I’ve had to get new eye glasses, not because of a prescription change, but because the right nose piece snapped off. I wore them cockeyed over the weekend, and then visited the optometrist’s office, hoping they could repair them. No such luck. They advised me to take the pieces to a jeweler to see if they could be soldered back together, and I’d have a spare pair of glasses.
One of the women who runs the office for the practice took me back to a wall of frames and proceeded to choose seven shapes that I liked. Then we went to a mirror with good natural light, and she handed me three of the frames, and instructed me to select the two I liked the most. We kept on with that until we narrowed it down to two choices. Then, everyone in the office got to give their opinion. Luckily, everyone liked the pair I liked the best. The glasses will be ready either Friday or early next week.
I’ll be glad to have them. You don’t realize what that little variation in focus will do until you have to live through it for a week.
I’ve ordered progressive bifocals that are frame-less on the bottom edge. The lens is held in place with a thin plastic cord. I’m not a fashion maven. They aren’t Red Hat Lady colors….just a natural look that will last for years. The pair that just died was five years old. Not bad, huh?
Daily Archives: October 4, 2006
$2.329
YES!!! $2.329 is a far cry from the cost of a gallon of gas this summer. I think the place where I buy gas topped out at $3.159, and I know it was more expensive in Chicago. Yeah, I know that those of you who don’t live in this area are paying less than two dollars a gallon, but I doubt we’ll ever see that here.
Did I tell you that my youngest sis called one day just to tell me that she had driven past a sign for gas that read $1.999 a gallon? Mean, I tell you. She’s just plain mean!
For Susan: Shade Plants
Susan, I need some particulars about where you garden to be able to make suggestions about shade loving plants. I need to know what zone you are in. Instead of announcing the town where you live, you can tell me what state, and upper or lower half, and I should be able to determine the zone for you. OR… go to this site and clock your cursor where you live to determine the zone number.
There’s a wonderful little book called “Taylor’s Guide to Perennials for Shade,” published by Houghton Mifflin, which I would recommend to you. It will give you basic tips for preparing your soil, and when to move plants into and out of your garden. There is also a companion book on ground covers that would be very helpful.
The following list of plants are hardy to USDA Zones 5 or 4, unless noted. Taylor’s guide shows a picture of, and describes all these, and as many more plants that I won’t mention here. You need to choose by height, season, and also by type of shade. Most of these plants will grow in partial shade. If you need information for DEEP shade, let me know, and I’ll see if I kept the websites that might help.
Bugleweed
Lady’s Mantle (I have one, and it sends out runners to make more.)
Anemone (Zones 4-6 depending on the variety)
Columbine (Spring bloomer)
Goatsbeard (a shrubby perennial that grows 4-6 feet. I want one!)
Astilbe
False Rockcress (a mat-forming plant for edgings)
Siberian Bugloss
Bellflower (dozens of varieties and sizes)
Leadwort (zone 6)
Lily of the Valley (This spreads nicely, and smells wonderful)
Bleeding Heart
Dutchmen’s Breeches
Foxglove
Shooting Star
Leopard’s Bane
Sweet woodruff (I’ve used these under taller plants)
Hellebore (I’ve never grown these….the Lenten Rose)
Cranesbill
Coral bells (I love the “Purple Palace” variety)
Hosta (Francee is my favorite….a creamy stripe down the center of the leaf)
Blue lily turf (The book says this is zone 6, but I grow it in zone 5.)
Blue Lobelia
Lupine
Creeping Phlox (beautiful at the edge of a garden or base of a tree)
False Dragon Head (This is a good tall plant for the background of a garden)
Chinese Lantern Plant (Very invasive. Grow it in a pot for dried arrangements)
Jacob’s Ladder
Solomon’s Seal
Primrose
Stonecrop (Sedum) I have “Autumn Joy” and one other
Snow Trillium
Violets (which will spread all over the place, if you let them)
I hope this list gives you a jumping off point, Susan.
Ooops….
I wasn’t on vacation. You would have heard all about my plans long before I left for vacation. I was among the missing due to a LOT of office work, a LOT of piecing quilt blocks, some gardening, and a recurring bout of light flu. I didn’t realize how long it had been since I had posted.
I really need to get a voice activated blog. I think of things to share throughout my day, but by the time I get to the computer, I’ve forgotten what I wanted to say.
Fall progress:
It’s been gorgeous here, a beautiful Fall. The black walnut trees, always the first to change, have been gold the past few weeks. With the stormy weather of the last few days, they’ve dropped most of their leaves. The rest of the grove is still green, with a hint of gold creeping in here and there.
Weather:
We’ve had a warm Fall, with occasional dips into colder weather. Yesterday it was in the eighties, but later today we will have dropped twenty degrees as a cold front moves through. We had a dry summer, but we seemed to have made up for it during September and October. The severe weather Monday night didn’t cause any problems here, but neighbors have some branches down, and Chicago and several suburban towns were hit hard. There’s been flooding of creeks, and flash floods were expected today as more storms come through. The two retention ponds immediately east of us are full to the brim. More rain today may put the road under water. Our daughter sent a cute e-mail thanking us for the pallets her dad delivered this Spring. It seems they needed them Monday night, and she was really glad that their things were up off the basement floor, high and dry.
Health:
Elegante Mum is a bit under the weather. She has a mild flu, and she’s given it to me. I need to get her up and moving around, even though she doesn’t want to be active. I know that if we let her sit too long her health will deteriorate. Call her and tell her to “Get BUSY!”
Gardening:
I RIPPED OUT the coreopsis on Saturday. I decided I didn’t want to deal with it any longer, and simply tore it out. That end of the garden looks a lot better at the moment. I dug up two (maybe three) iris and moved them to pots to winter over in the garage. I moved two more iris within the garden. I don’t know if those plants will make it. It’s very late in the season to dig iris, but I used a shovel and moved them in huge clumps. We’ll have to hope for the best. If the iris in the pots winter over, I’ll transplant them back into the garden next year. While I consider myself a mostly organic gardener, I chose to spread “Preen” to keep the seeds I disturbed when I weeded from germinating. And, where ever I can, I use “Round-up” on poison ivy.
I plan to cut back the iris and chrysanthemum this Fall. I’ll mulch around the chrysanthemums to help them through the winter. There’s an absolutely beautiful bronze mum just opening in the herb garden. It’s the only color there beside green, this time of the year. I need to tidy up the gardens so that the guests who come for Elegante Mother’s Open House won’t blab about what a lazy gardener I am.
Dear Husband bought CEDAR timbers to rebuilt part of the herb garden! It’s going to look lovely as the cedar ages, and I doubt that the garden will have to be re-timbered again while we live here. *S*
Seasonal:
I’m slowly getting out the Fall and Halloween decorations. I have a few pumpkins, but I want to find a green Cinderella pumpkin, and some cornstalks. I don’t think I have the ooomph to build a scarecrow this year, but I’ll hang the bats and spiders and put out my rubber rat! *G* EM HATES that rat! lol
That’s the general “stuff.” Of course, there was sewing quilt blocks, and a few other things, but I’ll put that in a separate entry.
I think this is my favorite time of year. I hope that you’re all having a good Fall.