Go ,Cash!
Hairy crab? Like a spider crab?
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Go ,Cash!
Hairy crab? Like a spider crab?
I know some of us had plants damaged by recent cold weather, so I thought I'd share this email I received from the Mo. Botanical Garden:
"In the aftermath of the recent record-breaking cold spell, gardeners must be patient with their damaged plants, especially our trees and shrubs. The freeze puts a damper on what had turned out to be an early, but beautiful spring.
At this time it appears the worst injury is limited to open flowers, new buds, and new foliage. Spent flowers will be shed and most of the damaged leaves will continue to deteriorate in the days ahead, eventually drying up and falling off. Expect the appearance of your garden to decline aesthetically for a period of weeks before fresh, new growth returns. It may take until mid-summer before your garden looks “normal” again.
Perennials with damaged leaves and stems can be cut back to the ground and will respond with rapid new growth. However, resist the temptation to prune frosted trees and shrubs. Healthy well-established plants will produce new growth. How quickly this occurs will depend on individual species, location in the landscape, and the severity of the damage sustained.
Resist the temptation to fertilize heavily. With the loss of flower buds, all of the trees energy will be channeled into vigorous vegetative regrowth. Fertilizer could actually produce excesses of growth that will have to pruned at a later date, creating higher maintenance in the long term.
Water cautiously. Avoid soggy conditions which can do more harm than good, but do irrigate during long dry spells. Reducing water stress may be the single best thing you can do to help your plants recover this summer.
Overall, consider this untimely freeze only a temporary setback. Given time and patience, our gardens will recover. Since every dark cloud always has a silver lining, on the plus side we probably won’t have to worry about raking up any Sweetgum balls this autumn."
Chip Tynan
Missouri Botanical Garden “Answer Man”
William T. Kemper Center for Home Gardening
If I ever get married again, I will elope (though not to Vegas).
Problem is my visions involve Elvis and a Vegas wedding chapel.
I think I only have one really damaged plant. and possibley the fig tree, but that might have been the heat this summer.
billytea, was it steamed? Or just mildly annoyed?
Totally steamed! My brother made a good impression by being the only foreigner to eat his crab.
JZ the books got here.
Dang, erika, that's fast! May you emerge all baseball-edjimacated and fannish, or anyhow interested. If it gets too incomprehensible, you can always skip to the chapter late in the season where the Sox destroy the Yankees and Stephen King is leaving the stadium gibbering with excitement and getting mobbed by other gibbering fans. That part is total fannish glee, the baseball equivalent of the commercial break right after Giles walked in the door and said, "I'd like to test that theory."
Which book is that, JZ? I think I need to read it.
Man, I knew that putting off doing my taxes this year would come back to bite me in the ass. I'm going to owe the Feds over $800. Which is funny, because I don't SEEM TO MAKE ANY DAMN MONEY. What. the. hell.
Now I have to have a long talk with myself about the F2F. And, you know, groceries. Damn damn damn.