rose smoothie

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Bet the title got your attention, huh? Well this smoothie isn’t for people…it’s for rose bushes.

Yes, as in plants.

I have mentioned that banana peels are awesome junk food for roses. I told you I save my peels and just stash them in a plastic bag in the freezer until I need to feed the roses. Well, since my bushes have had their first blooms and one bush got beaten up by the roofers I decided today was the day.

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I used to dig the peels in around the base of each bush, but given the critter population living with woods and farmers’ fields I have developed a rose smoothie which I dig in around the base with a small spade I use to transplant seedlings.

The formula for the smoothie is I rough chop the peels and toss into the blender with whatever spent coffee grounds I have on hand and a couple of cups or so of very warm tap water. (I never drink flavored coffee and I would never recommend using artificially flavored coffee grounds. I don’t know how the artificial flavor chemicals would affect the plants.)

20140619-141544-51344382.jpgThe consistency of this smoothie for rose bushes should be on the thick side , but pourable. I don’t take my blended outside I pour the goop into a plastic pitcher. I then go around to each bush and dig a few ounces in around the base of each bush. I have a standard sized blender and only a few rose bushes right now, so one batch of rose smoothie is all I need every time I do this.

I will feed my roses this concoction every two weeks until Labor Day.

Now, I know people have this banana peel magic out on the Internet, but I want to tell you specifically how I first learned about this, which is easily twenty plus years ago thanks to a gardening article I read in the Wall Street Journal. Yes, the Wall Street Journal. Some of the best gardening articles I have ever read have been in the Wall Street Journal over the years.

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So in this article the writer was talking about caring for roses and mentioned banana peels. The writer cited as a source a book called Old Wives’ Lore for Gardeners by Maureen and Bridget Boland. The book was originally published in the 1970s in the United Kingdom but you can still find gently used copies on Amazon.com today. . I have the book and the companion book Gardeners’ Magic and Other Old Wives Lore by Bridget Boland.

Banana peels add calcium, magnesium, phosphates, silica, sulphur, and potassium. Spent (or used) coffee grounds are rich in similar nutrients (nitrogen, potassium, calcium, phosphorus, and magnesium).

Anyway, if you grow roses, try this. And if you like fun vintage gardening books, find yourself a copy of Old Wives’ Lore for Gardeners.

Food for thought as I leave you for the day: do you miss the real gardening shows that used to be on television ? There used to be real gardening shows where hosts including Martha Stewart used to get out and dig flower beds, discuss plants, and so on. They would share tips. Today all it is all hardscaping , fake pre-cast pavers, and outdoor kitchens as far as the shows. No real horticulture. I miss the real gardening shows.

Thanks for stopping by!

summer sandwich

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Yes this tastes as good as it looks. And couldn’t be more simple.

All it is is two slices of wheat bread toasted, a little bit of mayonnaise on the bread- not much – and to that that you layer on sliced fresh mozzarella, sliced fresh tomatoes, a couple of thin slices of Vidalia onion, salt and pepper to taste and top off with basil leaves. If you build this sandwich on ciabatta or other more substantial rustic bread I would suggest substituting olive oil for mayonnaise.

charity auction june 27th

country auctionI was asked to post this Briggs Auction House press release :

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

June 18, 2014

 

 CALLING ALL MOVIE FANS AND BIBLIOPHILES!

Own a piece of cinematic and/or book-binding history!  On Friday, June 27th, beginning at 3pm, Briggs Auction, Inc. in Garnet Valley, PA will be selling at auction furnishings and accessories from Sundowning, the newest M. Night Shyamalan movie that just wrapped local filming, as well as a collection of antique bookbinding equipment owned by prominent local book binder and restorer Elke M. Shihadeh.

 

The local set for the Shyamalan movie was a historical farmhouse, so the furnishings and other items from that collection reflect the typical country antiques, continental furniture, and fine porcelains that would be found there. Everything was locally-sourced from Philadelphia and suburban antique shops.

 

Highlights of the movie collection include a 10′ country farm table with unusual folding and hinged legs; a Southern pine pewter cupboard; a Continental inlaid games table; a fine selection of Chinese Canton porcelains; Majolica; stoneware; decorative lamps, and more.

 

The majority of the proceeds from the auction will go to the M. Night Shyamalan Foundation. Shyamalan and his wife, Dr. Bhavna Shyamalan started the foundation in 2001, with the goal of removing the barriers of poverty and inequality through closing the education gap in the U.S., as well as other developing countries.

 

The bookbinding collection from Elke M. Shihadeh will include her personal turn-of-the-century book-binding equipment, including book presses; gold-leaf presses, type tools and trays, oak print and map files, and a collection of 19th century books. Mrs. Shihadeh personally restored the broadsides announcing the Declaration of Independence. She has restored and bound many fine books, including rare elephant folio editions of John James Audubon’s bird renderings. The majority of the proceeds from this estate collection will also be donated to charitable causes.

 

“The unique triality of these collections is the real draw”, says John Turner, President of Briggs Auction. “You have the opportunity to own a piece from a local movie filmed by a prominent director, or a piece of history from a prominent bookbinder, each with strong ties to the Delaware Valley; the proceeds from bothcollections will go to wonderful causes; and at the same time, you’ll have a beautiful and antique piece that is ready to be displayed in your home.”

 

“We are proud to work for charitable organizations like the M. Night Shymalan Foundation, and that the Shihadeh estate proceeds will benefit charity. We hope that the local interest of the film and the uniqueness of Mrs. Shihadeh’s collection attracts curious people to become satisfied buyers.” Turner continues.

 

The 100+ lots of these special collections augment Briggs Auction’s weekly estate discovery auction, which begins at 3:00p, Friday June 27th. Detailed listings and photos will be available on the Briggs Auction website, www.BriggsAuction.com .  Driving directions are also available on the website.

 

Auction previews will be held Thursday, June 26th from 4pm – 7pm, and all-day Friday, from 9am on. Absentee and telephone bids are accepted for this auction.

 

Questions? Please call Briggs Auction, Inc.: 610.566.3138.

 

 

early morning gardening

Queen Elizabeth Rose

Queen Elizabeth Rose

When the weather starts to warm up, as far as the garden is concerned it is definitely holier if it’s earlier. The whole holier if it’s earlier is a familial joke having to do with my great aunts who loved mass at 6 a.m. every day during the week. It does apply to gardening too, however.  When it gets warm you either water before the heat of the day, or after the heat of the day. I like before (or early morning) because I grow roses and it cuts down on rose diseases like black spot and mildew when I water first thing in the morning.

This morning I was out there a little before 7 a.m.  The garden in summer is so extra beautiful in the early morning hours.  The birds are at their morning songs and it’s cool and quiet. It’s peaceful and a terrific way to start your day.

This morning I had to feed everything front side and woods side so it was a process.  Today I used fish emulsion. Specifically I have been using Alaska Brand Fish Fertilizer which you can buy lots of places, including Home Depot. The drawback is your garden smells like dead fish for an hour or so after you apply but the plus side is plants love the stinky stuff.

Mystery Viburnum

Mystery Viburnum

I also had to dead head the roses and some of the zinnias that bloomed early.  I had to stake up some droopy plants here and there,  including a few sun flowers.  I don’t grow the giant sun flowers, but I choose these Italian sunflowers that are of a more compact growth habit and are a deep red.  They only get 2 to 3 feet tall. These plants I bought because the Mexican red sunflower seeds I planted were duds.

This was not the year for seeds for me.  The only seeds that have come up at all are the wildflower seeds I bought on eBay for the woods.  Because the ice storm did mother nature pruning and opened up the tree canopy, I saw it as an opportunity to enjoy some additions to the garden.

Roman Chamomile and English Thyme

Roman Chamomile and English Thyme

The change in light due to this winter’s ice storm has presented me with a lot of planting opportunities, truthfully.  I have had all sorts of plants pop up since spring broke that did not have the light for years to emerge.  I had blood root for the first time, amazing Jack in The Pulpits, and what I think are wild hydrangeas.  A plant that I thought was a wild dogwood and is about eight feet tall bloomed for the first time and it is a viburnum of some sort.  I have no idea as to the cultivar.

Plants I initially thought were goners after the winter have surprised me with new growth. A couple of other viburnum and itea (Virginia Sweet Spire) have resurrected themselves and my Pistachio hydrangeas which I thought were totally dead have sprouted from the base of the plants much to my surprise- I don’t think they will bloom this year but they are alive! A mystery shrub that came with the house that I couldn’t identify until it bloomed this year is some sort of old fashioned wigelia.  It was greatly overgrown when we bought the house and last year I gave it a big hair cut and it rewarded me with blooming this year even after the winter we had.

Some plants did not make it. I lost a bunch of ferns and my inherited caryopteris. Plants damaged by the hail storm we had a few weeks ago are finally starting to recover.  Well except for that hydrangea named Annabelle that came from White Flower Farm. I am not sure if it will make it or I will rip it out in frustration. It may just end up as one of those failure to thrive kind of plants.

The break in my tree canopy was a good excuse to start more woods-edge planting beds.  So I have started one on a slight incline that is growing well.  I planted witch hazels, elderberries (I planted the dark leaved ones “Black Lace” and “Black Beauty”), oak leaf hydrangeas (I can’t remember the cultivar names but they will have white flowers.) , some ferns, hostas, lily turf, day lilies, spice bush, spider wort, and mountain mint.  It sounds like a lot of plants, but everything is spread out.

Bi-Color Zinnia

Bi-Color Zinnia

A garden takes years to evolve, so I am but at the beginning of what I want to do. But I will tell you it is so satisfying.  And a garden in the morning is such a slice of heaven.  Of course today, heaven came with a price – something stung me around one of my eyes. It doesn’t hurt, but it is swollen and a friend to Benadryl. Yuck.

Tell me how your gardens grow! Thanks for stopping by!

Then followed that beautiful season… Summer….
Filled was the air with a dreamy and magical light; and the landscape lay as if new created in all the freshness of childhood.
~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

best vintage linen cleaner

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I have come across some more fun vintage linens in my travels recently , so I have been laundering them and putting them away.

Recently I have found some terrific vintage pillowcases and linen hand and kitchen towels.

The linen kitchen towels of yesteryear are of a better quality than what you find today, and they clean up very nicely for the most part. Plus they add a twist of fun vintage kitsch to your kitchen!

Pillowcases might seem like an odd thing to hunt for, but some of them I have found a very beautiful. Hand embroidered, handmade of linen, funky floral patterns from the 60s and 70s by Vera. I am not a patterned sheet person, so I use solid colored sheets, which means I can mix it up and create a fun and funky bed scape with vintage pillowcases. And since I like to use vintage quilts and bed spreads, it really makes a nice look.

I will also apply my mixing it up to my tables when I’m setting the table for dinner. Just because you’re having company doesn’t mean you can’t mix it up – and often I do using different fun napkins with a more traditional tablecloth. I will also mix the plates up. Everything does not have to match exactly to get along. I will use colored goblets instead of clear glasses, and things like that.

You can pick up all these vintage items in any number of places: barn picking, flea markets, church rummage sales, consignment and thrift shops. And the things I pick up aren’t necessarily “shabby chic”, they are in fact in excellent condition.

Back to the linens. I use this linen wash stuff called “Restoration”. I discovered it after going on a hunt for something to clean vintage and antique linens because you aren’t left with a lot of options as far as these washes go on the shelves of your local grocery store. Restoration is a little pricey but a little goes a long way. I also use it on my vintage quilts.

Thanks for stopping by!

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keep your joy

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How do you keep your joy? How do you keep your joy in the face of unpleasantness?

It is very true that you cannot control the actions of others, you can only control your own actions and behavior.

As a writer and a blogger I have been a target of unpleasantness. It is nothing new, but that never makes it right. When you write, you are putting yourself out there. You will have fans of your writing as well as the detractors. Sometimes the people are those you know, but a lot of the time they are just strangers.

When people love something I write, or a photo, or a recipe it is such a nice feeling. That is what makes blogging so fun. It’s a very neat connection at times.

I am blessed with meeting some very cool people throughout the years I have been writing. I have also had some unpleasant experiences. The two topics that seem to cause unpleasant experiences always seem to get whittled down to two topics: politics and animal rescue. That is why I don’t write about these two topics very much any more.

One of the newer topics I have touched on a couple of times now, and will continue to cover is cyber bullying and cyber stalking. It’s real, it happens every day. It happens to kids and adults alike. It is an unpleasant side of the Internet.

I have been a victim of this welcome to bizarre-O world behavior for a while now. It began a couple weeks before my 50th birthday. The people doing this to me used to be in my life. They left my life of their own accord years ago. Only they didn’t really leave. They have tracked me via the Internet.

It is sad and disturbing at the same time that these people have nothing better to do. They pore over blog posts looking for ways to twist topics I have written about. They skew and oddly sexualize things. From a psychological perspective it’s obvious they need help, and a lot of it.

For the most part, I ignore the whole thing. You see it is pretty simple why they persist: they are miserably unhappy people who want to steal the joy of others and pervert it. It’s sad and stuck all at the same time. But I can’t control their actions, I can only control my own. And I choose to be the better person in the equation.

But what this experience has done in addition is spurn an interest within me. Cyber bullying and cyber stalking is a very timely topic in this country. Today I read about U.S. Senator Al Franken (D-Minn) and his efforts to do something about cyber stalking.

In a Canadian publication I found the story of a mom crusading for most simply put, respect. You see, her teenage daughter committed suicide after being cyber bullied by a thirty-five year old man.

In The Providence Journal in late May there was a very thoughtful editorial on cyber bullying. The writer points out the high profile cyber bullying cases we hear about are the ones that lead to suicide and so on . Basically, if the case is dramatic and flashy, it gets attention.

The thing is this: I am an adult. I can consider the source and tune it out. My rational mind knows that it is the handiwork of truly messed up people. But not everyone can process cyber bullying pragmatically for lack of a better description, especially in a lot of the cases, the young.

There is a fascinating editorial in the New York Times today. Here is an excerpt:

The Opinion Pages / OP TALK New York Times : Rise of the Internet Hate Machine
By JAKE FLANAGIN JUNE 16, 2014 11:37 AM

Welcome to the age of Internet hate, when “it’s never been easier to send an anonymous death threat,” writes Jack Shafer for Reuters…..The Internet and social media have drastically altered the conventions of traditional bullying, threatening and harassment. Phenomena once thought native to playgrounds and high school locker rooms are now a bug of human interaction through technology — for children, teenagers and adults alike.

Has the Internet made us more hateful? Or has the Internet simply made it easier for us to exercise our in-born spite?…..”I was so puzzled by people who were telling us that anonymity was the reason there was so much vile meanness and attacks online,” said the Canadian journalist Paula Todd in a video interview with the National Post. ….Ms. Todd is the author of “Extreme Mean,” which examines “motives and machinations behind cyber-abuse — tormenting, trolling, harassment, cyber-bullying, stalking, and sexual extortion — and the toll it is taking on children, youth, and adults around the world.”

….In a cover story for the January 2014 issue of Pacific Standard, Amanda Hess relayed her own personal encounter with cyberabuse: a Twitter account set up for the express purpose of issuing threats — like stalking, rape and decapitation — to the popular Slate staff writer. “I felt disoriented and terrified,” she recalls. “Then embarrassed for being scared, and, finally, pissed.” She continued, “headlessfemalepig was clearly a deranged individual with a bizarre fixation on me. I picked up my phone and dialed 911.”….But online misogyny need not always be wielded by men. There are countless examples of women utilizing the Internet and social media to spread hate. …..Women victims of Internet hate also aren’t limited to progressive ideologies. Ms. Hess is a celebrated feminist writer with a largely liberal readership, but conservative women are no less exempt…..

Take the time to read the entire op-ed, it is fascinating. My bringing up cyber bullying on my blog will without a doubt cause a renewed flurry of bullying attempts towards me. I expect it, and I don’t care. Their behavior is theirs to deal with. But this topic of cyber bullying is garnering more attention every day and that is a positive thing.

Even the United States Supreme Court is getting interested in this with regard to Facebook in particular:

Huffington Post Politics: Supreme Court Will Hear Appeal Over Online Threats
| By By SAM HANANEL
Posted: 06/16/2014 10:05 am EDT Updated: 2 hours ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court will consider the free speech rights of people who use violent or threatening language on Facebook and other electronic media where the speaker’s intent is not always clear.

The court on Monday agreed to take up the case of an eastern Pennsylvania man sentenced to nearly four years in federal prison for posting online rants about killing his estranged wife, shooting up a school and slitting the throat of an FBI agent…..For more than 40 years, the Supreme Court has said that “true threats” to harm another person are not protected speech under the First Amendment. But the court has cautioned that laws prohibiting threats must not infringe on constitutionally protected speech. That includes “political hyperbole” or “unpleasantly sharp attacks” that fall shy of true threats.

The federal statute targeting threats of violence is likely to be used more often in the coming years “as our speech increasingly migrates from in-person and traditional handwritten communication to digital devices and the Internet,” said Clay Calvert, a law professor at the University of Florida.

Calvert, one of several free speech advocates who submitted a legal brief urging the court to use a subjective standard, said people mistakenly seem to feel that they can get away with more incendiary speech on the Internet, in tweets and in texts.

According to the Justice Department, 63 people were indicted on federal charges of making illegal threats in the 2013 fiscal year. That was up from 53 cases the previous year.

At the end of the day, it’s simple: don’t let people steal your joy. You know who you are and so do the people who love and care about you. There are a lot of sad and disturbed individuals on this planet, don’t make their issues yours. Also remember that God don’t like ugly and neither do most individuals with a conscience.

Thanks for stopping by!

cool gardening app

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Someone sent me an article from The New York Times a couple of weeks ago on gardening apps. So I tried the ones they discussed.

Two I found to not be helpful, but one very much so. It is called Garden Compass. It has it’s very commercial component (which tells you things like Waterloo Gardens in Exton and Devon still exist and doesn’t have nurseries truly local to us in Chester County listed), which I guess I should expect on a free app, but it has a very cool component: it lets you send them photos of plants and garden problems (like pests) you can’t identify.

So there is this plant that pops up in one of my gardening beds I can’t identify. I know it is a native plant, probably classified as a native wildflower, but I had no clue what it was. So I snapped a picture on my phone and sent it in. This morning, Garden Compass gave me an answer:

QUESTION:
Please identify this plant

CUP PLANT (SILPHIUM PERFOLIATUM)

ANSWER: June 13, 2014
Easily grown in average, medium to wet soils in full sun. Prefers moist, rich soils, but tolerates some drought once established. Somewhat slow to establish when grown from seed. Self-seeds in optimum growing conditions.

The photo I sent to them is the photo in the post. How cool is that?

Now I will admit I wonder how many cultivars “cup plants” have because I looked on a fellow gardener’s blog and her cup plants don’t look like mine. (Incidentally the blogger whom I do not know writes at Victoria Elizabeth Barnes and her blog is very cool.)

So we shall see.

This app is available in the App Store and again, it is free. I chose the app because it has a “Plant ID” and “Problem ID”, two tools as a gardener I find helpful. For other gardening apps to try, check out this other New York Times article.

Happy gardening!

babaganoush my way

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My sister is coming for a visit tomorrow and since she is vegan I try to have a menu that meets the best of both worlds. So I decided to make her babaganoush my way as part of the menu.

I large eggplant roasted, cooled, peeled

1 Vidalia onion roasted, cooled, chopped up

1 small head of garlic, roasted, cooled, peeled

2 tablespoons Balsamic vinegar

1 1/2 tablespoons fresh squeezed lime juice

2 15 ounce cans chickpeas drained and mashed

4 tablespoons tahini paste

4 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil

1/2 12 ounce jar roasted peppers, drained and minced

Salt to taste

Dash of hot paprika

Few tablespoons chopped flat leaf Italian parsley. Parsley is added before you serve

Dash or two Tabasco

Throw it all together (EXCEPT for the parsley) in the food processor, blender, or even into a large bowl with one of those handheld immersion blender tools. Mix until smooth.

Chill – preferably overnight and just before you serve add the parsley and serve with sliced up pita wedges or mini carrots.

It’s good.

(please note the photo is missing the parsley- I will add when I serve )

one of my favorite shrubs

With delicate arching arms and graceful fluffs of fragrant white flowers this shrub is easy to grow and also makes a great part of riparian buffers. Meet Itea or Virginia Sweetspire. And in the fall you are also rewarded with brilliant fall leaf hues.
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