Garden of the Future

Future turnips and greens.

Tips for Filling Your Walls of Water

It’s been a good weekend but as per always I didn’t get around to half of the stuff I wanted to do. I’ve been so busy I still haven’t had time to watch Lost.

You’d think I’d learn to live by my own advice and simply want to do less things. But I can’t figure out how to implement that in a satisfying way.

The good news is I’m about 95% to where I want to be on the story I’ve been working on. It’s much longer than my usual length but I think it’s coming together.

My best pea crop ever, I hope.

On Friday I took care of some errands and then I zoomed home for a day in the garden.

I planted a bunch of flower seeds. I bought the same exact seeds last year but I planted them on a mild weekend and then we had this freak hot spell, I think it was in April, 90+ degrees two days in a row and that was the end of the flower seeds. I have high hopes for this year.

Then I did a bunch of weeding. Dug out the dead rosemary plant which was one unwieldy carcass who did not give up without a fight. And I put in a new one. I put in some berry starts and got the potato patch all ready to go.

And I planted my first two tomato plants and filled my wall of water. If you’ve never seen them before, it’s a bunch of plastic tubes that you fill with water and make a little teepee for your tomato. It acts like a little greenhouse and helps them grow faster which is nice when you are desperate for homegrown tomatoes like I am.

I love the walls of water but they are miserable to fill and I usually have to wring myself out by the time I’m finished. I thought about checking youtube to see if there was a “wall of water filling tutorial” because they have everything on youtube. But then I thought of an idea myself.

I put the empty walls in one of those 5 gallon plastic buckets and then it stayed up while I filled it. Worked perfectly. So the walls are up. Bob brought me home some more tomato plants today. I dug up a strip of my lawn so I could fit more garden in this year. I am hoping for BUSHELs of tomatoes.

Watch in late August I’m going to be whining about how crazy I was to plant so many tomatoes.

The iris started blooming. I never appreciate them as much as the others because they are so easy to grow they are almost weeds. I dug up about 6 bulbs when we moved from our old apartment to this house. Now I have two giant patches.

I’ve got a short break before I start getting ready for Mother’s Day dinner so I’m back in the yard.

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Sideshow Bob

Didn’t have time to get to my real post yet and I have a pretty full day planned.

Until then, here’s a plant I bought last year to put in this neglected corner of the yard. I’ve decided to name it Sideshow Bob.

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Let The Right One In

If you like foreign films and you like vampire movies, have I got a recommendation for you: Let The Right One In.

I wasn’t going to write about it but I kept thinking about the movie yesterday and wanting to talk about it so I’m offering a brief spoiler free review.

I think I first heard about this from Roger Ebert who’s in my feeds. Later the Oregonian reviewed it around the time Twilight was out and said this is the vampire movie everyone should go see.

What I like about it is that it has a lot of what you’d expect from a vampire movie but never how you would expect it. I also like that it doesn’t hit you over the head with the soundtrack. This movie goes about unsettling the viewer very quietly.

It was made in Sweden and it’s about a dweeby 12-year-old kid named Oskar who gets bullied. He gets a new neighbor who’s a 12-year-oldish vampire and the two of them begin a strange friendship. I would love to talk about my favorite parts but don’t want to be spoiler-y.

Bob is going to watch it next. We’ll see what he thinks.

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Conspiracy Theories
A couple of weeks ago I wrote an offhand remark about toothpaste and received an anonymous comment about toothpaste conspiracies. Since I love conspiracy theories and hadn’t heard about this one I sat down and popped a few queries into my favorite search engine and was sadly disappointed.

I did see a lot of talk about how much sugar is added to major brand toothpastes and since this sounded odd to me I pulled up MajorBrandOfToothpaste.com to see what ingredients are in toothpaste. The site is ugly and giant and about four columns with line after line of informational links which turned out to be a giant exercise in clicking. There was nothing about ingredients. The search tool sucked.

At first I thought maybe it was a trade secret but aren’t the ingredients on the box when you buy it?

During the course of this adventure in time-wasting a box popped up asking if I’d be interested in participating in a survey. “Of course,” I said because I was anxious for the opportunity to tell someone how worthless I thought this website was.

Thirty-seven questions. (37!) For toothpaste. And you couldn’t skip any questions. And some of the questions were like, “MajorBrandofToothpaste.com Has the Most Up-to-date Information on Oral Care” and there was no box to answer, “How the Hell Should I Know?”

Since my question wasn’t answered I decided to try CompetitorBrandofToothpaste.Com and they also had an ugly website with things I had to wait to load, a sucky search tool, couldn’t answer my question AND a survey. The first page said 1 of 12 so I skipped it.

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Gutter Full of Petals

Yesterday after dinner Bob said he wanted to show me something but he didn’t want to tell me what it was because it would be a cool surprise. And we would have to get in the car and drive somewhere.

Petal Carpet

We drove over to the college and saw this. He was right.

Petal World at Clark Campus

Today was so productive I even cleaned my oven. I would take pictures but I didn’t do such a great job. It looks a lot better but it’s not museum ready.

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Orleans Bench

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The Shrinking Jeans Problem

I know I said I’d already taken pictures of all the tulips but then I noticed these out back. I don’t normally buy such weird looking flowers and these, while a pretty color, look like they fell into the garbage disposal. I don’t know what to think.

This has been a super busy, but not terrible, week. But now I have about 10 trillion things to catch up on and I’ve made a list which means that there is little doubt tomorrow will be a bitter disappointment. Oh, and I have 1,150 words to do tonight to make my monthly goal.

I’d really like to finish this draft of a story I’m working on. I need to exercise. I put on my jeans earlier this week and could barely zip them. Yikes. I’ve almost completely ignored cooking lately so I’d like to make something decent to eat. But also healthy due to the shrinking jeans problem. I’ve got more yard things to get going. I started reading The Yiddish Policeman’s Union which I keep referring to as The Yiddish Policeman’s Ball. I like it so far and can’t wait to dig in. Too many things. And a new Asimov’s arrived which means I’m now three issues behind.

We’ll see how I do.

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Funny, But Only To Me

I don’t know how they sleep at night with all those dandelions in the yard.

It took until late Saturday afternoon for my digestion to return to normal. Too much rich dairy. Sometimes I miss the iron-clad innards of my youth.

My last comment about motel doom: there was one point during the middle of the whole thing where I looked at Bob and said, “You know this is going to be really funny later.”

Every time we were in the room together yesterday we would start cracking up.

In case you’re wondering, the worst hotel room we’ve ever been in was in Frankfurt which was another time we didn’t plan for a room in advance and just wung it. I suppose there’s a lesson to be learned.

The story at the link doesn’t do it justice. The room wasn’t ready when we arrived so we had to leave our luggage and come back after dinner. When we returned they took us through some sort of storage yard to this horrible dinky room which was probably a converted garage or shed. It was dark and raining sideways so we didn’t want to leave. I don’t remember it being stinky. The TV was broken and the bed was like two pieces of plywood set up on bricks (slight exaggeration). We shared the wall with some sort of belly dancing place so it was noisy. There was a table with a glass top and if you touched it, it slid off.

Bob went to take a shower and it was one of those handheld showerhead dealies that you can either hold or hook to the wall. Bob got the water going and then shimmied into the tiny shower stall and when he put the showerhead up the hook broke and the showerhead fell and since the room was so tiny it actually fell out the bathroom door and onto the glass tabletop which fell down and there was a spray of water in the middle of the room.

That actually was funny at the time. But only to me.

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We Survived

Update: here’s Bob’s review of Leonard Cohen.

One part of the Motel Doom story that I forgot to mention is that when we got home we clutched each other like we’d just survived a grenade attack.

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Motel Doom

Have you ever been in a situation that felt wrong, but because the person you are with doesn’t question it, you don’t question it either? Then later you end up having this conversation that goes something like, “Omigod, I thought the crabcakes tasted funny, too, but you were eating them so I figured it was just me.”

This story is like that although it doesn’t involved crabcakes.

Bob and I went to see Leonard Cohen on Thursday night in Seattle. A couple months ago Bob called me at work and said, “You know I never do anything like this, but this is the last musical icon on my list that I must see.” We took time off of work and made the trek.

It was spectacular. I’m sort-of glad I went in not knowing what I was getting into. It was like three hours of church, but I mean church in the sense of people gathering together to have their spirits refreshed. This is yet another wonderful experience my husband has brought to me that I never would have discovered on my own. Poor Bob. The concert he got to discover because of his wife was Ratt.

I will link to Bob’s review as soon as it’s up. (Leonard, not Ratt.)

We used the trip as an excuse to visit friends and relatives that we haven’t seen in long time. For the first night we stayed in a nice chain hotel in the Capitol Hill area. (I don’t know Seattle very well so geographic things are approximate.) This is the kind of hotel that asks you to join their frequent user plan and has a giant wall sized display in the elevator telling you about all their local hotels.

When we checked out we asked if we could make a reservation for one of their other hotels that was more convenient to our plans. The guy said their system didn’t work that way but he could write down the phone number for us. The events that follow are clearly this man’s fault.

Actual postcard from lobby with slight photoshopping by me.

As we headed out to one of our visits, we decided screw that hotel chain, we’d just stay at some generic motel on Aurora. As we drove I wrote down a couple of places that looked okay and we saw that there were tons and didn’t worry about it.

Our visit ended in the late afternoon so we got caught up in clusterfukage traffic and we puttered down Aurora and finally saw one of the places that was strategically located and seemed to look okay when we drove by the first time.

Here’s where the story is going to strain reader credibility, but you know, when you’re in the middle of the story things are not always obvious. It’s only later when you start adding it all up that you see how you were steered wrong and should have done it differently.

It looked sort-of shabby but we went in and it was cheap and we were tired and just wanted to sit quietly for a bit and the traffic was stacked up out front and I saw this lovely postcard and I thought how bad can it be? So when Bob said what do you think? I said, I guess it will be fine.

But as we’re standing there I’m reading these signs posted everywhere about no guests and no loitering and no refunds (has there ever been a bigger red flag anywhere in the history of red flags?) my heart is telling me RUN! but my head is telling me to get over it, it was just one night and that seemed okay until we saw the inside of the room which is my top two grimmest hotel rooms of all time. Please let that not be “so far.” Stained carpet, patched walls, tiny bed and smelled like smoker heaven.

“I’m certain someone has been murdered in this room,” I said. But we laughed and convinced ourselves it wasn’t so bad. We put our stuff down and went to visit our friends.

When we returned, the room was worse than we remembered. No hangers for our coats. The lamp didn’t work. One towel. Bob went to get a new lightbulb and when he returned, I had my bags in my hands, “Let’s just cut our losses and go to Travel Lodge.”

He talked me out of it but he was upset that I was upset and he sat down in a Thinker pose if The Thinker was wearing a baggy sweater and looking completely demoralized.

“I can’t figure out how this happened,” he said.

I crawled under a bedspread that I’m certain was a table cloth for a smoking convention and tried to fall asleep and my digestive system went ornery. We ate a big lunch and dinner and both with rich foods and it was just enough for that gross indigestion-y nausea that makes it impossible to relax when you’re trying to sleep, even in a nice hotel room. I finally drifted off for an hour or so and when I woke up Bob was up reading. I felt even worse and finally confessed to Bob and he went and found a cup in the lobby (free coffee station) because we didn’t have one in the room and I drank some alka seltzer. Bob said, “Do you want to leave?”

And I said, “Of course not, we have plans tomorrow. Our friends will hate us and never invite us to anything ever again. Who drives for three hours in the middle of the night? We can live through one night in a shitbag hotel.” (The conversation actually went on a lot longer and had lots of colorful parts to it.)

I still couldn’t settle and I tried to read my book. I noticed a giant gap in the curtains and because it was one of the least sexy moment you can imagine, I turned to Bob and said, “You wanna have wild sex?” and he, who has never answered that question this way, even when offered in jest, said, “NO! I want to go home.”

Then the room phone rang.

And there was no one there.

We got up and started packing. It rang again and I unplugged it from the wall. By 2:30am we were zooming through downtown Seattle and we were home and in bed by 5:30am.

We just washed our hair with gasoline and now I’m preparing to burn our clothes. What a weekend!

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