Wednesday, June 29, 2022

Sail away, sail away....


 











 

 


 

 :o)

 

 

Today's funny :o)

 .

 



 

 

:o)

Flowers 'N stuff....


 

 



 

 More roses:



 

 

 


 The little side garden:

 


 One lonely little cloud:

 


 

One of the 10 tress that will come down soon - I'll miss this one:

 

 


 

 Benji - Chipper was under the deck:

 


:o)

 

 

 


Monday, June 27, 2022

Instead of......

 .... this monstrosity:





.... why can't we build beautiful buildings again?










:o)

Today's funny :o)

 H/T to Terry!



:o)

Just pics

 It was hot again, yesterday:

 



 

 Benji and chipper:



A Daddy Long Legs (It's blurry because I didn't want to get too close to it) LOL!




The lilies are in bloom!!!







Mamma and her babies:



Kitty-Kat spied a boid:




Busy at night:



A raven calling for it's mate. The tree is dead and will be coming down next month.

(might have to turn the volume up a wee bit to hear him)



:o)

Friday, June 24, 2022

Friday Night Steam

 Dow you know the story of the Overseas Rail Road?











More info here:

https://www.baynews9.com/fl/tampa/weather/2021/09/07/florida-hasn-t-seen-a-hurricane-more-intense-than-the-labor-day-hurricane-of-1935







Today's funny! :o)

 H/T to Donna!!!





:o)

Too damn cute!

After the rain yesterday:










:o)

 

 

 

Wednesday, June 22, 2022

A Killer Tree!

 Amazing!

 

 


 

 




 

Survival of the fittest may be the first law of the jungle, but strangler figs (Ficus aurea) are living proof that clever opportunists get along just fine, too. Several types of figs (Ficus spp.) are called "stranglers" because they grow on host trees, which they slowly choke to death. Ficus citrifolia, F. microcarpa, F. aurea and that happy little houseplant lurking in the living room, F. benjamina, are all strangler figs.

Generally, strangler figs grown from seedlings planted in the ground or in pots behave themselves. Stray seeds deposited by birds or winds in tree canopies are another story. Depending on the species, strangler figs grow best in U.S. Department of Agriculture plant hardiness zones 9 through 11.

Establishment in Host Trees

When the sticky seeds from a strangler fig cling to clefts and crotches high up in another tree's canopy, they develop as epiphytes, or plants that grow on another plant, but are not parasites. Epiphytic growth is common in tropical rainforests, where the shade is so complete that seedlings have little chance of survival on the ground. The tiny fig plant gets its nutrients at first from sunlight filtering through the canopy, rainfall and leaf litter on the host tree.

Strangler Tree Growth

Once established, the young strangler figs begin sending aerial roots down to the ground, where they quickly dive into the soil and anchor themselves. The roots may dangle from the host tree's canopy or creep down its trunk. Once in contact with the ground, the fig enters a growth spurt, plundering moisture and nutrients that the host tree needs. The strangler fig's roots encircle the host tree's roots, cutting off its supply of food and water, ultimately killing the host tree.

Meanwhile, back at the epiphyte, the strangler fig is busy producing new leaves and shoots that soon become large enough to overshadow the host tree's foliage, stealing sunlight and rainfall from the host canopy. By the time the host tree is dead, the strangler fig is large and strong enough to stand on its own, usually encircling the lifeless, often hollow body of the host tree.

 

:o)

Today's funny :o)

 H/T to Gary!




:o)

Back in May I started to grow celery from the bottom of a stalk:

 


 Here it is now:

 


 It has a great root system already....

 

 


 

 .... so I planted it in the garden:

 


 

 We'll see if it grows!

 

 

 

 I started another one!

 


 

 

 Chipper and Benji just wandering around:

 

 


 

 

:o)

Monday, June 20, 2022

Bubble grass???

 Have you ever seen it?


James Callender, a resident of Cambridge Springs, Pennsylvania, found a lawn bubble in his backyard after a heavy rain. There was no other reason for the blister to form: no leaking septic, no broken water line. Nothing. The blister was larger than a waterbed, and a lot wavier.

 

 




 

 

 

 


A massive lawn bubble formed on the 14th fairway of the Greywolf Golf Course in Invermere, British Columbia after a break in the irrigation system. 


:o)