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You are here: Home / Archives for Claudia

A Birthday, A Beheading & A Book

July 3, 2014 at 8:54 am by Claudia

Today is Meredith’s birthday. Meredith, for those of you who don’t know, is my beloved little sister. She writes a very popular blog called Mereknits. She is the fiber wizard in our family – she knits, she crochets, she weaves, she sews.

She is a wonderful mother to her three boys.

She is the best sister in the world.

It’s a big birthday number for her, one that is hard to comprehend for this much older sister. How can that be?

Drop by her blog and wish her a very Happy Birthday for me, okay? She deserves all of the best the world has to offer.

a-new-dawn-for-a-rose

I love all my roses, but this one – the New Dawn – has my heart. The soft pink of those blooms is simply stunning. This one is currently arching over the porch railing, right behind the glider.

As you no doubt know, I have a lot of hostas in the gardens. A few years ago, I planted two of them in front of the shed, which is a distance from the house.

I discovered this yesterday.

beheaded-hosta

Yes, my hostas have been beheaded. I’m pretty sure the culprits are my friends, the deer.

The hostas in the other garden beds have emerged unscathed, most likely due to their proximity to the house. Time to spray some natural deer repellent. (No chemicals or pesticides are ever used here.)

We had a doozy of a thunderstorm yesterday. It went on for several hours. Booming cracks of thunder, torrential rain, streaks of lightning – what a show! I’m hoping the humidity will go away later today.

Please?

lavender

What are you reading at the moment?

I’m reading The Silkworm, a mystery by Robert Galbraith (who is really J.K. Rowling.) It’s the second in her series about a London private detective, Cormoran Strike.

Boy oh boy, that woman can write. I never read the Harry Potter books. I tried, but I just never got into them. (I know…you’re shocked.) So I am very happy that Rowling has moved into a new genre, the mystery/crime novel. I almost never do this, but after reading The Cuckoo’s Calling (the first book in the series) I purchased the second book months before it was due to come out.

The series is that good.

I’m thinking a lot about the new book blog. I’m gathering ideas. I’m pondering domain names. I’m very excited. It will probably take another week or two to launch. I’m still recovering from the long hours in the theater and subsequent lack of sleep during my last week in Chautauqua. But the ideas are percolating in my brain, rest assured.

Tomorrow is a special anniversary for Don and me. Stop by tomorrow and I’ll tell you a little story.

Happy Thursday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Filed Under: birthday, books, Don, flowers, Meredith, reading 40 Comments

Decluttering Blog-Style & Other Tidbits

July 2, 2014 at 7:38 am by Claudia

You might have noticed that I’ve changed to a new layout here on the blog. This idea came to me yesterday and, like a dog with a bone, I spent all day on it. All day. I took a break to take a shower, water the plants and to feed Scout, of course, but the rest of the day? Lost in cyber world. Don was lost in music composing world, so it worked out well. No one felt neglected.

I’m on WordPress and I use the Genesis operating system, which uses what are called ‘child themes’ that individualize websites and blogs. So, changing the blog involved working with a new theme while my current theme was still running. I thought I had it all done but when I hit the button late in the day to change over, it looked like a mess. Back to the drawing board. I still need to tweak it a bit, but I really like the new post font and the amount of white space there is on the blog. The old theme was feeling a bit crowded and cluttery. Having ads can do that. And though I’d still love to cut down on ad clutter, I need them. So, adding some ‘air’ to this space helps a bit.

It’s a change and if you loved the other theme, it may take some getting used to. I loved the other theme, too. But a girl has to try something new every once in a while.

Here’s the one snag. I cannot get Leave a Comment to show below the post. I’ve got a support request in and hopefully will have it figured out soon. But in the meantime, you have to scroll back up to the top of the post to click on ‘Comments’, okay? Scroll back up, click, and you’ll be taken to the comment page. Update: Fixed it!

Where did this peony come from?

I strolled down to the mailbox yesterday and glanced at the peony bushes, which had long since stopped blooming. Wait a minute….what is this? A pale pink peony. Neither of the bushes has flowers in this color. I’m amazed. I wonder if it will open?

It was a nice surprise for this girl who hated leaving her cottage when the peonies had just opened.

This is what I got Don for his birthday:

don's-sign

I found it at the Country Living Fair. I saw it on my first day there, didn’t buy it, and kept thinking about it after I got home. So, the first thing I did on Saturday was find the vendor who was selling the sign and grab one.

Don loves signs. He loves the Beatles with a devotion that has never wavered over the years. What could be better than a sign with these lyrics that remind us to avoid fussing and fighting and sweating the small stuff?

Now we have to figure out where to hang it. We’ve used just about every bit of wall space in this little cottage.

tuesday-garden

The shade side of the big garden bed is full of crown vetch and ground covers and catmint and grasses and soon-to-be-blooming white coneflowers. Every bit of soil that was bare had been taken over by humongous weeds in my absence, so I had to do a lot of weeding on Monday. Everywhere.

How is the weather where you are? Boy, is it hot and humid here! It was that way when I left Chautauqua, too.

Not a fan of humidity. It makes my hair curl and my brain turn to mush.

Not a very attractive picture, is it?

The winner of a copy of Supreme Justice is Donna. Congratulations! I’m sending you an email, Donna.

Happy….wait…let me check the calendar….Wednesday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Filed Under: blog, blog design., Don, flowers, garden 40 Comments

An Ode to Perennial Gardening

July 1, 2014 at 9:59 am by Claudia

At this time of year, the garden has really taken off – it’s lush and new flowers are appearing every day.  If you recall, I left as the peonies were in bloom, the catalpa trees had yet to bloom, the catmint was showing very pale lavender flowers, the spirea was about to bloom and the rose bushes had buds.

Now, the catmint is full of vivid lavender flowers, the Annabelle hydrangea is in full bloom, all of the roses are blooming, the peonies have left for another year, the catalpa flowers came and went while I was away, as did the spirea. Day Lilies are blooming, the crown vetch is full of flowers, the bee balm has flowered.

beebalm&catmint

beebalm

crown-vetch

Love the flowers on the Crown Vetch – they remind me of clover.

After eight summers here at the cottage, armed with a lot of patience and a willingness to do it slowly, plant by plant, the perennial gardens I created more than pay me back every year.

We moved into the cottage at the end of August in 2005, so, except for planting the boxwoods, we didn’t do any gardening. In the spring of 2006, I started planting the big garden bed, for that’s all there really was here. There were a few hostas near the house, some sedum in the big garden bed, the peonies, the flowering quince and the bridal veil spirea. Everything else was added over the course of 8 years. And I really haven’t added much at all in the past 3 years.

I added two beds at the side of the house as well as the beds in front of the shed. I added the Chicken Wire Fence Garden. And the lilac. I added the bed in front of the porch where the boxwoods live, along with a hydrangea and a rose bush.

All of this was done slowly, as time and budget would allow. Some years, I could only afford to add a few plants.

Building a perennial garden takes patience.

You have to be willing to see the possibilities, to know that it will pay off in the end.

I wanted lush, densely-planted cottage gardens. And now, eight years later, that’s what I’ve got.

I’m not a gardener who uses annuals very much, though my hanging plants and the plants in the galvanized tub on the funky patio are annuals. Most of the plants that are in pots and planters are annuals. As are the impatiens….but I overwintered them and they rebloomed this year (so happy about that!), so I’m going to call them perennials. Or maybe biennials – we’ll have to see how they do this winter. I did use annuals as filler in the early days of the gardens, but now I don’t have to.

Isn’t that wonderful?

Every year, my gardens come back, fuller and more lush than ever. Like old friends who come back every season for a long visit, so do my perennials. I have to do very little at this point except weed. I did a lot of that yesterday and my allergies are screaming in protest. But that’s to be expected after two and a half weeks away at this time of year.

daylilies-yellow

LadyElsieMay-roses

new-dawn-buds

If you’re just starting a garden and you have the space and the time and the patience, consider planting a perennial garden. You don’t need to spend a lot of money.

You just need a few plants.

You don’t need to hire a landscaper or gardening professional.

You just need to be willing to take a leap, to experiment, to build the gardening dream that you see in your mind’s eye.  Just as I have no desire to have a decorator ‘do’ my home, I don’t want another gardener to ‘do’ my garden.

Where is the fun in that?

view-of-the-porch-corner

Believe me, it is so worth it in the end. These beauties bloom for weeks and attract butterflies and bees and hummingbirds. In some cases, as with my coneflowers and morning glories and sedum and yarrow, they reseed. What a delightful surprise it is to discover a volunteer plant coming up elsewhere in the garden or on the property.

They love to perform.

And you get to experience the enormous pleasure that comes with tending and nurturing your garden. Just as you tend and nuture and love a child, the same goes for a perennial garden. Eventually, you reach that day when you can let your ‘child’ fly, when you can trust that the child will be just fine on his own.

My babies are just fine on their own. They might need a trim here and there, they may need more space. That comes with parenting, don’t you think?

Sincerely,

The proud mama of many children, currently doing just fine on their own.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: flowers, gardening 30 Comments

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Welcome!

Welcome!

I live in a little cottage in the country with my husband. It's a sweet place, sheltered by old trees and surrounded by gardens. The inside is full of the things we love. I love to write, I love my camera, I love creating, I love gardening. My decorating style is eclectic; full of vintage and a bit of whimsy.

I've worked in the theater for more years than I can count. I'm currently a voice, speech, dialect and text coach freelancing on Broadway, off Broadway, and in regional theater.

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