Thursday, June 30, 2016

Clay

Just wanted to post a few more, hopefully better, pictures of my clay works. This first one is the bowl I patched. The patches failed so yesterday I cut them out entirely, added a few holes for interest and now we'll see what happens in the fire.


These pictures better represent the colors of the jars I posted last time although you can't see the patterns on the lids very well. Sheesh. One of these days I'll get a good photo lighting set up.

Blue with ocean waves pattern
Red-gold with fish pattern
Black with curlicues pattern 
 I just liked the softness of this out of focus shot of a small porcelain bowl. Looks very artsy.


Tuesday, June 28, 2016

Canning

I am making raspberry jam today. Here's the first batch. These are pint jars and I've got berries for a whole lot more.


Finally some peony poppies. 


Chokes, like alien heads floating above the garden. I harvested a bunch of tiny heads, cut them in half and cooked them into a pasta dish. Wow!


Here are a couple of porcelain bowls I'm working on. This first one started cracking around the rim as I was making the texture so I patched it up and humidified it to kind of even out the moisture in the clay. We'll see if it survives the fire.



Some of the jars I made back in December, finally fired. The red background and contrasty lighting isn't the best for photos . 







Thursday, June 23, 2016

Cheer on a Gray Day

It's raining and cold. What happened to summer?

Update on the garden with pics...

The greenhouse. Tomatoes forming fruit in the greenhouse and outside, too.


Artichokes with blueberries behind and raspberries in right rear. Berries are wonderful this year.


One of my garden goals was to attract hummingbirds and I've had success with this honeysuckle.


The deep blue of sea holly as it ages. Can you see Tag's pawprint?


Our old girl Tux. Her coci titer was back down to 1:16 with the latest blood work. I doubt it will ever go lower.


Hattie with her ducks at the new, larger, pool.


My new wheel arrived yesterday. I haven't had a chance to break it in yet.


Escallonia in bloom. Some day they will form a small but pretty hedge to protect the flowers from wind.


A really big white poppy.


Red poppies.


A beautiful lavender poppy on the purple bush.


The crazy Himalayan blue poppy in bloom.


 Long-lasting flowers of hellebores.


That's all for today.

Thursday, June 16, 2016

Boiled Linseed Oil

This has been quite a week for us. You might be wondering way I'm writing about boiled linseed oil after the last post was about rat poison. If you guess that it has something to do with the dogs you'd be correct.

We had another emergency situation yesterday. Bob was finishing our new garden chairs with linseed oil...

Comfy new rockers for the yard

...and left a bucket with a little oil in it on the garage floor. I went into the garage, Hattie at my heels, looking for a loupe so I could take a close look at her tick bite and within 30 seconds heard *slurp slurp* behind me. There was Hattie with her head in the bucket enjoying another illicit treat!  This required a trip to the vet because vomiting was not what was called for. 

The vet treated Hattie with a charcoal/clay suspension and sent us home with the bottle to administer the rest that evening. She slurped that slimy black stuff right up. There is nothing this dog will not eat.



The vet also wants to check Hattie for Lyme and other tick borne diseases in five weeks. In the meantime we have several days of cleaning up ugly black stools. Incredibly, I caught her licking the chairs where the odor of linseed oil still lingers this afternoon! What are we going to do about this girl?

Never a dull moment with Hattie

In the garden we are battling rats. The strawberries have been disappearing and I thought Bob was eating them. He thought I was. Then he saw the rat run from the raspberries to the strawberries and we knew who was actually the luck one. There is now a trap in the strawberries. Here is one of the culprits that ate my other veggies.

No more veggies for you!

Other garden news. I have some white peony poppies after all, though their size isn't as advertised. They'll be pretty when more of the buds open though.

A peony poppy

There is even pottery news. I had some good results in the latest firing though I haven't had time to get pictures yet. That will be next post... if Hattie can stay out of trouble for a while!










Sunday, June 12, 2016

Rat Poison

I planned to do nothing today, just kick back and take it easy after the morning duck chores and yard work, but that was not to be.

Our neighbors took us over to their place to check out the remodel job being done by the company we hope to use in our remodel. The dogs came along and waited outside in their yard.

Long story short, Hattie found some rat poison the guys put out a few days ago. They initially had it safe in a bait box, but after a few days looking like the rats weren't taking the poison they took one of the poison blocks out of the box and put it on the ground under their hedge. (Bad move even if our dogs didn't visit them. They have no fencing to keep any animals out of their yard.) Hattie, she of the Nosework training, found and ate it. It must smell good to attract rats because Tux managed to get a little for herself, too. Of course, if we'd known there was rat poison in the yard we wouldn't have allowed the dogs in, but we didn't know and it never occurred to the neighbors that the dogs might get into it so they didn't mention it.

Luckily the dogs pulled the bait box over to the porch and that alerted us to a problem. Panic ensued. Which dog ate it? How much did she eat? Who do we call for help on Sunday? We ended up calling the ASCPA Animal Poison Control Center after leaving a message with our local vet's emergency number. (The local emergency never returned our call.) In the meantime, I saw the blue/green poison in the crevasses of Hattie's molar teeth while she was panting so there was no doubt she ate it. But Tux had a little in her teeth, too. The ASPCA took the info on the poison and the dog's weights, breeds, ages, etc and used a formula to determine if they might have ingested enough to cause a problem. Not knowing which dog ate the most, we had to assume each of them ate the whole block and Hattie, being smaller, was over the safe amount. We decided to induce vomiting in both dogs anyway.

Our neighbor had a new bottle of hydrogen peroxide and we were instructed to give Hattie two tablespoons of it with a little yogurt and if she didn't vomit within fifteen minutes give a second dose. Tux required three tablespoons. Both of them needed a second dose before the heaving began.

Hattie was first, her foamy white vomit yielded three big chunks and multiple slivers of poison, at least 80% of the block. There were even a few pieces in the second vomit, but third and fourth were just foamy slime. Tux held out for a while then heaved two massive foamy piles with just a few pieces of poison so she was in no danger.

The ASPCA said Hattie was probably in the clear and shouldn't suffer any neurologic damage, but reading up on rat poisonings it can be days, even weeks, before any symptoms make themselves known. I'll be calling the vet tomorrow to be sure we don't need to do any more.

To top it off, the white skin tag that was growing near Hattie's eye (you can see it in the picture of her in my last post) turned dark this morning and Bob thought it looked like a tick. We all poo-pooed the idea but the neighbor brought over a magnifying glass to convince Bob and, by god, it sure did look like a tick. I got my old tick puller and got it right out of there. It turned out to be one hell of a day for all of us.


Saturday, June 11, 2016

Garden Woes

Flower pictures again. I've been kind of disappointed with the garden. The Red Bed has very little red in it. Only one peony was red. The others turned out to be pink. Now the poppies are following suit. It's like someone just put any old seeds in the packets then slapped on labels to match my order. 

This is a pretty pale yellow poppy except I ordered white.


I don't know what this one is about. I ordered various red and white poppy seeds but this one got into the bunch.



 I'm not sure what this is either. A miniature poppy? I think it's growing on a red peony poppy plant. The rest of the buds are much bigger and haven't opened yet. I'll be totally disappointed if they are all this small!


This one is definitely red. I think it's a Flanders poppy, but maybe it's a red peony poppy that failed to grow peony-like. I'm baffled.


This is one of two Himalayan blue poppies I've been nursing along since last year. The ducks damaged the other one and it seems to be a goner now. This is nothing like the magnificent blue poppies I grew in Homer. The structure of the whole plant is different and the flowers are puny in comparison. They are supposed to be difficult to grow here and I would be lucky to get it to bloom a second year. It won't be a big loss. 


Here is the same flower from above. You can see the cluster of buds that grow along the tall stem, sort of the same way Brussels sprouts grow.  Downright weird.


Ah. Some poppies that grew from self seeding last fall, and look, there are white ones!


Back to the reliable roses. Showy yellow roses on a grafted bush.


Bonica, the flower demon! She's loaded with delicate roses and putting out new growth like crazy. Love this bush.


The clematis is still a show stopper. New Dawn climbing rose is having a hard time keeping up.


This is Super Dorothy. She hasn't given much new growth yet but is putting out big clusters of pretty little roses. She's a vigorous climber that is supposed to be a heavy bloomer - eventually.


Our temperatures are back down to the sixties and the dahlias and zinnias don't like it. They are growing so slowly they can't keep up with the insect damage. And in the veggie garden a rodent moved in. I saw it yesterday a few hours after the neighbors complained they had three rats eating their fallen birdseed. Not sure if ours is a rat. It wasn't very big and the tail not long like a rat's. Bigger than a mouse though. It climbed over the bed fencing and devoured the largest romanesco cauliflower plant, eating the huge leaves right down to the midrib stem. And only that one plant. I suppose it's going to return to dine again tonight. Bob tried to block it's entrance with metal fencing (it chewed through the plastic deer fencing) but it is only a matter of time before it figures out another way in. They are smart creatures.


Tuesday, June 7, 2016

This-n-That

Pictures from the garden.
Loads of blueberries growing
Overhanging raspberries form a tunnel for the ducks
The Toadhouse
Ball girl Hattie
Greens looking good
Memorial garden, Tag's blue flowers
Silver and blue sea holly
New red cabinet to hold all my potting tools
My workspace

Tractor

 What is it about tractors that is so exciting? Bob is giddy with excitement and the neighbors are begging to take selfies on it. But the wi...