Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Unsolved Mystery (July 25, 2012)


Does anyone know what these are? Recently I noticed these pointy things growing on some trees. I wish I'd paid better attention to the kind of trees they were. I was near some Eucalyptus trees at the time but who knows? The remind me of spiked wrecking balls. My online searches aren't yielding anything when I search under "acorn cluster."


The moment I saw these I knew they would look cool painted in a metallic color. It brings out all their points and shapes. Now it looks like a cluster of birds. Gold birds? Sure.

If you have any info on these mysterious plant ornaments, please notify me immediately. I'm SO curious!

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Delightful Dahlias (July 22, 2012)

The colorful plant princess: the gorgeous dahlia.

Today while driving I spotted a corner house with a beautiful garden that featured dahlias. Naturally, I stopped to take a few photos. Here’s what I saw:



Inspired by the dahlias, I just did my first Google search on these flowers. Did you know there are hundreds of kinds of dahlias? I didn’t. I knew that there were different sizes and colors and types. But hundreds of kinds? Wow.

Below is the aptly named Pom Pom Dahlia, which has 360 degrees of saturated color.




Some dahlias have spiky petals, reminding me of sea anemones. Some are multi-colored. They look like they’ve been painted by someone with a patient hand. Each one is a work of art. Some are giant (these would be Dinner Plate Dahlias). I like dahlias for their various shapes, their dramatic size and their bright colors. They are full of life and they dazzle.



Maia has been a good friend since we were eleven, and she loves dahlias, too. She knows a lot more about them than I do, but everyone has to start somewhere. Her dad also loves dahlias, and gave me a few last summer. I’m happy to report that his dahlias are growing again this summer in my yard. Just leaves for now, but almost daily I see more growth, and I’m excited about the blooms on the way.



Dahlias first came onto my radar a few years back when we were visiting rain-abundant  Vancouver Island. In twenty-four hours we saw three things that I had not seen before: logging trucks, a bear climbing a pear tree, and huge, dramatic dahlias. Toto, we’re not in San Diego anymore.



Obviously, dahlias can grow in San Diego. But maybe their hearts are in the rainy Pacific Northwest. Canby, Oregon claims to be the dahlia capital of North America. They do a big dahlia show there each summer. Maia, you interested? 










Saturday, July 21, 2012

Big and Small (July 21, 2012)

The garden I joined is really coming along. It’s amazing how quickly it was turned from a patch of grass and ivy into a growing garden with raised beds, irrigation, and plants and vegetables of all types. Ground was broken only 2 months ago. We shoveled dirt and drilled boards to make beds over the course of five or six Saturdays. Some people did a lot more work, staying extra hours to coax the irrigation system to life. We planted a few weeks ago and already some people are harvesting vegetables. I picked my first one today, a single yellow pear-shaped tomato.



Only an inch long but it had good flavor. Is it worth blogging about? Sure! My garden is growing and there’s edible stuff in there. Nature really is amazing.


As for the big things in the garden, as of today there is a composter that is almost the size of a Volkswagen Beetle. Seriously. It’s an 80-gallon tumbling wonder. The photo below shows how giant it is (with a gallon of paint next to it for size comparison).



I’m painting a wall that frames one side of the garden. Right now it has beige primer on it (the wall has only slightly more primer than my hands do! I started out with plastic gloves but I ditched them when they got hot and uncomfortable.) Stand by for photos of the mural when there’s something on it besides primer.


This garden is really special to me. It came out of nowhere, just when I was ready for a project and a connection to neighbors with similar interests to mine. It’s such a friendly group of people, do-it-yourselfers like me, who don’t mind shoveling dirt on their Saturdays, who lend tools and share plants. One lady helped prime the wall yesterday. She loves to be involved and she helped make the raised beds, too. She’s in her late 60s, and while she’s small in size (less than five feet tall), she’s big and mighty in her enthusiasm. She embodies what this garden is about. When faced with turning a wedge of rocky land into a garden, some might say, “Why bother?” But like my gardening-and-painting friend, this group said, “Why not?” And they made it happen. It’s about community. We’ve learned new skills and made new friends. Our plants are growing, and so are we.






Monday, July 9, 2012

Room with a View (of its own Endless Clutter) (July 9, 2012)


Today I tried to tackle one of the most grueling, daunting tasks one can face in this lifetime: I attempted to clean a child’s room. (And by “clean” I do not mean spending ten minutes with a duster and a vacuum. This room is as packed as a storage unit. I’d been avoiding this dreaded task for several weeks but we could not get across the room anymore, as the stuff on the floor was…hiding the floor. Time to face the mess, er music.)



This particular room has suffered for several years from a condition that often goes undiagnosed. It’s called IFS (Invisible Floor Syndrome). The floor is there but you can’t see it under the debris covering nearly every inch.



Part of the problem is that this room is the smallest in the house. If we’d been able to anticipate this issue earlier perhaps we would have reassigned rooms, switching their contents as it became clear whose collections would be best matched with which rooms. The real-life equivalent to the computer game Tetris (which, for those who don’t know, involves turning geometric pieces to fit into shapes left by other geometric pieces, all within a limited time). With Tetris, you need quick thinking to anticipate which shapes will fit where. I’ll admit freely that I was never a great Tetris player, and I seem to suffer from the same lack of skills when it comes to fitting people’s stuff into their rooms. In my defense, when this room stopped being my art studio and became a child’s room, all the other rooms were already taken, so it wasn’t that I thought, Oh, we’ll never fill this gigantic room. It will remain prison-cell austere. It was our only choice! At about this time a neighbor who works with young kids laughingly labeled my youngster’s tendency to hold many things at once “squirreling.” She explained that some kids like to gather as much as they can, all at once, perhaps readying themselves for winter, just like squirrels with their acorns.



No good deed ever goes unpunished, right?! I soon realized that my plan to unearth this room was a much bigger task than I’d anticipated. My first idea was to sweep (perhaps literally) the stuff back into plastic boxes, just to get it off the floor, so we could reach the closet again. But I realized that a dresser that gobbles up space could be moved out and that if I moved a few pieces of furniture, the room could have more usable space. First I needed to move the dresser. But in order to do this I had to move the heavy wood bed (because the dresser was anchored with an L bracket to a stud, which was just an inch or two behind the bed). Had to clear the floor at the foot of the bed in order to move the bed. Did that. (Boy, this is a good workout! I’m sweating and my heart is beating). Finally I unfasten the dresser from the wall. Found a library book under the bed. It’s been there so long I think it predates libraries.) Now I need to move the shelves that were in the closet to the new vacancy next to the bed. Must unload the stuff from the shelves (really only a half a job as the child in question had removed most of the contents for me, sweeping them onto, yes, the floor.) Now I have an idea of how to make the closet more efficient. Some sawing. Drilling. Might need to paint. Won’t bore you with the details but I can’t find the longer screws so this part will have to wait. Sigh. Stare at mess again. I’m overwhelmed. There are moments where I nearly hyper-ventilate as I look at the endless piles of stuff I need to sort. So I repeat like a mantra, This room is going to be GREAT! But reality and fear set in and I find myself alternating between nearly hyper-ventilating and the occasional moment of confidence about how amazing the room will look if I ever sort through the ocean of stuff on the floor.



Eventaully I realize I should have brought a trash can into the room. I call for help and someone brings me one, realizing that I am trapped behind quite a mess. The trash can helps. I make a giant “Keep” pile as well as a recycling box. I also start a crayon pile. I use a new purple crayon to scribble a list of things I’ve found. This seems like a creative way to get through the annoyingness (yes, it’s a word) of my current task. I realize this is prime blog material. My friends (especially those with kids) will howl with laughter and nod with commiseration as they read about today’s discovery of a Mt. Everest-sized mishmash of broken toys parts. So here, my readers, is a partial list of what was found in my child’s bedroom today:



·         Crayons, broken and whole

·         Pencils and pens (some no longer working, having been separated from their caps)

·         Drawings

·         Paperclips

·         Confetti-like pieces of broken Styrofoam peanuts. Hundreds, maybe thousands of them.

·         Single socks in various sizes

·         Clothes

·         Toys (both broken and intact)

·         Puzzle pieces I’d wondered about for years

·         Buttons

·         Kitchen gadgets

·         Plastic bags

·         A partial deck of cards

·         Uncooked pasta (Rigatoni, in case you’re wondering)

·         Band aids

·         Empty gift bags

·         Hair bands (I’d wondered where that new package of 20 bands had gone)

·         Cotton from a formerly stuffed toy animal

·         Flash cards

·         Beads

·         Sequins

·         Books

·         1 Elmo slipper

·         Shells

·         Coloring books

·         Halves of plastic Easter Eggs

·         Flossers

·         Christmas tree ornaments

·         Wrapped candy

·         Leaves

·         Stones

·         Pinecones

·         Mr. Potato Head’s Ear (no sign of Mr. Potato Head himself but we remain hopeful)



Not Found: the book How to Declutter for Dummies



If you were to point out that I should have managed this dangerously big accumulation of stuff before it reached avalanche status, I would not argue with you. But I do the mom thing, I sometimes work, I do service hours at school and during the school year I was just too tired and overwhelmed to tackle this project. Every once in a while I’d clear the middle of the room, putting stuff into plastic boxes, but I rarely had the time or stamina to sort the stuff into groups of like things. Despite my hopes, the mess did not sort itself into boxes. Well-intentioned people gave us gifts or toys their kids had outgrown. And like rising bread dough, the mess increased in size while I was busy with other things.



Where is the fine line between being a curious soul who likes to look at stuff, and plain old hoarding? If anyone has thoughts on this, please let me know! We may need an intervention.



Well, it’s time for me to get back to the room. I’ve made some progress (after all, I’ve been at it for quite a few hours) but there are more papers to sort, toy parts that need reuniting with their friends, debris to vacuum up and the closet that needs its rod back. I’m somewhat hopeful about the potential. But if I haven’t surfaced by the time school starts this fall, would you send someone to the room to see if I’m still picking up Styrofoam confetti?

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Fourth: Flags, Fireworks, Food, Fun, Freedom! (July 4, 2012)


Another Fourth of July. In some ways it was different from other Independence Days. But there were familiar elements, including fireworks. Love those. They’re only once a year, and skipping them is not an option for me. I look forward to them all year long. At dinner we used the red and white gingham table cloth that always reminds me of my grandparents and so many July 4th barbeques at their house.

It’s almost July 5th and this patriotic party animal needs sleep. But I had to post today, one of my favorite days of the year. Before signing off, I’ll share two photos of the edible art creations I made today. On thematic holidays, you’ve just got to make food festive. It’s so fun!



Happy 236th Birthday, America. You’re amazing, and you don’t look a day over 185!


Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Grow, Baby, Grow!!! (June 12, 2012)

Do you ever try to retrace your steps back to the first moment you discovered a passion? Oftentimes an interest is not marked by a lightening bolt and a clearly defined start. For me, the idea has to wander through my mind several times before it bobs to the surface as an actual concept.

I’m in the middle of a passionate obsession with growing things and I’m trying to map out how, when and why this developed. My parents had small flowerbeds at the house where I lived as a child but I never dug in the dirt. We had a lemon tree that (to my young eyes) seemed huge, with no fewer than a thousand lemons! Occasionally I went with my mom to plant nurseries. It was fun to run through the aisles of flowers. There were so many kinds, so many colors! I liked pinching Snapdragons, causing their mouths to open. Was I interested in flowers and plants? Not especially. But it was wildly exciting to visit relatives in rainier climates and see blackberries and blueberries growing by the side of the road! We’d stop and pick them, high on the thrill of picking our own berries. At age seven I remember attempting to grow orange trees. I was confident that poking a half-inch hole into our hard back yard soil, dropping an orange seed in, and watering it once before forgetting its location would surely produce a giant tree, loaded with juicy oranges. After two days it slipped my mind as I was far too focused on drawing, watching cartoons, trading stickers, doing homework, and eventually becoming a teen-ager who never thought about plants as there were more important things to do: CDs to listen to, phone calls from boys and hairdos to create.

Fast-forward a decade or two. I’m twenty-five and I have my own tiny apartment. I buy a few plants and put them in my bedroom in front of the window. I love it. Indoor plants make any room so cheerful and full of life.

Another two years pass. I’ve moved and I’ve married and I have front and back yards. Space for plants, although I’m obsessed with beading and almost ignore the potential for outdoor plants. We restore the 95-year-old house we’re living in and redo the landscaping. I choose plants myself and I plant colorful impatiens and cheerful lilies. They grow. I watch them bloom and I feel good knowing that my efforts help them. I see how much plants beautify the front of a house. We sell the house and leave the area for another adventure.   

Where we live next there isn’t much room for growing things. Ironically this is when I develop a major interest in plants. At garage sales I choose a few geraniums. I start looking at plant labels at Home Depot. Wow, they all have names! There are so many varieties. I accidentally stumble upon a community garden and I’m blown away. It’s amazing! So much growing. So much sharing. I’d never even heard of community gardens. I’m in awe.

We move locally, I turn thirty, and now we have a front and back yard again. Our yard has trees planted by the last owners: apricot, peach, mango, plum, fig, persimmon, avocado. The first year we get peaches that are small. One year only one apricot grows on our tree, which a friend enjoys for us. He feels badly once he learns he’d accidentally consumed our entire apricot harvest that year! I’m too busy to really pay attention to the trees but sometimes I buy plants in an attempt to put my own stamp on our yard. I plant things and discover the hard way that certain plants really do prefer shade, not sun. Or vice versa. I try the plants in new locations. I plant Morning Glory, and eventually regret it. (Vines are very hard to eliminate!) It threatens to take over the entire house. I cut it down but it keeps coming back. A few years later I have forgotten what I learned about vines and plant a beautiful black-eyed Susan, which immediately quadruples in size, and threatens to overtake the entire side fence. Wait. This feels familiar. Did I have a vine challenge before? Ooops. We try to grow corn. Not successful. You mean all soil is not the same? Oh.

When I visit my grandparents I poke around in the back yard, admiring all the things that grow there. Grandad has Sweet Pea, roses, berries, lemons, and many other plants. He gives me Nasturtium seeds and some of his Clivia. My interest in plants grows. Is it coincidence or is it because Grandad is teaching me, passing on a love of gardening? Who can say? But now that my grandparents are gone, it’s special to me to have plants from their garden. I gradually learn names of plants. I take photos and search online.

I happen upon more community gardens. Each is so different, a product of the gardeners who spend time there, the neighborhoods nearby, the contours of the lot. It’s so fun to wander through these gardens, studying what people do, wondering which vegetables might come from the plants with gigantic leaves, gathering ideas for my own garden.

Somehow I discover succulents and develop a passion for them (and wonder how I never really noticed them before). We go on garden tours. I start making mosaic art to install in gardens. Great combination! I join a community garden. We build raised beds and shovel a mountain of dirt. We work together. We share seeds, tools and ideas. It feels awesome to be involved.

At home, our apricot tree is going crazy. There are hundreds up there (this is the same tree that formerly produced exactly one apricot a few years back). We pick them daily, and sometimes discover them below the tree, having ripened and fallen for us to find nestled in the grass, like late-blooming Easter eggs.







Yesterday I spent hours working in the yard. I swept grass cutting. I pruned trees. I planted bamboo. I wrestled thorns. I lost a fight with a sharp orange tree branch. I taped a piece of Kleenex over the cut and carried on. I watered and weeded. And weeded and weeded. I moved plants and repotted others.


Thirty years after planting my orange seeds in my parents’ yard, I’m in planting mode again. This time I have a spade. I know where my seeds were planted. I remember to water. I have gusto and information. My shoes are dusty. My shoulders are tired. My right arm is scratched up. My nails have looked better. But I’m growing things. I’m happy.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

To Sit or Not to Sit? That is the Question (June 5, 2012)

The chair. One of the most basic, essential items in existence. Chairs have been around a long time. I'm sure that the need to sit occurred to our earliest cave-dwelling ancestors—although I’m guessing they used rocks for sitting. Sometimes we don’t notice items that are so much a part of our daily lives. They are functional and familiar, and while we use them daily, we don’t give them much thought. Which is why it’s so fun to give them makeovers. Sometimes they just need a new look in order for the world to take notice.

About a month ago I came upon a broken chair while I was out wandering. Immediately I knew it had potential. As it was placed at the curb, I took this as a sign that I was meant to adopt it, give it a new look and a new life, and turn it into a plant holder. I knew she’d become an outdoor art-and-garden piece, but I didn’t know which colors she wanted. After a little thought I realized she needed to be purply-magenta, a color full of life and pizzazz. I’m not sure exactly how I arrived at the idea to do stripes (which are more fun than just a solid color).


After starting her paint job I realized that she reminded me of the Cheshire Cat, from Alice in Wonderland (which I haven’t seen in decades but is quite memorable):


This morning while wandering a street I hadn’t been on in years I came across another chair-turned-planter and since I had my camera with me I can show you how it looked:


How fun that this gardening enthusiast saw potential in an older chair, and gave it a new calling in the front yard! On today’s walk, I also came across something that was not originally a chair but became one. What a clever upcycle of a palm tree stump! I love how these two homeowners both had unique ways of looking at chairs and nature.


My paint job won’t last forever but that’s not my point in doing this. I can always give the chair another makeover if inspiration strikes or if the sun fades its current look. My point in doing this is to have fun with plants, to use everyday items in unexpected ways, and to do things that give me a little boost and my yard another shot of color.

So in reply to my own question “to sit or not to sit?,” I don’t have one answer that fits all. Sometimes a chair is just a chair. But sometimes it’s a nest, just waiting for plants to give it life.