he lets down a tin pailand you have to toss in fifteen cents and a nailand the shell of a great-great-greatgrandfather snail.
He pulls up the pail,makes a most careful countto see if you've paid him the proper amount.
Then he hides what you pay himaway in his Snuvv,his secret strange hole in his gruvvulous glove.
Then he grunts, "I will call you by Whisper-ma-Phone,for the secrets I tell are for your ears alone."
"SLUPP!"Down slupps the Whisper-ma-Phone to your earand the Once-ler's whispers are not very clear,since they have to come downthrough a snergelly hose,and he sounds as if he hadsmallish bees up his nose.
"Now I'll tell you," he says, with his teeth sounding gray,"how the Lorax got lifted and taken away...It all started back...such a long, long time back...
Way back in the days when the grass was still greenand the pond was still wetand the clouds were still cleanand the song of the Swomee-Swans rand out into space...one morning, I came to this glorious place.And I first saw the trees!The Truffula Trees!The bright-colored tufts of the Truffula trees!Mile after mile in the fresh morning breeze.
And, under the trees, I saw Brown Bar-ba-lootsfrisking about in their Bar-ba-loot suitsas they played in the shade and ate Truffula Fruits.
From the rippulous pondcame the comfortable soundof the Humming-Fish hummingwhile splashing around.
But those TREES! Those TREES!THOSE TRUFFULA TREES!All my life I've been searchingfor trees such as these.The touch of their tufts was much softer than silkAnd they had the sweet smell Of fresh butterfly milk.
I felt a great leaping of joy in my heart.I knew just what I'd do!I unloaded my cart.
In no time at all, I had built a small shop.Then I chopped down a Truffula Tree with one chop.And with great skillful skill and with great speedy speed,I took the soft tuft. And I knitted a Thneed!
The instant I'd finished, I heard a GA-ZUMP!I looked.I saw something pop out of the stumpof the tree I'd chopped down. It was sort of a man.Describe him?...That's hard. I don't know if I can.
He was shortish. And oldish.And brownish. And mossy.And he spoke with a voice that was sharpish and bossy.
"Mister!" he said with a sawdusty sneeze,"I am the Lorax. I speak for the trees.I speak for the trees, for the trees have no tongues.And I'm asking you, sir, at the top of my lungs"--he was very upset as he shouted and puffed--"What's that THING you've made out of my Truffula tuft?"
"Look, Lorax," I said. "There's no call for alarm.I chopped just one tree. I am doing no harm.I'm being quite useful. This thing is a Thneed.A Thneed's a Fine-Something-That-All-People-Need!It's a shirt. It's a sock. It's a glove. It's a hat.But it has OTHER uses. Yes, far beyond that.You can use it for carpets. For pillows! For sheets!Or curtains! Or covers for bicycle seats!"
The Lorax said,"Sir! You are crazy with greed.There is no one on earthwho would buy that fool Thneed!"
But the very next minute I proved he was wrong.For, just at that minute, a chap came along,and he thought that the Thneed I had knitted was great.He happily bought it for three ninEty-eight
I laughed at the Lorax, "You poor stupid guy!You never can tell what some people will buy."
"I repeat," cried the Lorax,"I speak for the trees!"
"I'm busy," I told him."Shut up, if you please."
I rushed 'cross the room, and in no time at all,built a radio-phone. I put in a quick call.
I called all my brothers and uncles and auntsand I said, "Listen here! Here's a wonderful chancefor the whole Once-ler Family to get mighty rich!Get over here fast! Take the road to North Nitch.Turn left at Weehawken. Sharp right at South Stitch."
And, in no time at all, in the factory i built,the whole Once-ler Family was working full tilt.We were all knitting Thneeds just as busy as bees,to the sound of the chopping of Truffula Trees.
Then..Oh! Baby! Oh!How my business did grow!Now, chopping one treeat a time was too slow.
So I quickly invented my Super-Axe-Hackerwhich whacked off four Tuffula Trees at one smacker.We were making Thneedsfour times as fast as before!And that Lorax?...HE didn't show up anymore.
But the next weekhe knocked on my new office door.
He snapped, "I'm the Lorax who speaks for the treeswhich you seem to be chopping as fast as you please.But I'm ALSO in charge of the Brown Bar-ba-lootswho played in the shade in their Bar-ba-loot suitsand happily lived, eating Truffula Friuts.
"NOW...thanks to your hacking my trees to the ground,there's not enough Truffula Fruit to go 'round.And my poor Bar-ba-loots are all getting the crummiesbecause they have gas, and no food, in their tummies!
"They loved living here. But I can't let them stay.They'll have to find food. And I hope that they may.Good luck, boys," he cried. And he sent them away.
I, the Once-ler, felt sadas I watched them all go.BUT...business is businessAnd business must growregardless of crummies in tummies, you know.
I meant no harm. I most truly did not.But I had to grow bigger. So bigger I got.
I biggered my factory. I biggered my roads.I biggered my wagons. I biggered the loads of the Theends I shipped out. I was shipping them forth to the South! To the East! To the West! To the North!I went right on biggering...selling more Thneeds.And I biggered my money, which everyone needs.
Then AGAIN he came back! I was fixing some pipeswhen that old-nuicence Lorax came back with MORE gripes.
"I am the Lorax," he coughed and he whiffed.He sneezed and he snuffled. He snarggled. He sniffed."Once-ler!" he cried with a cruffulous croak."Once-ler! You're making a smogulous smoke!My poor Swomee-Swans...why, they can't sing a note!No one can sing who has smog in his throat.
"And so," said the Lorax,"--please pardon my cough--they cannot live here.So I'm sending them off.
"Where will they go now?... I dont hopefully know.They may have to fly for a month...or a year...To escape from the smog you've smogged-up around here.
"What's more," snapped the Lorax. (His dander was up.)"Let me say a few words about Gluppity-Glupp.Your machinery chugs on, day and night without stopmaking Gluppity-Glupp. Also Schloppity-Schlopp.And what do you do with this leftover goo?I'll show you, you dirty old Once-ler man, you!
You're Glumping the pond where the Humming-Fish hummed!No more can they hum, for their gills are all gummed.So, I'm sending them off. Oh, thier future is dreary.They'll walk on their fins and get woefully wearyin search of some water that isn't so smeary."
And then I got mad.I got terribly mad.I yelled at the Lorax, "Now listen here, Dad!All you do is yap-yap and say 'Bad! Bad! Bad! Bad!"Well, I have my rights, sir, and I;m telling YOUI intend to go on doing just what I do!And, for your information, you Lorax, I'm figgeringon biggering,and Biggeringand BIGGERINGand BIGGERING,turning MORE Truffula Trees into Thneedswhich everyone, EVERYONE, EVERYONE needs!"
And at that very moment, we heard a loud whack!From outside in the fields came a sickening smackof an axe on a tree. Then we heard the tree fall.The very last Tuffula Tree of them all!
No more trees. No more Thneeds. No more work to be done.So, in no time, my uncles and aunts, every one,all waved good-bye. They jumped into my carsand drove away under the smoke (or smog)-smuggered stars.
Now all that was left 'neath the bad-smelling skywas my big empty factory...the Lorax...and I.
The Lorax said nothing. Just gave me a glance...just gave me a very sad, sad backward glance...as he lifted himself by the seat of his pants.
And I'll never forget the grim look on his facewhen he heisted himself and took leave of this place,through a hole in the smog, without leaving a trace.
And all that the Lorax left here in this messwas a smaLl pile of rocks, with one word... "UNLESS."Whatever THAT meant, well, I couldn't guess.
That was long, long ago.But each day since that dayI've sat here and worried and worried away.Through the years, while my buildings have fallen apart,I've worried about it with all of my heart.
"But NOW," says the Once-ler,"Now that YOU'RE here,the word of the Lorax seems perfectly clear.
UNLESS someone like youcares a whole awful lot,nothing is going to get better.It's not.
"SO...Catch!" calls the Once-ler.He lets something fall."Its a Truffula Seed.It's the last one of all!
You're in charge of the last of the Truffula Seeds.And Truffula Trees are what everyone needs.Plant a new Truffula. Treat it with care.Give it clean water. And feed it fresh air.Grow a forest. Protect it from axes that hack.Then the Lorax and all of his friends may come back."

Now go do what your mother said!

Thursday, June 11, 2009

This Train is Derailed

Okay so lets go on a trip through time and space and I will show you all what I have been up to for the past 2 month, and why, "No I'm not done yet." I'm not sure why no one believes that I have been busy.
The question always poised and ready to reach out and scratch me is..."why aren't you done yet?" "Why does it take you so long?" I have come t ignore it all and go back outside to my secret world of clay, rough hands, pretty flowers, food stuff, and bag after bag of corrective soil agents.
The reason I'm not done is because I have a huge yard, it takes a long time to ripe the grass out of the ground, more time to get the clay into something a plant besides the weeds growing wild would want to live in. I really do garden with a hatchet. Its a sight to see I must say. So if you are ever out for a nice country drive on dead end back road and you see a girel with a big hat on, cussing and flailing madly at the ground with a hatchet don't be afraid. The girl is me, and that hatchet is dull, nothing really to worry about or see there.
Anyway the import bit is this. This is what i have bewen up to, and have been too tired to blog about when it happened at the time.
April
23rd
buy dirt

24th
planted porch salad bed, swiss chard, lettuce, spinach, onions, garlic, turnip.

25th
planted 5 cans of tomatoes, 3 in the porch salad bed.

26th
mowed, hatchetted out a curved border path bed to the house.
27th
planted 7 lavender, 3 sage on the border path. Planted 2 clematis vines.

28th
Planted 3 blueberries, pulled grass and weeds from around strawberries

29th
Planted 2 more clematis vines.

May
3rd
planted peppers, 4 green bells, 4 red hots.
planted beans, 12 seeds, all pole beans
Weeded around Satan's Cactus
Transplanted a rose of Sharon
3 white tiger lilies, I'm glad they bloomed they looked like little aliens with all their buds sticking out this way and that atop their spikey leaved perches.

4th
Laid brick for the Pentacle Planticle
sent in order for plants.

5th
Mowed...all day I have a big yard main'y on hill, and have to push mow...its a half acre...yeah I know.

6th
Bought landscaping timbers

On the 7th day I rested.

8th
Shopped for herbs, planted the herbs, and build a big red bench.

10th
Cleaned aroud the daffodis on the bank planted zinna seeds around them.
Took my mother out for mothers day, shopped for more herbs, Planted them when I got home.

11th
bought poop, dirt, and mulch

12th
Planted patunias in tree stup, planted 5 lilly of the valley bulbs around my mailbox.

14th
weedeated long bank.


15th
weeded around random flowers, planted 3 apple gourds, 3 birdhouse gourds, 3 bottle gourds. I only have one growing and I didn't think to label the rows, I'm thinking this little magic gourd is an apple gourd. We'll see at any rate it is the only one that is growing, which is kind of depressing.

16th
dark and scary rains whipped through the land, sending me into fits like an old dog that is forced to live on the porch, and hates storms. I may even had made noices like said old dog too, I can't be for certain.

17th
mowed, took sticks from yard and burned them in a ritualistic fashion in the yard. Wooping and hotdogs were had.

19th
Took everything off the porch, swept cleaned, and painted the floor.

20th
Painted the shed, went to war with the carpenter bees.

21st
Picked up yet more sticks up out of the yard, painted a rocking chair red, and followed it up painting more baskets, and otehr little things that go on the porch red.

23rd
Painted top of porch, painted the picnic bench red, and small bench yellow.


24th
Put in flower bed by newly painted shed hollyhocks, 3 blue salvia, 3 red lilies, put yellow bench by maples, Put up land scaping timber wall. 12 timbers, 32 ft.


25th
Memorial Day, ate blackened msg, and potato salad. Filled in dirt around landscaping timbers, weeded west bank, laid down landscaping fabric, planted 16 irises, 8 butterfly weed, 8 gloxnia, 12 blazing stars, 4 gladous. 12X25 bed to fill in on its own accord.
26th
Cleaned in neglected house.

27th
prepared a wave bed, planted nastum seeds. Enjoyed the wave bed so much put in a bottle tree on the one dead rose of sharron.

29th
Mowed

June

1st
worked on dirt pile by the pentacle panticle, started prepping the devil's cactus for its big move for the side of the house to its new home ( got hurt and cussed a lot instead.)


2nd
Went to the denist, got a wisdom tooth pulled, lived on pudding and ice cream. Got plant order from the 4th. Tied roses up on fence, planted 25 strawberries, 3 rhurbarb, got rained on went inside to sleep.














3rd
Planted 12 rhurbarb, cut down a few trees, planted 10 asparagus, planted 24 marigolds down the front of the landscaping timbers with back eyed susans and dasies for friends. Those arent weeds you are seeing on the bank. Those are herbs and tasty ones at that.

4th
planted 10 fruit trees, 2apple one red one yellow, peach, pear, 2 apracot, 2 paw paws. planted 6 grapes. Planted 24 more marigold in the tree bed to see if it keeps the deer from eating off my hostas and stargazing lilies.

6th
planted 6 giant hibiscuses, 2 mulberry trees, 2 lilies, and 6 walk on me thyme.

7th
picked up the free table and chairs, cleaned the table and chairs, planted 2 hostas, 8 snap drangons in front of the house. cleaned in the front of the house beds for squashes, and cucumbers...also plantede them. Finally moved the Devil's cactus. It has perked up since this picture and is covered in its beauitful yellow blooms. Makes me want to forget why I started calling it the Devil's cactus.

8th
cleaned around porch salad bed got rained on.


10th
planted 4 snap dragons in the wave bed, planted a star gazing lily there too. I enjoy taking my coffee from the table and watching my cat roll around in the herb garden only to pop up through the wave bed, panic at being spotted and rush up a tree. Its a good way to greet the day.


11th
Transplanted 3 rose bushes to the maples, in the rain. Started singing in the rain until I noticed that there were people watching me from the road. Children from up the road it seems, also less happy for the cooling rains than me it seemed.
Today I would also like to announce that I am tired. Very very tired in fact. I feel very frazzled and a bit sick. I should have been singing in the rain it seems. Do other people seem surprised that you are still doing something? Do they act like you're not moving fast enough for them? Am I really moving that slow?


Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Something for Nothing


A.K.A How did I get to be lucky all of a sudden? My mom came home on Sunday to tell me that one of the ladies she cleans for was giving her a table and chair set. She said that she had had it for 3 years and never used it once.

I had to leap like a hungry lion onto the back of a zebra. She said that they were dirty and needed some tender loving care. I didn't care. Free is free.


As an added bonus to sweeten the already super deal, she threw in an extra two chairs and a small table to go with them. I'm not sure why you would buy something like this to never use again. The cushions could have been prettier, but I can sew, and again really what room can I complain in this situation. Sometimes the skies do open up to give you your very own rainbow.

Friday, June 5, 2009

Pentacle Planticle take 2


If you click the picture you can see a larger picture of the plants, and can see what's planted as well. Looking better from http://garnetsmagickaljourney.blogspot.com/2009/05/pentacle-plantacle.html yes? And of course you can probably guess that those are marigolds, right? Well they are, and even though they smell funny, they keep animals from eating on my plants. Looking nice isn't it?

Photo Tag


The task is to go into your photo archive and choose the 4th picture from the 4th folder and talk about what it is. Then choose 4 people to tag!

I once was headed home from school, and spotted an old sign on the the backway, (not the interstate) Hidden behind tal weeds were two large collums glass tiled in shades of blue and green, the sign read, Welcome to the Mediterranean. Not really sure what it use to be.

The building was strange, the outside walls brick were held up well, the wrap around porch you see here was very rotted in some spots, and because I am insane went on it around back to find that there wasn't any wood even left on the back. This was the view, interstate driver zooming by, I wonder how many people know this was here?

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Deep Roots

I've been feeling pretty bad about a lot of different things, and not that those things will go away quickly, because they didn't come quickly, its on the climb. The dirt is making me better. The horrible clay, the blisters on my hands and feet, the simple joy of being surrounded that which I am trying to control.

The failing of the controling makes me feel even better some how. Nothing grows the way I want it to, and it ends up looking beautiful anyway. I labor until the the weather or sun tell me its time to go inside, or if it is time for work or school. But in the dirt, covered in clay mud mess, top soil, and elbow deep in bags of poop I'm happy.

This can only mean one things....I'm just a dirty hippy. No that's not completely true, I hate having to take forever scrubbing the dirt from out from under my nails. My roots towards the outside world tend to keep getting deeper and deeper, and the more they soak up from the earth the more I want to be surrounded by her.

Its the end vision in my mind. I trudge on. One day my yard with be a Magickal Oasis. The Mother Earth is my shrine to eternal salvation. I'm just part of the maintance crew....with a few extra plans for the shrine.

As part of my gardening and maintance duties, my goddess is giving me lots of fresh air, exerise, a better state of mind, vitamin D and B, and just because she knows my adversions to spending too much time in the sun, shade loving plants, she also helps me keep in mind that the more beds, the bigger the herb beds, the less mowing there will be. But she is not the only one shoving me outside and into the ground. The Green Man always dances with his beautiful Flora.


Nature Spirit
(I'm not sure who wrote this)
Nature Spirit carried
By spirits above
spirits below
spirits to rise
spirits to flow.
Always busy moving to and fro,
causing the elements,
to activate its cosmic dance,
merging together as a whole,
blended and drown into matter.

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Thanks to the Paw Path website, and my Love of Bill

Five Most Toxic Houseplants for Cats
There are many common household plants, both indoor and outdoor, that are poisonous to cats. Several of these plants can cause your beloved cat to become quite ill, including vomiting, diarrhea, and convulsions. In some cases, these plants can cause your pet to have complete respiratory failure, kidney failure, or other fatal illness. For this reason, it is important to assist your cat immediately if it eats a toxic plant.

Lilies
Perhaps the most toxic and common form of plant that can be fatal to your cat are lilies. Pretty much every form of lily can cause death to your pet. This includes the Tiger lily, the Easter lily, the Japanese show lily, the Rubrum lily and the Day lily. If your cat ingests any part of one of these plants, even a small amount, it will result in complete kidney failure in about 36 to 72 hours.

After ingesting a lily, your cat will begin to show symptoms within a few hours. Symptoms include a lack of appetite, lethargy, and vomiting. As the damage to the kidneys worsens, the symptoms will become worse. If your cat has ingested any part of a lily plant, it will need prompt attention from a veterinarian in order to prevent kidney failure.

Lily Of The Valley
Although the name of this plant has “lily” in it, it is not the same as the lilies already discussed. Nonetheless, this small, sweet smelling flower is also toxic to your feline friend. If your cat eats any part of the Lily of the valley, it can eventually die from cardiac dysrhythmias.

After eating a portion of a Lily of the valley, your cat might start to vomit and diarrhea. It also may show signs of confusion and weakness and even collapse prior to death. If you are certain your pet has eaten a part of a Lily of the valley, you should induce vomiting (as discussed later) and administer activated charcoal, which will help soak up the toxins and prevent them from getting further into your pet’s bloodstream. You should then take your pet to see a vet to ensure its safety.

Foxglove
Foxglove, also known commonly by its Latin name Digitalis, is also potentially fatal to a cat if eaten. Not only is the entire foxglove plant toxic, so is the water from the vase if the plant is cut and brought indoors.

If your cat ingests foxglove, it may begin to vomit and salivate excessively. Its pulse may become slow and strong early after ingestion, then later become rapid and weak. Ingestion of foxglove causes cardiac disturbance that can lead to hypotension, collapse, and shock, which can ultimately lead to death. The pupils of your cat may become dilated after eating foxglove and you cat may become delirious before slipping into a coma. While some of the symptoms of foxglove poisoning can be treated at home, your pet still needs to be taken to the vet to flush the foxglove out of its system and to help regulate its heart.

Monkshood
All parts of the monkshood plant, including the water in its vase, are toxic. Contents of the monkshood plant cause disruption in the nerve impulses when ingested in low doses. When ingested in large doses, it completely inhibits these nerves. Monkshood also causes irritation to the mucus membranes when ingested, which can lead to vomiting and excessive salivation. Some animals appear to go blind after eating monkshood, which is followed by cardiac dysrhythmias and death. Your cat needs to visit the vet right away in order to recover from monkshood poisoning.

Anemone
The entire anemone plant is toxic. It is irritating to the mucous membranes and often causes blisters to form after it is chewed. If it is ingested entirely, hemorrhagic gastroenteritis can occur, which can lead to shock, convulsions, and death. If your pet ingests anemone, administer activated charcoal and see the vet immediately.

Help For Your Cat: Inducing Vomiting
Inducing vomiting is generally appropriate after your cat ingests any toxic plant. To do this, mix 1 teaspoon of Hydrogen Peroxide with one cup of water and administer it to your cat. Or you can mix 1-2 tablespoons of salt with one cup of water or administer ½ mil of Syrup of Ipecac per pound of your cat. Of course, the vet should still be contacted immediately.

What to Do For Shock
If a cat is in shock, its heartbeat might be escalated. Or, it might have an irregular pulse or a very little pulse. In addition, its tongue might appear to be curled and its gums might be pale and have very little color. When a cat experiences shock its body temperature is often below normal.
A cat that is in shock needs to be seen immediately by a vet so it can have medication and intravenous fluids administered. While driving to the vet, it is best to have someone hold the cat and try to sooth it along the way. The cat should be kept warm, as loss of heat only increases the severity of the shock.

Saturday, May 23, 2009

A Rose by Any Other Name

Isn't it lovely. The rose bushes were looking rather sickly first come spring, but now they are in bloom, or rather just the one bloom, but isn't it lovely. I'm not sure what kind they are, but a rose by any other name would still smell as sweet right? Not completely true, but none the less its made me happy.






And here it is again from a different angle. The second angle isn't really needed I just felt the need to take it in, from all angles.











In other news the irises are alive and well and blooming like wildfire. The yellows ones suffered from being cut back twice, just because I think cut flowers are nice to have inside the house. They need to be thinned out horribly bad, but while they are so lovely they are just as good to be enjoyed. Beside I would kill them if I did it now. (Do you like how I have a valid excuse to be lazy?)














Continuing with the irisis they also come in purple, just not as many as I have in the driveway area. I find them very pretty, and they too are in desperate need of being thinned out.








These lovely ladies grow around the house and just here where I like to keep a rock 3/4 up the driveway as if you didn't know you were on clay mountain tells you who lives here.




Before we continue the garden tours of things that arew currently in bloom, I should make note that most of my lawn isn't grass, and is really weeds, and some grass sprinkled in so that the weeds look even more strange in the forever hills and holes that is my yard.
These that look like strawberry, but aren't and have a secret ungrourd root system that the devil himself giggles about perfecting are both nice and horrible. nice because they don't grow up high, horrible, because well they are Satan's root system.







I love this bush. It is a rhododendron, and was very sickly and small for 5 years. Last year it desided to get as tall as me and present me with lovely flowers. (thanks to a whole bag of poop) This year it is taller than me and goes through two flowerings before just turning into a waxy leaved giant. I I don't mind though, the flowers last long, and the bigger it gets the less grass (weeds) grow around it.




But behold those beautiful flowers. if only they smelled like something. They prove the world is not perfect, but can still be lovely.
Well that concludes it. The blooms of my yard will continue, but at the moment they lie in waiting.




Wednesday, May 20, 2009

This Means War!


Do you know of the hell of the carpenter bee? Carpenter bees get their common name from their habit of boring into wood to make galleries for the rearing of young. These are worldwide in distribution with 7 species occurring in the United States. They don't have a hive as honey bees, but are solitary bees.The female Carpenter bee can get into small areas,boring holes. They are perfectly round, about 3/8 " in diameter.


How do you kill them? I am at war with them. They are drilling holes in my porch that I went at hanging off a ladder to plug them up, I dance around the yard with a fly swatter and smack them down so I can rush over and stomp them, I spray them, and yet they buzz still yet. They have insane exo-skeletons, maybe a sledgehammer, or string their dead bodys on a piece of string as a spoil of war and as a warning to the others?


The males can't sting me, and the only reason I am brave enough to fight this war.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

A Moment to be serious

Sometimes you just don't get enough of those, and here is the thing if you don't balance right between your seriousness and your craziness then you end up on sided over the other in the eyes of other people. I know these things to be true. I also know that I'm caught in a bad place because of this. Emotionally I am suffering because of it.

What can you do? How do you get a good change going for you if everyone around you is rooting you deep in the thing that you're really not? How do you keep the people around you from tearing apart the small and hopeful fragments of your stability? They don't know of course, because you haven't told them. You haven't told them because they think you are stronger than you really are. In fact they think they're funny. What a terrible combination.

Here comes the kicker, you want to believe it. That's why you're not saying anything about it. That's why day after day you sit there wondering what to do and don't take actions, because you believe you are strong enough to deal with on your own. Who do you tell? Who is going to offer up their "funny" advice, that in the end is going to make you angry you even said a word.


A little kingdom I possess, where thoughts and feelings dwell; And very hard the task I find of governing it well.
Louisa May Alcott1832-1888, American Author

Big red Bench pt. 2



Without much further ado I now have the rest of the photos for the photomentary of my big magickal red bench adventure. The red looks quit sticking no? Well I liked it at least, and yes it was still raining. I did the top half of the bench before I went to sleep on the day of the posting of the finished unfinished bench. I figured in the morning I could flip it and paint the bottom, because after reading the paint can I found out it takes the paint a good while to dry.

And there it stands. Finished. The next morning before I ran away to do the things that needed to be done with my day I flipped and painted the bottom of the bench. On getting back home I flipped it back over and took its picture.
I've been thinking now that I should paint a few, lets say 5 stars on the upper right side of the bench. Why? I was think the big red bench of china could be fun considering the color choice. No? Maybe so....





Thursday, May 14, 2009

Rustic Bench Unfinished pt. 1


This is a bench. This bench I made, and before it gets any judgement...I know nothing of making benches. I had spare wood, and some time on my hands. Why is this bench ugly, and in my kitchen? I can explain.
It started out being outside when it was lovely and sunny, but it turned cloudly and stormed on me. So I brought everything inside so it could be finished. Still not finished. I am going to paint it red tomorrow. Why red? Its the only color I have that is for outdoor use. I could buy a different color, but that would make my bench worth something. I call it, found bench in a pile of stuff. Until tomorrow.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Pentacle Plantacle


After such much blood sweat and tears I have done it. My second herb garden is complete. That my friends is a whole lot of bricks. the path ways were going to be two bricks wide, but when I was getting the bricks loaded up from my mom's old house I touched a snake panicked and ran away with only 125 bricks. Snakes win the brick pile every time.

Anyway the plants look tiny and unimportant as of now, but soon very soon it will be amasing looking. With the help of Edwin my gnome my second herb garden will kick much ass. Hooray!

Friday, February 20, 2009

Tempest Smith

On February 20, 2001, a young girl named Tempest Smith killed herself in Lincoln Park, Michigan. Her suicide was directly caused by the taunting of other students at Lincoln Park Middle School who mocked her because she was different and because she was Wiccan. This is a dramatic and extreme example of hundreds of everyday cases of prejudice based on religion. Even those who would never make a racial or gender based slur may still discriminate based on religion, because many faiths teach that their religion is the only right one. We know that change is made one person at a time. So in memory of Tempest Smith and millions of victims of religious discrimination worldwide, I present to you the Pagan Pride Project pledge.

I remember Tempest Smith.
I remember that it's never right to make fun of someone's beliefs.
I remember that sticks and stones can break my bones, but names are words of power that can wound the soul.
I remember that many mocked and one died.
I remember Tempest Smith.
I remember that it takes all types to make a world.
I remember that nature likes biodiversity. This is true of beliefs and ideas as well.
I remember that I make a better witness to my own beliefs by simply living them, not belittling others.
I remember Tempest Smith.
And I remember that another person's belief (or nonbelief) is just as sincerely held as my own.
I remember to have the courage to say, "Hey, that's not right." when I see someone being ridiculed.
And the next time I am tempted to go along with the crowd and tease someone who is different, I will remember Tempest Smith, and I will remember my pledge.
Because what is remembered lives.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Wool of bat?

eye of newt anyone? Fear not! Things are never really want they seem. Witches really aren't so scary. If you visit your grandma she might know some of these. They were just folk names of herbs, not plucking out anyone's eyes, heart, tongue or else wise.

Here are some old time names for herbs:

A Bone of an Ibis: Buckthorn
Adders Tongue: Dogstooth Violet
A Titan's Blood: Wild Lettuce
A Lion's Hairs: Tongue of a Turnip [i.e., the leaves of the taproot]
A Man's Bile: Turnip Sap
A Pig's Tail: Leopard's Bane
A Hawk's Heart: Heart of Wormwood
An Eagle: Wild Garlic
Ass's Foot or Bull's Foot: Coltsfoot
Blood: Elder sap or another tree sap
Blood of Hephaistos: Wormwood
Burning Bush: White Dittany
Bread and Cheese Tree: Hawthorne
Blood from a Head: Lupine
Bird's Eye: Germander Speedwell
Blood of Ares: Purslane
Blood of a Goose: A Mulberry Tree's Milk
Bloodwort: Yarrow
Blood of Hestia: Camomile
Blood of an Eye: Tamarisk Gall
Blood from a Shoulder: Bear's Breach
Bat's Wings: Holly
Black Sampson: Echinacea
Bull's Blood or Seed of Horus: Horehound
Bear's Foot: Lady's Mantle
Calf's Snout: Snapdragon
Cat's Foot: Canada Snake Root and/or Ground Ivy
Candelmas Maiden: Snowdrop.
Capon's Tail: Valerian.
Christ's Ladder: Centaury
Cheeses: Marsh Mallow
Chocolate Flower: Wild Geranium
Christ's Eye: Vervain Sage
Clear-eye: Clary Sage
Click: Goosegrass
Cucumber Tree: Magnolia
Clot: Great Mullein
Corpse Plant: Indian Pipe.
Crowdy Kit: Figwort
Cuddy's Lungs: Great Mullein
Crow Foot: Cranesbill
Cuckoo's Bread: Common Plantain
Clear Eye: Clary Sage
Crow's Foot: Wild Geranium
Devils Dung: Asafoetida
Dragon's Blood: Calamus
Dog's Mouth: Snap Dragon
Daphne: Laurel/Bay
Devil's Plaything: Yarrow
Dove's Foot: Wild Geranium
Dew of the Sea: Rosemary
Dragon Wort: Bistort
Earth Smoke: Fumitory
Eye of Christ: Germander Speedwell
Elf's Wort: Elecampane
Enchanter's Plant: Vervain
Englishman's Foot: Common Plantain
Erba Santa Maria: Spearmint
Everlasting Friendship: Goosegrass
Eye of the Day: Common Daisy
Eye of the Star: Horehound
Eye Root: Goldenseal
Eyes: Aster, Daisy, Eyebright
Frog's Foot: Bulbous Buttercup
From the Loins: Camomile
Fat from a Head: Spurge
Fairy Smoke: Indian Pipe
Felon Herb: Mugwort
From the Belly: Earth-apple
From the Foot: Houseleek
Five Fingers: Cinquefoil
Fox's Clote: Burdock
Graveyard Dust: Mullein
Goat's Foot: Ash Weed
God's Hair: Hart's Tongue Fern
Golden Star: Avens
Gosling Wing: Goosegrass
Graveyard Dust: Mullein
Great Ox-eye: Ox-eye Daisy
Hairs of a Hamadryas Baboon: Dill Seed
Hair of Venus: Maidenhair Fern
Hag's Taper: Great Mullein
Hagthorn: Hawthorn
Hare's Beard: Great Mullein
Herb of Grace: Vervain
Hind's Tongue: Hart's Tongue Fern
Holy Herb: Yerba Santa
Holy Rope: Hemp Agrimony
Hook and Arn: Yerba Santa
Horse Tongue: Hart's Tongue Fern
Horse Hoof: Coltsfoot
Hundred Eyes: Periwinkle
Innocense: Bluets
Jacob's Staff: Great Mullein
Joy of the Mountain: Marjoram
Jupiter's Staff: Great Mullein
King's Crown: Black Haw
Knight's Milfoil: Yarrow
Kronos' Blood: of Cedar
Lady's Glove: Foxglove aka Witches' Gloves
Lion's Tooth: Dandelion aka Priest's Crown
Lad's Love: Southernwood
Lamb's Ears: Betony
Little Dragon: Tarragon
Love in Idleness: Pansy
Love Leaves: Burdock
Love Lies Bleeding: Amaranth or Anemone
Love Man: Goosegrass
Love Parsley: Lovage
Love Root: Orris Root
Man's Health: Ginseng
Maiden's Ruin: Southernwood
Master of the Woods: Woodruff
May: Black Haw
May Lily: Lily of the Valley
May Rose: Black Haw
Maypops: Passion Flower
Mistress of the Night: Tuberose
Mutton Chops: Goosegrass
Nose Bleed: Yarrow
Old-Maid's-Nightcap: Wild Geranium
Old Man's Flannel: Great Mullein
Old Man's Pepper: Yarrow
Oliver: Olive
Password: Primrose
Pucha-pat: Patchouli
Peter's Staff: Great Mullein
Priest's Crown: Dandelion leaves
Poor Man's Treacle: Garlic
Queen of the Night: Vanilla Cactus
Queen of the Meadow: Meadowsweet
Queen of the Meadow Root: Gravelroot
Ram's Head: American Valerian
Red Cockscomb: Amaranth
Ring-o-bells: Bluebells
Robin-run-in-the-grass: Goosegrass
Semen of Helios: White Hellebore
Semen of Herakles: Mustard-rocket
Semen of Hermes: Dill
Semen of Hephaistos: This is Fleabane
Semen of Ammon: Houseleek
Semen of Ares: Clover
Seed of Horus: Horehound
Sparrow's Tongue: Knotweed
Soapwort: Comfrey or Daisy
Shepherd's Heart: Shepherd's Purse
Swine's Snout: Dandelion leaves
Shameface: Wild Geranium
See Bright: Clary Sage
Scaldhead: Blackberry
Seven Year's Love: Yarrow
Silver Bells: Black Haw
Sorcerer's Violet: Periwinkle
St. John's Herb: Hemp Agrimony.(this is not St. John's Wort)
St. John's Plant: Mugwort
Star Flower: Borage
Star of the Earth: Avens
Starweed: Chickweed
Sweethearts: Goosegrass
Tarragon: Mugwort
Tartar Root: Ginseng
Thousand Weed: Yarrow
Thunder Plant: House Leek
Tanner's Bark: Common Oak
Toad: Toadflax
Torches: Great Mullein
Tongue of dog: houndstongue
Tears of a Hamadryas Baboon: Dill Juice
Unicorn Root: Ague Root
Unicorn's Horn: False Unicorn:Helonias Dioica
Unicorn Horn: True Unicorn Root
Wax Dolls: Fumitory
Weazel Snout: Yellow Dead Nettles/Yellow Archangel
White: Ox-eye Daisy
White Wood: White Cinnamon
Witch's Asprin: White Willow/Willow Bark
Witch's Brier: Brier Hips
Weasel Snout: Yellow Archangel
Wolf Foot: Bugle Weed
Wolf Claw: Club Moss
Wolf's Milk: Euphorbia
Weed: Ox-Eye Daisy
White Man's Foot: Common Plantain