Today has been as nearly perfect a spring day as anyone could want.
52 F. as the sun was climbing above the barn roof, a slight breeze, pillowy white clouds in a calm blue sky.
I've just read through the scribbled notes I keep in the small space allotted for each day on my calendar.
Each jotting serves as a record of what we have done in the house and outside, lists any outings we've made, tracks weather and temperatures. I've been saving these calendars for several years; sometimes they are a useful reminder when a date or event needs to be verified, prodding my memory of other events or happenings not elaborated upon.
When I began blogging in August, 2008, I created a post at least once a week, sometimes more often.
These posts were usually written in what I would term a 'personal essay' style; words were carefully chosen, photos selected to enhance the 'story' I wanted to share.
Frequency of posting slacked off when blogger changed their format resulting [for many of us] in an unwelcome spate of vile comments that left me feeling sullied by seeing them only long enough to delete.
A habit once broken is difficult to resume and as days/weeks lengthened between blog entries I excused myself by thinking that perhaps my life in retirement wouldn't be of interest to readers.
[Never mind that those bloggers I most enjoy following write to share the tasks and thoughts of their daily lives from one season to the next.]
I think I would benefit from keeping a weekly journal in blogger format, collecting the trivia of my days into something more easily reviewed than the abbreviated scrawls on the calendar.
I've procrastinated with learning to transfer photos from my iphone to PC or for use in messenger.
Perhaps I can find the patience to work around that.
Resolution made--but don't hold your breath!
Three pots of violas aka 'johnny-jump-ups' set out on March 28 are in colorful bloom.
Each year these 'pop' seeds into the surrounding areas. As they 'jump up' in the following spring I carefully lift them from the gravel or a nearby pot with an old spoon and tuck them in to grow on with the latest nursey plants.
When hot weather sets in the little plants languish, but with cutting back and modest watering they will bloom again in autumn until hard frost.
Clematis Dr. Ruppel is blooming exuberantly.
Heirloom 'Candida' is always the first to bud and this year, in spite of frost warnings the early flowers were unblemished.
Poppy, 'Lauren's Grape' has moved with us from one homeplace to another in Kentucky.
I planted several varieties of 'papaver somniferum' in my first KY garden; although I collected seed heads from each, Lauren's Grape was the only one to reestablish.
Most years I begin noting the emergence of tiny poppy seedlings in late January or in February. By March several colonies are flourishing sturdily undeterred by frost or even a late snow.
This year I feared the poppies were lost.
I found the first few ever so tiny and fragile, during the last week of March. I barricaded each little seedling with a ring of small stones, hedges of plastic cutlery--anything to protect them from the cats who have questionable uses for exposed garden soil.
As the season has progressed I'm finding more poppies. Some seeds landed in containers used for annuals; a few emerged outside the barn door sill, only to be washed away during one of the torrential rains which plagued the early days of April. Half a dozen have sprung up in the gravel just inside the barn.
Last year the volunteers that grew there were wiped out overnight by an invasion of hungry green cabbage worms. Perhaps a powdering of diatomaceous earth will discourage the caterpillars.
April 15th Jim planted potatoes and a short row of sweet corn--early for that, but sometimes it germinates and provides a meal or two before warmer weather sowings go in.
Matt donated cabbage and broccoli plants from his haul at the produce auction; those have been set out, some in the garden, others in the large black bins used as raised beds. He also bought a flat of beet seedlings, those are in and beet seed sprinkled in rows alongside.
We purchased tomato and green pepper starts at our favorite nursey and I transplanted those into larger pots to grow in the shelter of our little greenhouse until the soil in the garden is warmer.
I insist on sunflowers every year, choosing those that are designated as 'dwarf.' Most of them grow as tall as standard varieties. They lean crazily, fall over in wind and rain storms, topple into Jim's plots of cucumbers, annoying him with their untidy ways.
When he tilled the garden he announced that there was a small strip designated for sunflowers, near--but not in--the proper garden.
Tilling the garden, April 1st.
The sunflower seeds were planted in their allotted strip late yesterday afternoon.
Jim has devised a way of dropping seeds without crawling on the ground and was pleased to demonstrate his new method. A length of 3/4 inch metal tubing is marched along the row and the seed dropped down the tube at intervals.
In other news, within the space of a week two bluebirds have gotten down the chimney.
Elmo-the-eejit [pictured] and Thimble-the-kitten alerted us each time the bird scrabbled in the heavy stove pipe. After two days of this the first bird was discovered sitting on the inner ledge of the door when Jim opened it and he was able to gently grasp it and toss it from the front steps.
The 2nd bird [I'd like to think the first bird learned a lesson] didn't have as kindly a fate. It flew past Jim's head when he opened the stove door, fluttered toward a window and was snatched by Thimble who ran with it, pursued by Jim. It was several moments before he could catch her and when he took the bluebird from her it had died. He brought it out to the garden where I was working and showed me the little thing, limp and still, brightly blue in his gloved hand.
Such small deaths grieve us--and yet, Thimble-kitten was merely acting on catly instinct.
Thus the April days have rolled by, marked by quotidian tasks that must always be done: care of the cats, meals prepared, laundry pegged on the back porch lines when weather permits, a daily walk if rain isn't pelting down; church on the weekend.
I have two research/writing projects on the go that need to be finished. Perhaps I'll share those by way of a record--both have a flavor of nostalgia, one deals with personal memories.
The thought of converting the projects to blog posts is a bit of a goad to finish!