The severe shortage of thread is hampering me, too. We had frog-strangling rain all day yesterday. Today, the sun is blazing but it's only in the 40s. It's going to be a challenging dye season.
Just before the rain set in, I walked around the Wood Chip Heap and scattered several pounds of flower seeds that I have been collecting all winter. Native perennials. Butterfly and Hummingbird garden seeds. "Ooooo, that's pretty" Seeds. I got suckered by the seedmen weekly. The seeds fall down into the top chips hidden away from birds and squirrels into the decomposed stuff that will hopefully nurture some of these seeds to blossom. If a quarter of them make it, it's going to be amazing. I have a mix of vinegar and soap to spray on the emerging poison ivy, brambles, and pokeweed to give the flowers some breathing room. Beyond that, the rest is up to nature.
6 comments:
The houses on my street are two story- so taller. But yards and driveways- as long and deep as these.
I miss the South........I liked it there. I liked the food, the soft voices......
This is an old hilly neighborhood. We live in "the holler".My house and many like it were built in the 70s. Those in the picture even older. The trees are getting old.
Oh I can't wait to see what grows! Lovely street and view from your kitchen window.
That white silo-looking thing across the street is a little planetarium housing his telescope. I remember they called and asked us if we would mind them putting it there. At that time I think we had five vehicles in our driveway, three dismantled or up on blocks. They were glad we didn't have any appliances or stuffed furniture on the front porch. Nice neighbors here.
time for seeds.
planting seeds and dyeing threads ... rewards for getting through winter
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