Yay – insomnia is back…

It’s meme time!

I had been wearing the Fitbit at night to see my sleep and while I wasn’t really experiencing insomnia, it wasn’t great. I stopped wearing it at night because I didn’t want to see that LOL.

This week has been bad again. Up at 3:45 for the last couple of days. Ugh.

This, too, shall pass, but you kind of forget how bad insomnia feels until you get into a cycle again.

I’m really glad I work for myself so I don’t have to drag myself to an office 🙂

 

Flower Friday coming up – if I’m awake enough LOL

What’s Blooming 07-20!

Vroooom and another Friday has rolled around. Things are popping along in the garden. Our season is short so plants explode in summer.

Snapdragon volunteers:

This year only white and yellow are showing up so far. And they have gone to many different places in the garden bed – a bit wayward as well LOL.

Candy stripe zinnia:

These are some zinnias I picked up at a big box store instead of ordering them online from Select Seeds like normal. Lesson learned.  Only about half germinated. These are short and not very full. Select Seeds from now on for the best zinnias. Future Lori reread this post to remind yourself.

I picked up some clearance plants for $1 and two of them happened to be hibiscus. I repotted them, fertilized and watered. Now I’m getting lots of blooms:

I’ve never grown hibiscus before. I didn’t know the flowers only last one day. Or at least mine are only lasting one day.

Same hibiscus by the balloon flowers:

Liatris complete with pollinator:

We are in a drought situation here. Any rain that has been in the area keeps missing us. Here is our lovely lawn:

Just in case you think my gardens look perfect 🙂 . We don’t do anything for the lawn. No water. It just goes dormant when it’s dry.  This is why I want to make more garden beds and get rid of more lawn.

Lots o’ coneflowers:

This one is a baby from the Cheyenne Spirit and it turned out a really cool color:

I’m calling it hot papaya.

Hydrangea and black-eyed Susan:

My other hydrangea, Annabelle:

The flowers on this are just perfect.

In the back, more razzmatazz:

The milkshake coneflowers just opened. I swear, nothing blooming and then boom – all of them:

These will get all white on top.  I’m having better luck this year with fewer bugs eating all the petals. Maybe the neem helps with that after all.

Drumstick allium:

Those were flopped over on the ground, so we caged them up. It looks like some of them have bed head LOL.

Bee balm:

It has spread so much! The hummingbirds have been visiting it this week.

Gooseneck loosestrife:

The globe thistles are really close to opening up now. Hopefully these coneflower blooms will last:

For some perspective on where these plants are, here is a pulled back shot:

We get a for real and true cupcake ride on Saturday – I’m so excited! Schedules and weather finally cross beams. Yippee!  Have a great weekend!

Hudson Pointe hike with new flora and fauna!

Saturday ended up being a little on the spotty weather side, so we chose to do a shorter hike. I also got a text before we left that my bike wheel was ready, so we picked that up on way to the preserve. The gears need to be adjusted on the bike, but otherwise the wheel seems as good as new!

On to the Nature Preserve!

This goes along the Hudson river. You start up at a higher elevation and then drop down to the banks. It was nice and shady.

You could definitely feel a breeze up here.  This is a nice preserve with informative signs sprinkled around:

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The path is very clearly marked and pretty walkable. Not too many tree roots or things to trip on.  The downhill path is a little more loose and rocky. I wouldn’t want to do this when it’s wet.

Down to the banks of the Hudson.

Home of the PCBs. Ick.

We headed towards the marsh area and we saw several new-to-us species of plants and animals!  It’s been dry here lately, so the trail was only mildly damp, but having the wooden walkways is still nice.

The air was very still here and the mosquitoes started attacking. They love me more than John. Not sure why, but it’s annoying LOL. Time for the bug spray!

New plant:  This is a pickerel.

It’s a native plant, but apparently pretty aggressive, which I would agree with because it was around in abundance.

Buttonbush (aka Cephalanthus):

I was pretty excited to see this one in bloom. It’s a native plant and I actually have one in our back yard. It’s only 18 inches tall and hasn’t bloomed yet, so to see what it will eventually look like was pretty cool!  Or sort of like. My buttonbush is the home garden variety and not the wild and wooly one. This also was in abundance along with the pickerel:

Down to the marsh where we saw some new birds:

Okay, a little closer:

These are Eastern Kingbirds. Confirmed by my sister – the bird expert – after I sent her this pic.

Also seen was a not new-to-us bird, but the common red winged blackbird:

There are tons of these around here. It’s one of my favorites to see flying by when we bike.

Some waterlilies were in bloom and this is one I’ve never seen before:

It’s a Nuphar or common name of brandy bottle.  Very neat looking.

Closeup of the pickerel:

Leaving the swampy area and back into the buttonbush, I spied a new butterfly:


After much searching, this is a silver spotted skipper. I seem to have lost my butterfly ID book somewhere in the house (how does this happen??), so there was a lot of googling trying to figure it out.

This was a great hike for seeing new stuff!

Time to trudge back up:

The sun finally came out and it was feeling pretty warm. Interestingly enough, when we got back to the top you could feel the breeze again – which was very welcome.

All and all, this is a gem of a small preserve.

What’s Blooming! 7-13

The garden is busy, busy, busy right now. Making up for lost time, I guess 🙂

Lots of balloon flowers:

The pink ones open a little later for some reason. They are right next to each other, too.

Liatris, aka gayfeather:

Now is the time for coneflowers:

Those are Cheyenne Spirit. If I were to recommend a coneflower that you should get, it would be that one. You never know which of the colors it will be and sometimes more than one color per plant. I have lots of babies from the original three that I bought. I gifted some and let others just grow where they sprouted.

Loved by bees:

Supreme cantaloupe, which is kind of small this year:

Campanula rebloom:

My Annabelle hydrangea is doing nicely:

This should double in size for next year if all goes according to plan (haha – do gardens ever do that??). These big blooms don’t droop over since the stems are nice and thick.

Black-eyed Susan:

That’s one plant! In its third year. Another hydrangea behind that, which is just starting to bud out.

It’s baby bird time right now. With having feeders and a relatively safe place for birds, we often see lots of babies. Right now there are goldfinch and chickadee babies. Here is one of the chickadee babies looking to take a dip in our water feature.

Baby chickadees are adorable. They look just like the adult only tiny. They don’t fly very well and kind of bump into things. Plus they aren’t really afraid and will often come pretty close to us when we sit on the patio.

The gooseneck loosestrife that I moved when we put in the water feature has really taken hold. I started with something like 6 of these?

Yikes! They can be invasive, so I’m not really planning on putting them anywhere else. The blooms line up and point to the sun like little soldiers:

Bee Balm:

Another one that went crazy. I started with a one gallon pot and now I’m going to have to thin this patch.  I think of Raggedy Ann when I see the blooms:

Not to mention the bees go crazy for this plant. There were quite a few bumblebees on it this evening when I took these pictures.

Another bee favorite is the drumstick allium:

These had actually flopped way over and were almost touching the ground, so John and I wrestled to put a hoop around them – all while the bees were trying to eat lunch. Eeek! Making a mental note to put a cage around these early.

White swan and magnus coneflowers next to my globe thistle:

At our old house, I had a perfect placement of the globe thistle and coneflowers. They bloomed at the same time and looked so cool together. They aren’t timing right at this house. Not sure I will ever get that combo duplicated again.

My old friend the Razzmatazz coneflower:

Weather should be decent this weekend. However, my bike is in the shop. I don’t know what happened, but after I cleaned my bike, the rear wheel started making a grinding noise. I don’t know how I could have done something to the inside ball bearings by cleaning it since I didn’t have the wheel even off the bike, but there you go. Could just be coincidence.  Flat tires I can fix, but wheel problems I cannot. Anyway, I dropped the wheel off at the bike shop on Tuesday and they aren’t even going to get to look at it until Saturday. Boo!!  So, the plan will be for a hike instead.

Have a great weekend!

Cupcake ride!

The heatwave finally broke and boy did the weather feel fabulous! We actually woke up to temperatures in the upper 40s, which is pretty chilly, but no complaints here!

John was working on Saturday, so my ride was solo. I wanted a longer ride but didn’t really want to bike down to Saratoga alone. I’ve done it before and funny enough got a flat tire. Or not funny LOL.  I decided I would do closer loops to home so that I could get help a little faster than if I was stranded halfway to Saratoga.

I love to ride in the mornings. It’s not as hot and with the sun lower, there is a lot more shade from trees. Plus less traffic. It’s win-win all around!  I did a large loop by the airport, which has some nice climbs and lots of open road:

You know summer is in full swing when the chickory blooms:

My new bike jersey:

One truly annoying thing about bike jerseys is that there is no vanity sizing. In fact, it’s like the opposite. It’s soul crushing sizing LOL. You need to get shirts that are 3 times the size of your normal shirt to have a chance of it fitting. So I have an XXL and it’s snug on my hips. Looser in the shoulders – so obviously made for a slim-hipped woman and not a curvy one.  But, It’s very comfortable and cool (even though it’s black).

After about 15 miles, I stopped in the shade for a snack:

This would be all sunny if it was later. Did I mention I like morning riding?

This is also a new item I received for my birthday – a wrist mirror!

It’s adjustable. It rotates around and opens and closes.  The only thing that I need to get used to is that things look small in the mirror and really are much closer than they look.  And lots more freckles on view as well – 50 sunscreen applied.

I finished up at 33.5 miles on the day. Since it was morning, it was too early for a cupcake, but I did stop at the bakery in the last couple of miles to bring one home for later!  This was a butterbeer cuppie with an iced latte consumed next to our water feature.

That made for a nice afternoon snack!

I also treated Mr. Fuji to a bath. I have to admit I haven’t done much more than rinse it off in the last couple of years, but it was time for a full on scrub down with the grit:

Yuck.  I got out a scrub brush, toothbrush, degreaser and a magic eraser and now Mr. Fuji hasn’t looked this clean since I got it!

And wouldn’t you know a bird pooped on the handlebars while it was in the sun drying off. Gotta love it.

Now I just need to grease the chain and gears before the next ride and show off the sparkle! 🙂

What’s Blooming 7-6

Happy Friday and FINALLY cooler weather!  It was so icky and sticky this morning and it rained. Then the sun came out and as the day went on it got windier and the humidity dropped. In fact, we are going out tonight and I’m going to need to change into pants and wear a jacket!  Lori is much happier now 🙂

 

The garden fared pretty well during the heat. I was watering it every other day, but some plants still got really wilty looking. They seem to have recovered today.

I had a new allium open up. I have to say that I cannot remember which one this is. I got so many different allium bulbs last fall and I seem to be suffering from CRS disease any more.

The stem is very thin and wispy. With the wind today, these have nodded over quite a bit. I need to search the catalog and see what one this is.

Flowering tobacco:

Clearance annuals for $1 and how could I refuse?

The balloon flowers are all popping open (hahahaha!).

There are even more flowers today, but it is hard to get pictures when it’s so windy.

The tippy pots:

My $2 chair is just about ready to bite the dust. It fell apart and I glued it back together, but this may be the last year for it. I don’t dare place anything on the seat or the whole thing will come tumbling down.

More shasta daisies:

They are so cheery!

I still struggle with the shade garden. It is getting better, but slow going. The heuchera in the front got chewed by either the rabbit or bugs and they are still small. At least they are regrowing and not dead!

Closeup of the astilbes with the solomon seal:

There is a pink one next to it:

John got me this cute bike planter for my birthday.  All I did was add the pot. It sits by our water feature.

So cute!

The main bed in the back is cooking along.  The butterfly weed:

No aphids so far, but I do spray these with neem oil about once a week, which is supposed to keep them away. Might actually be working!

My baby Joe pye weed is tall again this year.

It obviously loves the spot I put it in as it continues to grow gangbusters.  Buds are forming on it now.

Old-fashioned daylilies:

I just stuck a few in this back corner after the fence came down and they really took to this spot. The ferns and other greenery to the left is my neighbor’s stuff.

I have some shasta daisies out back as well. These have a specific name, which I can’t remember either LOL. They are a quilled type:

Complete with little buggies! They don’t seem to be eating the plants, so I let them be.

There will be more new stuff next week. July seems to be when most of my things bloom:


With this gloriously much drier weather, I’m hoping for a nice long ride this weekend.  Have a good one!

A few eats

How is everyone surviving the heat wave?  I’m doing okay. Each time the weather gets like this, it affirms that I will never be moving south. I hate the heat and humidity. Plus I love the four seasons. I don’t even mind the cold so much, but I could do with less snow accumulation.

Anyway, that heat dulls my appetite some, but then I just eat snacky stuff. I like big salads in the summer:

I don’t eat salad dressing at home. Instead I have BBQ chicken on it.  Maybe I’m weird, but it tastes good. 🙂

I cooked a bunch of frozen chicken breast strips in the Instant Pot. 10 minutes on high with a quick release and I have cooked chicken for the week and no heating up of the kitchen! Winning!

I eat more yogurt in the summer as well. Pretty much always the same way. Plain greek yogurt with fruit and cereal:

John has made a few meals when we aren’t just eating our own thing. He is always in charge of pizza Friday and then he tried a falafel mix by Knorr and these were pretty tasty:

Drizzled with tahini mixed with garam masala. The tahini was purchased to make our own hummus that doesn’t have garlic in it. Neither of us is a big fan of garlic, but we like hummus – so why not make it our way?

These are baked donuts made with Bisquick to which John added some protein powder.

We each had 3 of these and that was nice fuel for a 20+ mile bike ride that morning!

Lots of cold brewed coffee, too.

I will drink hot coffee pretty much all the time until it gets as hot as it is now and then it’s ice, ice baby.

I have to share this funny Instagram message I got.  I don’t do much with my personal IG account, but I do find that strangers will follow it. In my messages waiting to be approved are often pick up notes from creepers. It’s surprising to me how many of those I will get. I never approve them or even respond at all.  This one was the most over the top I’ve gotten so far:

Ummmm…. decline thank you. Seriously, does this stuff work? It must or it wouldn’t keep happening. Anyway, it certainly is good for a laugh.

Have a Happy Independence Day to all my American peeps! Stay safe and enjoy the festivities 🙂

What’s Blooming 6-29

June is almost gone already!  I’m going back to my garden today as I still haven’t finished editing Longwood Gardens photos.

We finally got some much needed rain. Our lawn was pretty crispy and I was watering the gardens a lot. After a couple good days of soaking rain, everything feels lush and green.  Now, of course, it’s going to get boiling hot, but you can’t have it all.

My Calycanthus bush is doing so well. Even though it got hit with a snow/ice slide off of our roof this winter, which broke some of it off, it recovered great.

I planted this is 2015 this size:

The garden sure has changed in 3 years!  Patience for this is so, so hard.

Here is a closeup of the blooms:

June is rose season. All of mine have been sending out flowers. This is Othello, a David Austin rose:

I have to say that I’m not terribly impressed with this rose. It only puts out a couple flowers and they last 1 day or two at most. It’s a beautiful flower, though.  I may move this to the back garden this fall.

Fair Bianca, on the other hand, is my fabulous rose bush:

This has probably 20 open flowers on it now – and the plant is not that big. They are in clumps like this all over the plant. It smells amazing, too.

My astilbes are fully open now. Or at least the white ones are.

I have a few different kinds of astilbes. My shade bed really has a mole problem, which is pissing me off. I’ve gone to mixing up a castor oil solution with dish soap and cayenne pepper  and pouring it over their tunnels to try to chase them out. Results uncertain as of yet.

Shasta daisies:

I got a lot of these last year from my BIL as leftovers from the tree nursery and they all came back.

Pretty petunias:

And the mini petunias – calibrachoa :

The yellow ones are a lot of fun!

We were hoping for a cupcake ride this weekend, but it’s just going to be too hot for that kind of riding in the afternoon. Mid 90s and humid – ick. That means morning rides only. Can you believe we have not had a cupcake ride this summer yet? Our schedules have not meshed with the weather to make that happen.

Stay cool everyone!

What’s Blooming – Longwood Gardens!

I’m going to do a couple of Longwood Gardens posts as it really is too much to squish into one post.

Longwood is really huge – over 1000 acres. We were there for 6 hours and didn’t see the whole thing.  It was founded by Pierre Dupont and was designed as sort of a horticultural and cultural experience. Not only are there the gardens and learning centers, but there is a stage for performances.

Upon entry:

It was quite sunny that day. Not the greatest for taking pictures as the colors get washed out. Cloudy days are best for photography, but at least it wasn’t raining!  Early morning sun as I was pretty much banging on the gate when they opened 🙂

The gardens are divided into sections or groupings and there is always something in bloom. Clematis was all over the place:

This was along the Flower Walk:

I really got some great ideas for plantings and new things to try.  This is datura.

It’s actually a poisonous plant, so you pretty much have to grow it from seed. There are a lot of colors available, too.

.Right now is the Festival of Fountains. There are a lot of water features around the gardens.

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I wish I noted the tag on that flower. It looks like kind of like celosia or maybe amaranth, but I’m not sure.

Topiary garden:

They didn’t come to life a la The Shining, thank goodness.

Italian water garden:

This was lovely. You weren’t allowed out there in the fountain area, which is probably a good thing. People tend to ruin stuff, you know?

Then there is the main fountain area:

The Conservatory (my favorite thing) is that big building in the back. We are standing on a walkway between these fountains and the larger ones:

The fountains put on periodic shows that are set to music throughout the day. It was fun to be this close to them.

The rose garden:

I love pretty much any flower, but I have a special fondness for roses.

I wish I had the patience for tea roses, but they are so fussy and need too many chemicals for me to bother with. I’ll just enjoy the work other people put in and stick to my floribundas.

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Last rose shot:

That’s enough for today. If you ever are going near Philadelphia, you need to check this place out. Doesn’t matter if it is in the winter as they have the whole conservatory blooming then.

What’s Blooming!

I finally have my pictures downloaded from Longwood Gardens, but I have to edit them and organize. I took over 200 pictures, so I have some work to do LOL.  I’ll do a couple of posts because it was just such an amazing place. Absolutely well worth the admission cost and the drive to get there. I wish we could have spent two days there.

Back home to my little garden patch, which seems piddly in comparison.

My favorite Allium – the Star of Persia (Allium cristophii)

They are light and airy, not to mention huge!

My inlaws gave me a gift certificate to John Scheepers for my birthday and I am getting more of these! 😀

My “climbing” rose.

Need to mix up some more neem oil to keep the buggies from chewing on it. It smells great by the front door, but not really what I’m going for. I think I will move this one and the matching one on the other side of the door to the back and put clematis here.

Campanula alba:

It almost looks like it is floating. Just one flower stalk so far, but this will bloom a couple of times during the season.

My container plant is looking great now!

I have it in partial sun and it seems to like that a lot. That also helps keep it from drying out too much since it is a container and they need more frequent waterings than the rest of the garden.

The back corner garden:

Again, I wish this was closer to the house. It’s a nice full sun area for my roses, though.  Speaking of – here is Enchanted Evening:

I know you are singing right now…

I spied a toad friend in this garden bed:

I kind of freaked him out when I leaned in to take a picture, but living is good for him in this garden, so he won’t be leaving any time soon.

Shade garden with spiderwort:

I didn’t plant that. It just came by on its own.

Astilbe that is not quite ready for prime time, but close:

Jacob’s Ladder (Polemonium):

I had planted one plant, which died, but it gave me 3 offspring.  You can see one of my heuchera behind that, which I think is called Spellbound.

Long time readers know that I’m not a big fan of hostas and there were some here when we moved in. I gave away some and just pulled others out, but left this one:

It’s quite large and my shade bed was so empty that I left it. It’s future in this spot is uncertain, but moving it won’t happen this year if I decide it needs to be somewhere else.

Flanking the hosta on each side are the Ladies Mantles:

The are just putting up flower stalks. The flowers are kind of a yellow foamy-looking flower. It’s mostly for foliage, though.

And lastly is the final iris. This was a very late bloomer – yes, I went there.

Night ruler. This looks almost black in person, especially in the sun.  I have 3 more iris rhizomes on order and one is supposed to be even blacker than this one. I will do my darndest to keep the bunnies away from those!

Have a great weekend!