From Pizza Delivery Girl in Vancouver:
http://www.craigslist.org/about/best/van/346308204.html
Rain
It finally rained last night, not a lot, but a help.
Yesterday, CM bought two trees at 50% off at the discount nursery, and with the purchase, we got our pick of vegetable 6-packs for free. She chose lettuce and I came home with a dozen tiny tomato plants which I planted for now in two large previously unused flower boxes filled with Miracle-Gro potting soil.
Gardener’s Diary, Power Sprayer and a Tree Limb
Peter has been worried about a massive tree limb that dangles over the back yard, and after three tries, I found an arborist, my next door neighbor’s employer, who is willing to take it down today.
Peter has also been wanting to power spray the porch, which still has vestiges of the lousy paint job from four years ago, and I’ve reserved a unit at Taylor Rental for late today/tomorrow.
That’ll mean sanding and staining the deck in the weekends to come. I’ll be a very happy person when that job is over.
Continue reading Gardener’s Diary, Power Sprayer and a Tree Limb
Humidity
It’s been a good ten degrees cooler than Boston, but the weather on the Cape has still been oppressive for the last three days.
We’re supposed to get a break tomorrow, not soon enough for many of us.
None Yet on the Cape
So last night, I finally bought a $20 “Star Spangled Sweepstakes” ticket, the Mass. Lottery’s most recent opportunity for instant wealth or self-delusional scam, depending on your point of view.
There haven’t been any winners yet on the Cape, so if the law of random numbers applies, maybe there’s a better than average chance at either the daily or final Fourth of July drawing.
The Lottery claims it’s distributing $40 million in prizes, ranging from $250,000 to $20 million. You can’t win if you don’t play.
Love What You Have
I truly wish I could do this.
Longest Days
It seems a shame to spend time indoors at this time of year, when sunset isn’t until well after 8 pm and there are over 16 hours of visible light.
If one had the money, skill and the tools to do so, one could build a patio or put up a shed, all within the normal workweek.
Even folks who don’t exercise on a regular basis are talking about fitness routines, and real athletes are geared up for serious competition.
If it weren’t for the fact that winter saves us from being infested with bugs and even nastier creatures, I wish it were like this all year long.
Good Move
Glad I hauled self to the Provincetown Film Festival yesterday, otherwise I would have felt like a real loser this morning.
Not only were the two films I saw – America the Beautiful and Movimentos Perpetuos – well worth the trip, but the weather was picture-perfect.
It was a good drive out, good drive back, had enough cash for parking and lunch without breaking the bank, and I visited two National Seashore beaches on the way.
I’m running to catch up this morning; considering that the day is starting out gray and muggy, I’m happy to have invested a rare top ten in something other than mowing a lawn or a transfer station run.
Gardener’s Diary
June has been cool and dry, but the gardens don’t seem to mind.
Hacked but not stump ground 6 or 7 years ago, the woods around this house are looking like the forest primeval.
Having read through the “news” websites already, I’m trying to decide if I want to go to P-Town for the film festival, a one hour 45 minute trek each way, or just stay put.
That’s the story this time of year, when the opportunities for leisure time activities explodes.
TGIF
Too often, Friday night becomes a “throwaway”, and I get mad at myself when that happens.
The main reason is that most of the leisure time activities I enjoy, like yard work or visiting an art gallery, happen during the day. By the time 6 pm comes around, the sidewalks have been rolled up.