Sunday, April 11, 2010

Things Afoot

Here's a pic from the archives, since the camera is now found but my computer virus is not allowing the downloading of anti-virus cleanup programs and I'm fresh out of expendable computer geek funds to dig into the innards of hard drives and Things In Safe Mode (the phrase makes me hyperventilate...I'm not computer-friendly except for an ongoing love/hate relationship with my keyboard).

These are the cranberry hibiscus, also known as False Roselle, which we planted last year.  They're one of the survivors reappearing after the freezes of this past winter.  The plants died back to sticks but now are coming back at ground level simliar to the picture shown above.  The leaves are not only beautiful, like a japanese maple in appearance, but are delicious edibles tasting of lemon...tart and bright.  I'm so glad they're back!

We faithfully stick to our cruelty of neglect regimen
benign survival technique of allowing plants that want to thrive here to do so, and those that are fussy to...not.   After some great siting, watering, and compost amending the Plants Formerly Known As Bucketville now have been transplanted from the 5 gallon bucket conglomeration to other locales around our property.  Some live, some don't make it.

 
Tonight, the air was heavy with spice.  Truly.  There is a sweet and thick and earthy fragrance to the slightly cool nights now due to the higher daytime temps and the bursting forth of all the spring growth...everywhere. 
 
Here were some highlights from the past few days and some of the plants that are now back in the running:
 
1.  Volunteer calabaza seedlings now populating the holes where Jack's been throwing away/composting the leftover rinds throughout the winter.  He'll likely let some of them go to town, and I'll put in my two cents worth about heading the vines toward the vacant lot rather than the house...too hard to mow around if allowed to go where it wants.
 
2.  Moringa!  The tree trunks went from seed to 10 feet plus last year, tremendous growers.  The freeze killed the trunks but new leaves are appearing again from the bottom.  We'll have to get some loppers after those bare trunks and cut them to the ground.  We've decided moringa will be harvested by us best if allowed to be cut back hard after each batch of new branches matures with leaves...ECHO global farm has a lot of success with theirs and gets I think at least 4 or 5 harvests a year by alternating cutting and letting them regrow.
 
3.  We have LOADS (I count at least 8) of stable manure on the empty lot (it's our lot, if anyone's wondering...we just don't know what else to call it).  Last year's experiment growing cowpeas (purple hulls) and okra smack on top of stable manure raked out onto the existing not-so-fertile ground AND despite the flush of bermuda grass still reaped rewards for the lazy researchers we are...the cowpeas did much better than the bush green beans and survived all kinds of heat, drought, and monsoon...and bermuda.  As a result, we now have an interesting new crop of pasture plants on that site, ones we've not seen on that location before.  
 
4.  One of the new plants appearing on last year's cowpea site is CLOVER.  Why am I so excited about clover?  Because it's at the head of my wild edibles list!  It's chock full of nutrition, namely veggie protein, and I included it in some of our smoothies last week with no noticeable ill flavor effects.  It can be included in salads, too.  We  just don't see a lot of clover around here and were told at the feed store it doesn't grow well in this area due to nematodes.  So before the 'todes get 'em, we will enjoy them to eat :)
 
5.  The malangas are back.  We've never had a harvest of them yet.  But they come back every year.  We'll plant them out of the buckets this year.  The buckets must go.  Live, little malangas, live...
 
6.  Did I mention the night air is so fragrant right now??
 
7.  I love blue and white and cream as colors in my bedroom.  Those are the colors of our comforter.  One day it'll wear out and I'd like to (don't die laughing) make a quilt with those colors before then.  Yes, the girl who knows one thing...sewing a hem by hand... and who nearly failed the sewing portion of Home Ec has gotten uppitty ;-)   Well, I figure after reading the Foxfire books that if I can sew a hem, I can sew two piece of fabric together.  If it comes out straight I'll act like I intended it to be, and if not, it'll be called a crazy quilt, ha :)  In the meantime, when I sit to watch a vid with Jack, I am tearing old clothes into strips and trimming all the loose threads off.  I've purged through a bunch of his old work shirts and some torn bed linens and some of my old jeans that way and it feels nice just looking at the stack of long rectangular strips I have stacked from it.  A sewing machine would make short work of some of that straight line sewing.  I might see if anyone on craigslist might want to trade me for my guitar I never use.
 
8.  I'm still writing on the side.  Some of it started being about my (scant) college days.  I've laughed and laughed as things I seldom remember come back to mind.  Man was I young and gullible :)
 
9.  My dog's toenails seriously need clipping unless I want to have striped legs soon.
 
10.  Two blueberry plants show possible signs of life.
 
11.  A friend of mine is getting married in July.
 
12.  I love chocolate and have discovered that a piece of chocolate cake, when dropped, usually lands frosting side down.  I also like chocolate kisses, especially the kind I get when my husband has just eaten chocolate cake ;-)

12 1/2.  (I came back to add this.  Can't believe I forgot it)  We were out for a quiet drive tonight and with tomorrow being trash day, we noticed an item at the curb and couldn't believe our eyes.  It was over 6 feet tall and made of steel...a HUGE, rolling, portable cage for birds, all the parts there, everything heavy duty.  It looks like someone just wanted it gone, but wow, it was too good to pass up.  Glad there were two of us because it took two of us to get it into the back of the truck.  It's in the garage for now.  We'll clean it up and disinfect it really well, but that thing is just shy of being big enough for a chicken coop.  We have enough projects at hand outdoors for now, but it'll keep...those things are priced in the hundreds of dollars and both of us had the same idea when we saw it....doves and pigeons (actually pigeons that look more like doves, the King pigeons that are eaten for squab).  Or maybe two bantie chickens?  We'll fantasize a while but it's a great thing to have on hand.  Even if we don't use it, it'll clean up for resale and help us with debt.  We'll see...pretty cool find, eh?
 
13.   Um, that's all.  I'm still thinking of chocolate, and my husband.  Mmm hmmm.  Chocolate, husband.  Husband, chocolate.  Must be time to say goodnight to my keyboard.  :)   (Hey, Jack...woohoooo....)
 
Later :)

5 comments:

tenessaa said...

Try Malware Bytes. It's a free tool (it also has a pay option but you don't really need that) To remove it. I also recommend bleepingcomputer.com. They have a database on how to remove those dreaded fake programs! I work in IT in the local school system and we use these all the time! Good Luck!
Oh, and if you still can't get it Try hitting Start > Run > type MSCONFIG Click the startup Tab and disable the startup items. Reboot and try again. You will get a message saying you changed configuration etc. Hit ok. Then after you get everything remove just go back and turn it back on.

Wendy said...

Quail. Instead of chickens, maybe. I know some people raise quail for eggs. They're smaller, and the eggs are smaller, but you can have twice as many quail in the same space as chickens.

You might also think about bantam breeds of chickens, which are smaller, but don't take up much space.

Congrats on the awesome find!

Robbyn said...

Tennessa, I went ahead and downloaded the free version of malwarebytes and it did what the others did, it downloaded but then told me the application was not recognized..or something...it flashed then disappeared but nothing's different. As for the going to start and run, I'm too afraid to do that because if I do something wrong, I don't know how to fix it. I can't afford to lose everything or wreck it myself and not know what I even did wrong. Told you...I'm a computer neanderthal and I'm sure it would only take someone with more knowhow a couple of clicks and buttons to correct it, arrgghh. You directions are easy, but if I screw it up, no one is here to help me fix it.

Wendy, I'll pass it along to Jack, thanks! We'll have plenty of time to think about it since we're still playing catchup with other projects. Woo!

tenessaa said...

did you try bleepingcomputer.com? They are great there and it's free!

Robbyn said...

Tennessa, first of all I love your name :) Yes, recently you or another commenter recommended bleepingcomputer.com and I went there and downloaded what was suggested (nice site they have there)and it did download but my computer prevents it from opening, so I'm unsure how to proceed from here unless I fiddle with doing the start/run/misconfig thing which I am too paranoid I'll mess up bigtime.