Sunday, December 31, 2006

Hunger and Patience

You can see I am getting a lot of use and enjoyment from my new camera's macro focus.



















The Butterfly Bump and Grind was successful and the next generation of Monarchs that soar through my garden are munching away on a Calotropis procera. These Milkweeds have the most bizarre seed pods.

Divided into two hemispheres with a lumpy surface, it looks a lot like a human brain. When you open them up they are mostly hollow inside. The seeds are held tightly on a central stem that occupies a mere fraction of the large cavity. I would like to suggest a new common name for this poisonous shrub, Brain Bush, or Bush's Brain if you like.



















Meanwhile just three feet away and above the boldly striped caterpillar's head a big Banana Spider, Argiope aurantia waits patiently for another meal to arrive.




















A view of the underside of the beast reveals his larder may already be full in the fine web he has sewn among the stems of the exotic tropical Torch Ginger. There is no rush it seems to go hunting for a new meal.



















A certain couple who shall remain nameless are chomping at the bit for the next transformation in my life.

There is a hunger for new birth and transformation that the offer of an incredible gift promises me. A fine web and full larder built over many years in a habitat that has fed me well can be a bit sticky. A lot of house cleaning needs to be done before all those legs amd arms are set free.

Patience and Hunger

Nice Sky














Just Because.

Saturday, December 30, 2006

House and Garden




















Our house was fine when the Java Sparrows where living in here, better than in the attic. When the rats moved in I foreclosed on the house.

















What's Up Yours?






















Red shrimp White shrimp plant.













That Ant can't move a Century plant. They will walk all over it however.


















Hooray it is 2007!

Thursday, December 28, 2006

Busy Skies

Over the course of an hour the Hawaiian sky put on a busy display of weather and a very local phenomena.

There was a a pretty good Hawaiian Snow shower this morning. Big fat flakes where flying right into my eyes in the gusty wind when I took this shot. The back end of the snow shower sits above the regular kine clouds in the lower background.
















Then some misty rains came in on the blustery wind.















A piece of a rainbow rose from the deep blue sea.
















The rain got bigger and the rainbow grew thicker.














It reached completely across the sky to form the real deal.














After a brief misty shower blue skies returned.

It was not enough rain to stop The Hissing of Tropical Lawns around all the fancy houses on the hill.

Monday, December 25, 2006

Misty Grey Skies and Working Sugarmills

Same Christmas Day 2006 Noon
Kahului Maui Hawaii













On the other side of Maui there were low grey clouds and a misty rain that tried to follow me home.

Painted Skies and Old Pineapple Canneries















Diana Dorenzo


















Christmas Morning 2006
Kihei Maui Hawaii

Sunday, December 24, 2006

Things in my Yard

Irrigation drops on Kalanchoe














and Whiskers on Orthosiphon stamineus



















Silver white fern fronds that merge with Rosemary sprigs














These are a few of the things in my yard



I just smelled a shrub named Murraya













And suddenly my nose
will never be the same
All the beautiful smells of the world
in Murraya


Wait no wrong side of the yard
but still I don't feel so bad.


Now get that out of your head if you can.

Saturday, December 23, 2006

Holiday Fruit Tree

Or Procrastination as an Art Form 2

To create some semblance of a holiday vacation I won't be working for the next three days. That means I start doing all the things I neglect most of the time like dishes, laundry, vacuuming, dusting and the like in between long bouts of sitting on my okole in front of this screen.

Tis the season for picking oranges and I thought I would make some fresh squeezed organic orange juice for my Sunday morning get together. After picking and washing the fruit one of those tangential thoughts I am prone to came to fruition.



















Like a Tibetan Monk Sand Painting my little Holiday Fruit Tree will be ephemeral.




















By tomorrow it will be sweet juice.

Friday, December 22, 2006

Moths Attack

It has been so cold here.

How cold is it?

So cold that the moths all got stuck to the wall last night while circling the sensor light.

So cold I close the window over my bed when I go to sleep at night. We are talking a low of 67 degrees. A weak front is approaching and it may get even colder in the next few days. We are talking sock weather.















This was just a trippy thing to see first thing in the morning. They were pressed totally flat and completely motionless against the wall.

Thursday, December 21, 2006

As The Stones Stack

UPDATED with a better current shot. Lighting is everything. And a view from way way up above.


Pausing to pile on more rocks acquired from further bed preparation while being peppered with questions, the consensus of many observers was revealed. They like this thing.














People are saying this is really cool and interesting. Everybody asks me what it is, he says.

Do they say they like it before or after you tell them what it is?

I just tell them it is a pile of rocks.














This is not just a pile of rocks. This is an Organized Pile of Useless Rocks. OPUR for short?

How high can this thing go, he asks? I am thinking maybe of having a load of rock delivered to finish it if we have to.

I guess they really like it. I don't think we will need more rocks delivered.

I did not level the ground before I started stone stacking. Is that why the first attempts at pyramids crumbled?

To my eye it has a tilt that may need to be corrected by adding some fill dirt around the base on the left hand side. We'll see how I feel as it comes closer to the end of the rocks. I will make the top level to the eye.

I am not philosophically adverse to a Leaning Organized Pile of Useless Rocks or LOPUR for short.















It sits at the end of what will be a two car long gravel parking space for the Ohana unit. It sits at the entry to the stairs from hell that lead to the heavenly pool. It is a major focal point that separates two functions in the landscape.

From the two decks of the main house 25 and 35 feet above, it has begun to take on a presence.

They like it. I think they really like it.

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Wild Things

Hidden away in some of the most remote jungles of Wailea, Hawaii is a rare gigantic form of a plant that puts on a spectacular seasonsal mating display. Usually they are held captive as potted houseplants for their flagrant display. Most succumb and wither away after a short spell under the vagaries of human captivity.

Rarely a few manage to survive with more humane treatment. Not many will repeat the flagrant display that first caused their capture after being so beaten down. Often they are lacking the proper wild clues for reproduction. Fewer still manage to survive and escape back into the wild.

I went on the hunt for one of these rare gigantic wild specimens in its full seasonal courting attire.

Down long winding roads and behind several locked gates in a highly secure location, a couple of these returnees to the wild had found a protected spot tucked in among some larger plants.

Approaching cautiously from the side and at a distance I was able to capture this image of the rare gigantic form in a wild setting in full display.



















It was just past high noon. The warm day and large amounts of energy spent on attracting the attention of pollinators had lulled this giant into a peaceful lethargy. I was able to sneak quietly in for a closer shot.



















Treking through the jungle and capturing this elusive rarity on a digital camera was far easier than getting the message it wanted to share with the world to appear in the same image. Deciphering the message code took some work.

HAPPY HOLIDAYS EVERYONE

Monday, December 18, 2006

Not a Cloud in the Sky

On the way home late this afternoon. The next left is my neighborhood. Haleakala is completely exposed. This hill is just shy of 10,000 feet in elevation.









This arrow points to the way off.




A bit later that evening, my slice of the sky opted for a simple blended color spectrum.

Butterfly Bump and Grind

The middle of December on a clear sunny cool morning and there was somethin' floppin' around on my driveway. An amorous couple of copulating Monarch Butterflies had crashed to the ground. They kept busy while I went inside and got the camera.

















One had a constricting hold on the others wing and seemed to be in control of the situation. The dominant one opened and closed its wings several times while I hovered over them. When I was satisfied and stepped back, they lifted straight into the air. One Butterfly was flying, one was hanging still beneath with closed wings.


















I have always wondered when did the Monarchs get here? What stops them from migrating to the Oyamel fir forests in central Mexico when the days get short and cool? Or once the job is done do they sail out in to the Pacific Ocean headed south east. Is there a trail of orange and black wings floating on the waves that points to Mexico?

We have several species of Milkweed for the catepillars to eat. One, Gomphocarpus physocarpus is allowed to self seed in my garden and there are plenty of flowers for the adults to fuel up on. They glide through my garden on a daily basis and add a sense of grace that does not come from me. They own it and are kind enough to share it with me.

Saturday, December 16, 2006

Back to the Sky



















The setting sun has moved further south and no longer lands in the ocean where I can see it from my piece of the ocean and sky.

If only the neighbors below me would chop down their Plumeria Tree I could see a bit more of the deep blue sea. Not! I would rather have the tree screening their house and cottage from me.

There is still a camera full of sky directly above me.


















And there is a different new sky each day
if I pause for a brief moment
to just look
to just be

Gardenesque

What a difference mowing the lawn makes.

I sometimes lament having to bring my nursery to my house and burying my garden with it. Beginning behind the Philippine Poinsettia and around the corner of the deck where the bulk of my yard lies are thousands of potted plants. The effect it creates, while lush is not quite the same as a broad oval lawn surrounded by deep beds overflowing with flowering plants.

The two narrower portions of the yard were kept as is for their wide grass paths. The large bed below the deck had always been a stock bed of perennials lined in rows and that stayed the same.

My lawn is always the last one to get mowed. When it gets shaggy after being ignored for two or three weeks it begins to blend in with the beds and the whole place looks like an overgrown collection of plants that has run amok.

Mowing the lawn momentarily reminds me that indeed there is still a garden here. At least on two sides of the house.















The lawn has crept about a foot into the beds and I am no longer cutting it back hard to keep it at bay. The rows of perennials will all be dug up, potted and sold. The wide path will become a bigger lawn.















It is fortunate that the grass is Centipede, Eremochloa ophiuroides. It forms a dense turf that out competes weeds and stays relatively short so I can have the luxury of not mowing it for weeks at a time without it getting outrageously tall.

First I edge the lawn. Anything that gets stirred up from the beds then gets ground up with a mulching gas powered, smoke belching mower. I get to wear ear plugs and meditate. I go over it until everything is finely ground and is no longer visible on the lawn. If it has been a while since the last haircut it can take a few passes over each row.

I have never once in fifteen years fertilized this grass or sprayed it with an herbicide or pesticide.

When it is mowed and looking pretty this is the kind of pure sod lawn that people struggle so hard to have. I just picked the right kind of grass for my area.

Maybe it really does take a lawn to have a proper garden.

Friday, December 15, 2006

Similar Structures

I am still playing with the close-up feature on my new camera. Peering intently into the inner workings of the intimate lives of plants, some common structures are revealed.



















An unknown to me large Bromeliad. But these are the parts that are used to define species.




















African Iris, Dietes bicolor.

















Ti Leaf, Cordyline terminalis is a very regular December bloomer

















I can't really explain the dramatic color difference. Same clump of Portea petropolitana, same day, same time, different stalk six inches away.















They remind me of those websites as graphs toy.

Thursday, December 14, 2006

Super Fly

The new species of Whitefly that arrived a few years ago and went into plague proportions island wide still hangs on at plague levels in some locations. The increasing number of travelers, immigrants from the mainland and the goods they need that are shipped in to the state of Hawaii have also increased the rate at which hitch hiking critters arrive. Many of these insect species do find this place paradise.

This Super Fly is particularly fond of Plumeria. I was beheading a tree that is not allowed to be tree today and this is the underside of a leaf from that poor tree.



















The perimeter of the house is regularly doused with preventative pesticides and poison granules are strewn about by a pest control service. Hopefully this will kill all the ants, roaches, centipedes, scorpions, termites and any other bug deemed bad when it non-discriminately kills everything else. This is the result. In the absence of a balanced predator/prey relationship the sucking bugs thrive.

The tops of the lower leaves get covered in Honeydew or bug excrement and a black mildew grows in this sticky poo. The sap of Plumeria is also a sticky white latex and the whole concoction is just disgusting to trim.

















Five blocks away in an organic garden were the bugs are welcomed and the birds sing from dawn to dusk and the lizards bounce through the shrubberies with an audible plop the Plumeria leaves look a lot different. A touch of rust and a couple of scale are all that have managed to mar these leaves that were produced last May. The rust and the scale on Plumeria trees were here twenty years ago when I first arrived and the trees still thrived.

Plumeria was a desired small to medium sized tree for the garden. It brought shade and fragrance and bloomed all season long.



















After the Whitefly and the Papaya Mealybug plagues, Plumeria trees in bad locations started getting chopped down in the fancy neighborhoods were bugs were not allowed. No amount of additional poison seemed to help the problem quickly enough. No amount of coaxing, that to stop spreading poison was the solution would be heard. The Honeydew falling from their canopies landed on expensive cars and that just would not do. They had to go. Those that remain may slowly suffer the same fate.
















The ex-husband of a dear friend, the youngest son of wonderful parents and good clients, the father of a fine young man and brother to two brothers passed away yesterday. He was a good and honorable man. This is a loss of the worst kind for his parents and his son.

Some bug got into his system and he was no longer strong enough to fight it off. I don't know the particulars of what took him. I know the general undiscussed realities. He had the same disease I do. I listened to the coaxing and stopped ingesting a poison that was slowly killing me. Keep coaxing me Lord.

Nobody knows why some of us get lucky and so many have to die to soon. He was loved. He will be missed by many. He was a good man. Rest in Peace my friend.

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Soothing

I need a nap.



















This Ti Leaf is very alluring and soothing to my eye. It has so much white in the leaf it is very slow to grow for a Ti. I had to hide it from view to be able to get one big enough to propagate. In the nursery they will sell before they even have real chance to root and grow out. I was lucky to save this one for myself. Where ever it came from is now a mystery to me.

Perhaps its original location will return to me in a dream.

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Sharp Claws

Cats are supposed to have retractable claws. My solid black cat with the politically incorrect name may be unusual. He has the longest sharpest claws I have ever seen on a cat. Even at rest when the claws should be fully retracted they are still quite visible and very prominent.

Maybe his short jet black fur makes his clear white nails more visible. Maybe his life of utter sloth does not wear them down faster than they grow.

Completely asleep and oblivious to the world his four paws can still look pretty menacing. After a wild childhood and a blood letting slasher young adult phase, he has mellowed into a sweet affectionate occasional lap cat.















I was given the opportunity to do a Guest Rant today over at the fun and often provocative blog, Garden Rant. I ranted about the derogatory term Mow and Blow and the low skill set it generally implies to a large swath of the landscape maintenance profession.

Talking about lawns in any of its aspects often seems to get the claws flashed and the fur flying. Then the claws are retracted and the gardeners all go back to garden for peace, beauty, & the creative stimulation. Some crusty old gardeners may never be able to fully retract their claws though.

Sunday, December 10, 2006

Black Americana

This is a small sample of my collection of Black Americana for Chuck B. who is wondering what similar items from his grandparents house may mean. I don't know what if anything it may have meant to them. Not to long ago they were ordinary house hold items and common forms of advertising.




















The Cream of Wheat, my first piece was presented to me as a gift from a friend when I lived in Colorado. I may have still had a bit of a southern accent then and a way of talking that someone from Oregon assumed meant I was a racist. I'm like Honey are there even any black people in Oregon? You haven't got a clue what racism is like.




















The Shell Gasoline ad was also a gift from a friend who saw my other items and thought of me when he saw this. I have never made a real effort to collect this stuff. It just seems to land near me.
















The Darkie Toothpaste was also first given to me when I lived in Colorado by a world traveler who found it in Singapore and thought of me. Hmmm? I guess a real southerner was an oddity to all those folks out west back in the early 80's.

These gifts were given with a smile, a wink and a laugh. If I was being called a racist on some level I knew in my heart it wasn't true. I accepted them with gratitude and kept them to remind me of the culture I had left behind.

The Tree that Saved Itself

Having a very large potted plant growing on an elevated deck in the tropics would not come as much of surprise to most. In my case this is an example of an extreme will to live. I gave up house plants more than a decade ago. With lots of windows looking out into the garden, house plants just seemed redundant and they took up valuable space.

Out on the large deck they made more sense to help define the space. As Susan over at Takoma Gardener noted recently, the vagaries of watering potted plants can have some deadly consequences. Even with a hose right there I eventually switched to succulents and bromeliads for deck plants. It was too much trouble to water them almost daily in the tropical desert sun. A Confederate Jasmine Vine I had growing on the railing of the deck got quite large and constantly threatened to engulf the house. Fewer potted plants were needed. The succulents and bromeliads that needed a lot less water long ago turned to dust.

The vine got removed from the deck railing to do some wood repair. I was fussed at about it so I just dug the vine up. It was not going to be shy about coming back with a vengeance and well things are changing here. Now I have a naked, badly in need of some new paint deck.

There are a few survivors, a brown edged Sansevieria and a clump of Zephyr Lilies that resprout and bloom every time it rains. There is one potted plant that is thriving.





















A Clusia rosea or Autograph Tree as we call it in Hawaii has refused to die. If I wasn't willing to water it, then so be it. This tree was going to go get some water on its own.















You can see why it is called the Autograph Tree. You can etch a mark into the leaf and it will remain permanently. I still have fond memories of Me.















These trees can start out as epiphytic plants. The seeds which are spread by birds behinds can sprout in the deep moist crook of another trees branches high off the ground. From there they start to send down long aerial roots to connect with the ground. The one on my deck constrained in a pot was no different. It launched roots out into space and went hunting for water and I didn't stop it. Why bother? I wouldn't have to water it soon enough.















Contact! It made a handy support for the Butterfly Pea, Clitoria ternatea to climb up to the railing of the deck as well. I was fussed at about this big fat root snaking its way through the deck at the same time I was fussed at about the Confederate Jasmine Vine. I will have to disconnect the tree from its lifeline at some point. It is the one spot of natural cool shade left on the deck. I would like to try and find it a home first if I can and transplant it to a new home. If I just cut off its main root, I know it too will turn to dust.

A Bee's Behind

I am not quite ready to be a photographer for National Geographic. I have a lot to learn about good lighting and backgrounds and there may be more patience needed than I possess to capture a good image of a bee.

It has been COLD here, getting down to about 70 degrees at night. The basil which is usually swarming with bees is in the shade of the house in the morning and all the bee action was out along the warm sunny driveway lined by a hillside of Aloe.

Butt this is a picture of a bee that I was not able to take before with any clarity.




















The flowers of this orchid are just a bit smaller than a quarter. It kept refusing to show up as a focused image. I need to practice a bit more with the focal distance of the settings on this optical zoom. The blinding white of the lowest petal must be accurate. Flash is not used for close-ups and this orchid is in the shade. I think that is part of why it seems unfocused.



















A little background experiment. I think very steady hands are needed for this exercise too. Do not drink too much coffee before trying to make small objects appear larger than they are.


















This is Torch Ginger, Etlingera elatior. It is predominately a summer bloomer but a healthy patch can send up flowers throughout the year.




















The highly fragrant Yellow Butterfly Ginger, Hedychium flavescens unless they have changed the species name.















There is just something about this cropped image of the frond of a baby Thatch Palm, Thrinax excelsa that appeals to me.

Friday, December 08, 2006

I am Ready for My Close-up Now

The gift from my always organized and very efficient sister who drew my name in the Christmas Gift Pool this year arrived yesterday. I knew what it was so I saw no sense in waiting until Christmas to start using it. It is nice that once a year we have the chance to give and receive one nice thing that we aren't likely to buy for ourselves. Our family gift pool has many other advantages as well.

I wanted a new digital camera that could take better close-up shots. For botanical photography it really is an asset to be able to get clear detailed close-up shots. A camera with a macro setting or optical zoom is nothing fancy or expensive. It is just another feature that my first camera lacked.

I went out into the garden and starting learning how to use this new tool.

Umbrella Sedge, Cyperus involucratus in bloom.



















You knew I was going to take a close-up of the Philippine Poinsettia. I can see things in this picture I can't see with the naked eye or even my reading glasses. Might be time to go to the optometrist.















Something else white, a Spathiphyllum. That spadix looks downright medievil for a plant called the Peace Lily.




















Are you looking at me? The gorgeous Day Gecko getting some morning sun on the side of the house. The garden is filled and overflowing with these geckos that arrived about five years ago. The population of the Anoles has gone into a steep decline.




















Tomorrow I may park myself in front of the wild basil and see if I can capture a bee on film.

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Exotic Fruits I Have Known

There was only oral contact so depending upon what the definition of "known" is, it may have been in the Biblical sense, maybe not. None of them were forbidden and they where there for the ripe picking. Fragrant sticky juices were generally involved in getting to know all these fruits.

They were gone today so I had to borrow a picture, but for two weeks the Jaboticaba, Eugenia cauliflora was in full fruit. They are also known as the Brazilian Grape Tree because of their grape like flavor. It has a thick purple skin with a white gelatinous flesh with one to three small hard seeds. I just pop them in my mouth and press down firmly to release the delicious inner flesh, then discard the skin and seeds.









Photo Vivero Anones Inc.






A bit more common because they are prolific producers. Star Fruit, Averrhoa carambola has a crisp clear flesh. When fully ripe they can have a mild pear flavor. Chilled and sliced they are a nice light touch, a sorbet without all the sugar to finish off a full meal.




















Here we have some baby Sapodilla, Manilkara zapota. They will double in size and elongate to become more oval shaped. This tree has a reddish pink flesh with a dense unique flavor. Chicle, the latex obtained from the bark of the tree has been used as a chewing gum base for many years.


















Here is a little nest of Lilikoi, Passiflora edulis var. flavicarpa or Passion Fruit. This is a rampant vine. It will climb over and into anything it can wrap its tendrils around. When the fruit ripen they fall to the ground. They have a thick gourd like outer skin. Inside is a jelly like substance that surrounds the hundreds of small hard round seeds. You've just got to swallow the seeds to eat it fresh. It has a mild sour edge with a touch of sweet. Lilikoi Chiffon Pie, Lilikoi Sponge Cake and yummy jam are made by straining the seeds from the flavored jelly.












One of my favorites is Rambutan, Nephelium lappaceum. The fruits are very similar to its more famous cousin the Lychee. There is a single seed surrounded by a firm translucent milky flesh. You peel off the velcro skin, pop it in your mouth and let the sweet flesh with a hint of coconut melt in your mouth. The Rambutan wins out over the Lychee because it sets fruit up to three times a year and the incredibly fussy Lychee might set a good crop once a decade.















Saving the Big Boy for last. This Jack Fruit, Artocarpus heterophyllus can double in size before it is ready to pick. Inside this doughy Bread Fruit relative can be hundreds of large seeds. Each seed is covered by a thick crisp rubbery flesh that is a combination of banana and pineapple in flavor. It is a bit of work to get to them. The outer packaging is filled with a copious gummy latex that makes for a very sticky extraction process. It is well worth the effort. Jack Fuit is another one of my favorites.














All the usual suspect fruits, banana, papaya, mango, avocado, pineapple and citrus are too ordinary to be considered truly exotic.

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

Heading West

You have to click on the picture and expand it to see them, but their are twenty 180 foot tall windmills on the ridge line in front of you. In real life they are huge dramatic sculptures with an unavoidable presence. It is some what baffling to me that they do not show up very well on film.

This whole side of the mountain to the left of the power plant smoke stack, over the ridge and beyond burned early last September. What a difference a little rain makes.













The road runs right through Kealia Pond National Wildlife Refuge, a natural wetland that is home to some endangered Hawaiian waterfowl. Heading back east on the way home late that afternoon I saw a large group of the Hawaiian Stilt. They are very elegant looking black and white wading birds. Next week I will try to be a bit more prepared to stop and take a picture. Split second decisions to pull off the two lane road at 55mph in rush hour traffic are not one of my talents.

Saturday, December 02, 2006

Day Dreams Landing on Paper

Before he retired my father was a building contractor and architect who drew most of his own architectural building plans. That is a talent and resource of experience that is a major bonus to be able to use as I envision a new place for myself in this world.

He has been more than happy to start work on the plans. This is our second rendition of a house design from the crappy drawing of mine that I photographed and e-mailed to him. How can I get too mad at computers for acting weird when using them has helped make a process like this possible from a distance of 6000 miles over less than 30 days.

He pivoted the whole house 90 degrees on the narrow ridge where it will sit so the main living area will look out over what may be a view if enough trees are removed. I may have had enough of "The View" for one lifetime and might prefer to look into the canopy of trees.


















Two single car garages were placed underneath each bedroom side of the house, working with the natural slope of the land on a narrow ridge line.



















There are two small changes in this new main floor plan that I want. One is to remove the wall/door opening between the kitchen and the living room. I want one big open space. The second is to move the fireplace a bit closer to the front of the house and incorporate a window bench with storage under the bench for the fireplace in the right front corner of the living room.

There is a second floor mirror image bedroom/bath/sitting room on the left side of the house for guests that the stairs lead to. It's big enough that they may linger? The back deck is roofed so I can sit outside in the rain and the snow and the cool mountain air. There is a small portico roof over the entry portion of the front deck.

It may be several years before this Day Dreaming turns into cement, metal, stone and glass. There is plenty of time for all the details. In the meantime I will need a place to park my camping trailer in a holler in the woods and a septic system to run a line from the trailer to. No honey dipping for me. A road and septic system need to go in first and it needs to be done right the first time. So I plan.

To ease my fears of trailer life a separate open air living room and future gazebo for the mountaintop nursery and garden to be may be on the priority list too.

Black and White

Blogger photo uploading has returned and so has the regular speed of my computer. I wonder if this problem was caused by HawaiianTel, my ISP. In their low power to briefly absent connection that I was getting from them this past week, was Blogger's upload popup shut out? Ah the mysteries of technology.

The first amaryllis of the season has bloomed next to the Black Taro. They are in pots in the nursery, not an intended combination. I am not sure I like them together color wise, but I do like their forms as a combination.

















And I just love my Philippine Poinsettias. They are at their peak of bloom when they are the whitest of white and there is little green at all to be seen.