It's been quite some time since I updated you on the barn project, but it is essentially finished, minus a little painting of the iron fencing and a well-chosen corral sign. Yes, yes, I'm aware that most "oil pipe" fence is left to develop a patina of rust here in Kansas, but at the ripe age of fifty-four I am still apt to climb over the fence rather than walk around to a gate, and I don't want to soil my britches. My initial plan is to happily spend most of my summers sliding in and out of this "man cave," and rust stains are not part of the vision.
The northernmost third of the barn has been reserved for hoofed critters, hence the "corral". My original intention was to house a couple of bred Angus heifers for the winter and thus gain the benefits of both the miracle of baby calves while also providing to Mrs. ProfessorRoush some nice grass-fed steaks (the latter individual is an unreformed and unapologetic carnivore). It has, however, been appropriated by the donkeys and a pair of barn cats for the foreseeable future. The rest of the barn is storage for the "big green" tractor and its various implements, and the small green" lawn tractor, and various gardening implements that otherwise dirty and clutter up the garage.
There is something both incredibly calming and deeply biblical about having a barn filled with straw bedding, feed, and living creatures. I imagine that my blood pressure dropped ten points the minute I started feeding animals again every morning and evening. There is a peace and stillness in the barn (with the exception, of course, of the donkey's braying at the sight of me), that I haven't had in my life for quite some time. It may be a -10º wind-chilled trek to the barn, as it is this morning, but it's a short one and it does serve to stir the blood every morning. Inside the barn will be some hungry kittens and some impatient donkeys, waiting on the stupid primate for some decent sustenance. It took only two days once the barn was opened for the donkeys and cats to learn when feeding time was. Creatures of habit, each and every living soul here.
So this is where I can be found this winter, lazily sharpening lawn mower blades and hoes and dreaming of Spring. The barn cats? I'll introduce them to you later on, I promise.
Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
Saturday, December 7, 2013
Wednesday, December 4, 2013
Party At My Place
Unbeknownst to a sleeping or absent ProfessorRoush, there seems to have been a party, or a series of parties, held in my back yard in the late month of November. My garden has, it seems, become the combined neighborhood delicatessen, coffeehouse, and social networking place for the wild creatures of field and forest. I suppose I should be grateful that they aren't egging the house, although I have noticed the damage from the deer equivalent of teenagers making wheel-mark doughnuts in my garden.
Take a really close look at the picture above, taken November 25th at 5:29 a.m. This is the Garden Musings equivalent of Disney's "Bambi" tale. The doe is easy to see, slightly blurry in the center of the picture, but look closely at the lower left corner. Those little blobs with the glowing eyes are two rabbits who evidently are not bothered by the simultaneous presence of the deer. Click on it if you need to blow it up a little to see them.
And the next night, November 26th at 3:47 a.m., the doe from the night before must have felt outnumbered by the rabbits and subsequently brought a friend for round two. Or several friends. I've got approximately 25 photos with deer in them exposed over the space of two hours and I have no idea if all the deer are the same as these two or whether the big party was off camera and they were just using this area for a private conversation.
Last, but not certainly least, on the third day, November 27, at 8:43 a.m., the antlered creature pictured above decided to answer the question I posed in a 2012 blog entry. Here, at last, is the missing and majestic Hart, bounding away in all his masculine glory. Nice antlers, buddy.
I must make all haste to deploy countermeasures before my rose garden gets eaten down to stubs. Hhmmmm, where did my bottle of water go?
Take a really close look at the picture above, taken November 25th at 5:29 a.m. This is the Garden Musings equivalent of Disney's "Bambi" tale. The doe is easy to see, slightly blurry in the center of the picture, but look closely at the lower left corner. Those little blobs with the glowing eyes are two rabbits who evidently are not bothered by the simultaneous presence of the deer. Click on it if you need to blow it up a little to see them.
And the next night, November 26th at 3:47 a.m., the doe from the night before must have felt outnumbered by the rabbits and subsequently brought a friend for round two. Or several friends. I've got approximately 25 photos with deer in them exposed over the space of two hours and I have no idea if all the deer are the same as these two or whether the big party was off camera and they were just using this area for a private conversation.
Last, but not certainly least, on the third day, November 27, at 8:43 a.m., the antlered creature pictured above decided to answer the question I posed in a 2012 blog entry. Here, at last, is the missing and majestic Hart, bounding away in all his masculine glory. Nice antlers, buddy.
I must make all haste to deploy countermeasures before my rose garden gets eaten down to stubs. Hhmmmm, where did my bottle of water go?
Sunday, December 1, 2013
My Friend
After a search of his own blog, ProfessorRoush can scarcely believe that he has never even mentioned, let alone featured, the clear pink blossom of one of his favorite Griffith Buck roses, 'Amiga Mia'. But, there it was, or more properly, there it wasn't, a glaring absence of the rose unlisted in the "labels" section at the bottom of this blog.
'Amiga Mia' is a medium pink Shrub rose bred by Dr. Buck in 1978, making it an early introduction in his group of roses. It is described as "Seashell pink" on helpmefind.com, and as "light empire rose (RHSCC 48C) with white at the base of the petals" on the Iowa State Buck Roses page. I simply call this a clear pink; no bluish or orange overtones in this one, a color that will mix well in the garden.
'Amiga Mia' is almost a grandiflora; Hybrid-Tea style blooms occur in clusters of 5-10 and open quickly. They are double (25-35 petals) and 4 inches in diameter in my garden. The plant is very healthy, with glossy, dark green, blackspot-resistant foliage. 'Amiga Mia' is an offspring of 'Queen Elizabeth' and 'Prairie Princess'. She is hardy to Zone 4.
Dr. Buck gave her a catching name, naming her 'Amiga Mia', translating to "friend of mine" after his friend Dorothy Stemler, an eminent rosarian and proprietor of California-based "Roses of Yesterday and Today". That nursery still carries 'Amiga Mia', with the description from the current owner of "Griffith Buck had a great friend – one who respected and loved him, as well as his roses. Her name was Dorothy Stemler, and she was my mother."
This is my third year with 'Amiga Mia' in this garden (I grew her in my previous town garden), and she is a tireless performer. She is a chubby elfin rose for me, growing about 3 feet tall at maturity, and she has a round overall form. I love the bloom color and the constant ample display of her bosoms...oops, I mean blossoms.
I do have two complaints about 'Amiga Mia'. The first is simply that I can rarely find a perfect, unmarred blossom on her. More often, they're like the photo at the top of this blog, tempting me to learn photoshop so that I can airbrush out her blemishes, much like the fashion industry does with their flawless human models. My second complaint is that she opens up too fast. The middle photo, above, shows the bush with a number of new high-centered blooms on 5/28/13. The photo at the right shows the bush the next day, with most of those same blooms open, pistils on full display. No woman of the Victorian era would favor such brashness, so it is good that 'Amiga Mia' is around now, in our more accepting and less prudish society alongside our fascination with the Kardashians and Kendra On Top.
'Amiga Mia' is a medium pink Shrub rose bred by Dr. Buck in 1978, making it an early introduction in his group of roses. It is described as "Seashell pink" on helpmefind.com, and as "light empire rose (RHSCC 48C) with white at the base of the petals" on the Iowa State Buck Roses page. I simply call this a clear pink; no bluish or orange overtones in this one, a color that will mix well in the garden.
'Amiga Mia' is almost a grandiflora; Hybrid-Tea style blooms occur in clusters of 5-10 and open quickly. They are double (25-35 petals) and 4 inches in diameter in my garden. The plant is very healthy, with glossy, dark green, blackspot-resistant foliage. 'Amiga Mia' is an offspring of 'Queen Elizabeth' and 'Prairie Princess'. She is hardy to Zone 4.
Dr. Buck gave her a catching name, naming her 'Amiga Mia', translating to "friend of mine" after his friend Dorothy Stemler, an eminent rosarian and proprietor of California-based "Roses of Yesterday and Today". That nursery still carries 'Amiga Mia', with the description from the current owner of "Griffith Buck had a great friend – one who respected and loved him, as well as his roses. Her name was Dorothy Stemler, and she was my mother."
This is my third year with 'Amiga Mia' in this garden (I grew her in my previous town garden), and she is a tireless performer. She is a chubby elfin rose for me, growing about 3 feet tall at maturity, and she has a round overall form. I love the bloom color and the constant ample display of her bosoms...oops, I mean blossoms.
I do have two complaints about 'Amiga Mia'. The first is simply that I can rarely find a perfect, unmarred blossom on her. More often, they're like the photo at the top of this blog, tempting me to learn photoshop so that I can airbrush out her blemishes, much like the fashion industry does with their flawless human models. My second complaint is that she opens up too fast. The middle photo, above, shows the bush with a number of new high-centered blooms on 5/28/13. The photo at the right shows the bush the next day, with most of those same blooms open, pistils on full display. No woman of the Victorian era would favor such brashness, so it is good that 'Amiga Mia' is around now, in our more accepting and less prudish society alongside our fascination with the Kardashians and Kendra On Top.
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Gratefully Thankful
ProfessorRoush is fully aware, and mildly abashed, that it has been quite some time since my last rose posting on this blog, but I promise that I'll get to one soon. The next victim has, in fact, been chosen and is waiting in line.
Today, however, I awoke uncharacteristically grateful and I would be distinctly ungrateful if I ignored the feeling. I'm not given to displays of random emotion, but I can't shunt aside the contented feeling warming me up on this cold Kansas morning. I'm grateful for my life and my home and my love with Mrs. ProfessorRoush. Grateful for my children, now almost grown and gone. Grateful for the donkey's and the new barn cats and my garden.
I'm grateful for the plants and life of the prairie. I'm particularly grateful for the native blue sage that pops up randomly in my garden beds and provides a cooling reflection of the clear summer sky in the doldrums of August. I'm grateful for the prairie grasses, and for the ample sunshine that makes it all possible. I'm grateful for the mornings given to my life, fields dewy and golden with the rising furnace.
I'm extremely grateful for the Internet this morning, ready with all the information of the world at my touch-typing fingertips, including the origin of the word grateful. ProfessorRoush's mind doesn't work in a straight line, often taking bends and u-turns through a maze of thought, and somewhere along this little piece of writing, I began wondering why we say that we are "full of grate." There is no definition of "grate" in the English language (to sound harshly, to irritate, a frame of metal bars to hold wood) that seems pleasant. Happily, a short search informed me that "grateful" derived from an obsolete meaning of grate as "pleasing", from the Latin grãtus as in gratitude, and that the first known use of "grateful" was in 1552. It seems odd that "grateful" would have survived in the English language while "grate" no longer is defined as "pleasing." It seems odd that I would even wonder about it.
But, strange as it is, I'm also grateful just to wonder about it.
Today, however, I awoke uncharacteristically grateful and I would be distinctly ungrateful if I ignored the feeling. I'm not given to displays of random emotion, but I can't shunt aside the contented feeling warming me up on this cold Kansas morning. I'm grateful for my life and my home and my love with Mrs. ProfessorRoush. Grateful for my children, now almost grown and gone. Grateful for the donkey's and the new barn cats and my garden.
I'm grateful for the plants and life of the prairie. I'm particularly grateful for the native blue sage that pops up randomly in my garden beds and provides a cooling reflection of the clear summer sky in the doldrums of August. I'm grateful for the prairie grasses, and for the ample sunshine that makes it all possible. I'm grateful for the mornings given to my life, fields dewy and golden with the rising furnace.
I'm extremely grateful for the Internet this morning, ready with all the information of the world at my touch-typing fingertips, including the origin of the word grateful. ProfessorRoush's mind doesn't work in a straight line, often taking bends and u-turns through a maze of thought, and somewhere along this little piece of writing, I began wondering why we say that we are "full of grate." There is no definition of "grate" in the English language (to sound harshly, to irritate, a frame of metal bars to hold wood) that seems pleasant. Happily, a short search informed me that "grateful" derived from an obsolete meaning of grate as "pleasing", from the Latin grãtus as in gratitude, and that the first known use of "grateful" was in 1552. It seems odd that "grateful" would have survived in the English language while "grate" no longer is defined as "pleasing." It seems odd that I would even wonder about it.
But, strange as it is, I'm also grateful just to wonder about it.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)