Anoles

Never try this unless supervised by an adult.

greed

This tale starts out of greed, greed for the largest wind chimes I could afford and struggle home with. It is funny, chimes sound very soothing with the wind blowing gently through them, but as soon as you try to pick them up and carry them they turn into the chimes from Hell…clanking nonsense. There I was in The Great Outdoors nursery in Austin, eying-up some monster chimes. Like a complete nerd I had to try each one to find the one with “just the right notes and tonality”(You immediately forget what the previous set sounds like).  Back and forth I went like an obsessed percussionist to the dismay of the nursery’s staff.

I finally settled on the “set for me” – large but not too large, a deep zen sound with a slight discord . . . perfect!  I clanked my way to my truck and settled them down in the truck-bed with a blood-curdling, teeth-clenching sound (metal on metal) and rushed home to hoist them to their new home high in the trees.

images

The first inclination that this was going to be slightly tasking was when I had gathered the “mad octopus” clinking in one of my arms and started to head up my stepladder, which incidentally kept sinking into a bed of mulch. The gravity of my predicament started with the sudden awareness that the chimes were extremely heavy. I then realized that I had to go up very high on my stepladder to get the chimes to a tree limb high enough so that I wouldn’t be continuously hitting my head when walking underneath them. After 45 minutes of struggling in the heat with my “mad octopus” my new chimes were “up” in the Pecan tree next to my back deck. When I say “up” I actually meant that I had managed to only get them about 6ft off the ground. “I will just duck if I need to go by them,” I convinced myself.  I went to my outside refrigerator and grabbed a cold Corona, sat down, put my feet on a low table, and nursed the bruises on my head whilst waiting patiently for a breeze. About three days later, a breeze finally did blow in. The “deep zen sound with a slight dis-chord” was suddenly transformed into something loud enough to raise the dead,no, Nooo, NOOOO!

Word of warning:  just because something is new – it doesn’t mean you should position it close to you so you can see it or hear it!

I realized this was not yet over, I looked over with dread to my stepladder then down to my Post Oak at the end of my garden.

post_oak_tree
The chimes in their new home, they now sound just like I wanted them to. The deep bass sounds contrast with
a number of small, higher pitched wood and metal chimes surrounding the back deck. I now appreciate what
it takes to create a balance of sounds at various distances and pitches, the sign of a true gardening nerd!

Other Interesting things in the yard right now:


Burgundy Canna light show and the cool purples of Verbena in full bloom



Datura (Jimsonweed) caught early morning, dies to the ground in winter but returns each spring.


Night opening flowers get to 4-6″ wide.


” I told you we should have got a room in the four seasons, Gladdis.”

 

Stay Tuned for:

“The Pampas Chainsaw Massacre”


All material © 2009 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized
intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and
punishable by late (and extremely unpleasant)
14th century planet Earth techniques.

“My Shed Moved”!

So now comfortable with my new water feature design, I planted heavily all around it to soften the edges of the tank. I introduced aquatic plants and placed chunks of colored glass around the new “dry creek bed” for some elevated color. My back garden faces due West, so early evenings with a low setting sun produces a good light show- the glass chunks really glow.  My garden has a large number of ornamental grasses to take full advantage of this.


I buried the Cyprio UV filter in the ground and fed the water pipes through some painted PVC pipes to give it a finished look, and to hide the ugly pipes.

It was time to move on to the rest of the yard.

water_feature waterfeature

The pond is flanked by two Arizona ‘blue ice’ cypress trees that were about two foot tall about the time I was swinging my sledge hammer.

So it was time to move the shed and for some reason I was dreading it. In my mind I had built it up to the equivalent of moving a house – it was going to take ages, be expensive and logistically how is it done anyway?  We found a company in the Yellow Pages, they arrived, jacked up the shed, rolled it on PVC pipes to the back of the garden, and turned it around – they were done in 40 minutes, amazing!

This is where the shed was:

shed_moving

It basically blocked the view to a large section of the garden, it was a solid shed
though (albeit it beige) – it even had electricity – but it had to be relocated. As a
side note the entire back yard has been designed around the view from my
back deck, moving the shed was an easy decision. Painting it was even easier.

new placement of shed

Here it is moved and painted.


Interesting things in my garden right now . . .

Perhaps someone can help me identify this – I think it is Frog something?


Amaranth plants are about five to                      New growth trumpet of a Canna Lily
seven feet tall when mature, and
are dicots (broad leaf) plants with
thick, tough stems similar to
sunflower. I have loads coming up
everywhere – one of my favorites!
great foliage – great seed-heads!

Guara / whirling butterflies, named
for the way the blooms move in the
wind.


wildflower

H.R.Geiger would be proud                            Indian Blanket Flower

Taro Bloom                                     Butterfly Iris                            This anole needs a new tailor

Stay Tuned for:

“Never Sleep in a Cactus Bed!”


All material © 2009 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized
intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and
punishable by late (and extremely unpleasant)
14th century planet Earth techniques.


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