Calzone
Gear Whore #1
Glad we have mini-splits: first off they are silent; next is we need them for days like this.
The garden sprouting is like a time lapse. Somehow spring got pent up by the combination of drought and weather. A little surreal.
A squirrel dug up most of my white oak seedlings, and at one point I only had three left: one was a single, and the other a dally or twin which white oaks do where two seedlings grow from one acorn.
Then some critter ate the stems of the twins. I was pretty sad about this, but because I’m an optimist I planted the two large pots in the ground to winter, knowing that this would help protect them from cold.
Today I was surprised to see the twin starting to form buds. The twin lives so now I have 3 oaks again. I figure the twins might be or could grow weird and I’m mucho cool with that.
When I get a chance I’ll transplant them into monster pots to encourage growth. What saved my oak seedlings from squirrels was that I kept these three close to the house in the front-backyard. The other dozen I moved into the back-backyard on the “landing,” and embankment I created down the “slope” along the marsh grass near where the cherry tomatoes were growing wild.
Happy-happy.
Cal
The garden sprouting is like a time lapse. Somehow spring got pent up by the combination of drought and weather. A little surreal.
A squirrel dug up most of my white oak seedlings, and at one point I only had three left: one was a single, and the other a dally or twin which white oaks do where two seedlings grow from one acorn.
Then some critter ate the stems of the twins. I was pretty sad about this, but because I’m an optimist I planted the two large pots in the ground to winter, knowing that this would help protect them from cold.
Today I was surprised to see the twin starting to form buds. The twin lives so now I have 3 oaks again. I figure the twins might be or could grow weird and I’m mucho cool with that.
When I get a chance I’ll transplant them into monster pots to encourage growth. What saved my oak seedlings from squirrels was that I kept these three close to the house in the front-backyard. The other dozen I moved into the back-backyard on the “landing,” and embankment I created down the “slope” along the marsh grass near where the cherry tomatoes were growing wild.
Happy-happy.
Cal