Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Sunny Flowers on a Cloudy Day

If the daffodils in our yard are any indication, spring is finally on its way! 



My color preferences in the garden change with the season.  I adore this color yellow in the early spring, but I can't tolerate it any other time of year.  This must be caused by some sort of innate reaction to the lack of sunshine from being cooped up all winter.



The only flowers that existed when we moved here were a row of daffodils planted along our front fence by the road.  Every year, I plant more around the property ... adding daffodil bulbs on our side of the front fence, in the Noisette border, with the azaleas by the driveway, and other places.  One can never have too many daffodils!

See the edge of the road in the background?


Last year, I took advantage of the fall clearance sale at Brent and Becky's Bulbs, and I came home with a wonderful assortment of daffodils.  Most of the ones I bought bloom after the plain yellow ones, so I can stretch the season a bit.



Critters won't eat daffodil bulbs or flowers, so I find ancient clumps of them at many of the abandoned old house sites I visit.  When these sites are threatened, I dig the bulbs up and relocate them to my yard and I share them with friends. 

My very favorite daffodil is one that the locals call 'Butter and Eggs'.  Scott Kunst at Old House Gardens says that these are actually 'Van Sion' (also known as 'Telamonius Plenus’) a double daffodil from 1620.  These multiply happily completely untended by humans.  They bloom a bit later than many other daffodils ... this one must be in a really warm spot in the garden because it's already starting to open.  (It's fragrant, too.) 



The other sunny yellow in the garden is the forsythia.  I don't have any of my own.  This one belongs to my neighbor, but it's planted adjacent to my rambler fence and I enjoy its sunny color.



Blooming forsythia means that it's pruning time around here!  I expect to get started on this in earnest next week.  Woo hoo, spring is here ... it's time for me to sharpen the pruners and gather a matching pair of gloves, because I have a lot of work to do.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Family Room Sofa Decision

A few weeks ago I came here to ask all of you for some inspiration about replacing our family room sofa.  If you missed that post, click HERE to catch up.  After a lot of consideration, The Husband and I have finally come to a decision. 

I'm reusing this old family room photo to show you the sofa in question ... and because I like it.


The fabric on the cushions is continuing to deteriorate, and the threads are shattering and creating holes and tears where I sit most often.  This beautiful damask fabric just wasn't made for 20+ years of hard family use.  Considering its age, it really has held up well.



I do not have the energy or time to do sofa shopping as it should be done, even with the helpful suggestions that many of you offered.  If I'm honest with myself, I don't really WANT a new sofa ... I want my current sofa to look better. 

We decided that a slipcover is going to be our best option right now.  Last week, I wandered through fabric stores looking for inspiration.  At my second stop, I found a faded-burgundy cotton duck that should be totally perfect!  Here it is, sitting on the sofa in front of my inspiration pillow.



Now all I have to do is find someone to make the slipcover for me, because I do not have the time or the energy at this time of year to do it myself ... though I would love to give it a shot.  I want a fitted slipcover, not a loose one that will require primping and retucking every second of the day. 

I've never lived with a slipcover before, and part of me is still a little bit apprehensive.  I sure hope I don't hate it.  For those of you who have slipcovered furniture, do you have any tips?

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Sunday Snapshot ... Companionship

When I'm sitting here on the family room sofa working on my laptop, I can count on having at least one of our four indoor cats here with me ... usually more than one.


Do you know how hard it is to work on a laptop when there are two cats who also want to be in your lap?

Alice and Dorothy are very helpful, and they like to be involved in whatever is going on!  It's hard to believe that they are eleven months old already ... they don't look as much like kittens anymore. 

Happy Sunday,
Connie

Friday, March 11, 2011

I'm Dreaming of Porches

Lately, I have been thinking a lot about the renovation of the front entry of our house.  As it is now, the porch isn't anywhere close to the homey, welcoming place I dream it could become. 

Here is what it looks like, as of this morning.

Temporary cedar posts and a seriously ugly, but code-compliant and safe, railing made from 2x4s and 36" grade stakes.


We rebuilt most of the porch in 2005, because most of the structure of the old porch was deteriorating. The roof itself was solid, as was the floor framing, but everything in between (the beams, roof joists, posts and flooring) was replaced. The columns and post brackets that were there were not appropriate to our Gothic Revival house. We replaced the posts with plain cedar 4x4s, to hold up the porch temporarily until we could decide on a new post, bracket, and railing design. 'Temporary' has lasted for almost six years so far.

I took this photo with my ancient digital camera in 2002, on our first visit to the house with our realtor.  The handyman hired to spruce up the property did a good job of using wood filler to hide the rot on the front posts.


Water had infiltrated the ceiling because there was no flashing where the roof met the brick structure.  Those 'lovely' brackets were styrofoam.


This is my favorite photo that I have taken of our house.  It is the view I saw one day in the sideview mirror of my Jeep.   I took this photo right before we started to rebuild the porch.

Notice how the porch posts are a little bit bow-legged from rot.


This morning, to celebrate the Inspiration Party at Modern Country Style, let's see what kind of ideas I have to finally finish our porch.


This is the oldest photo we have of our house.  We figure that it was taken sometime around 1940.  Notice how our house still wears its Gothic barge boards on the gables and the dormer (the dormer and the trim were removed in 1967.)  These are not the original porch posts or railing.  The ladder on the right was being used by painters (I have another photo of painters working on the front door), and I am guessing that the porch was new at this point.


In order to design new ornamentation for our porch, I am trying to look to similar houses in the area for inspiration.  The only other Gothic Revival house in our area is Idlewild, which was built about 12 miles from here in the 1860s.  It sat abandoned and deteriorating on a large tract of land slated for development. 


Photo from the Free Lance-Star newspaper in the 1990s.


Most of its ornamentation was still intact when I took these photos in 2002.


(Pretend you don't see that No Trespassing sign.)


Look at the level of detail in this porch!


I love the design of the balusters.


While The Husband and I were there photographing, we found a heap of ornaments that had been gathered into a pile.

I can't believe this stuff hadn't been stolen!

I came on this mission fully prepared with a Sharpie marker and some poster board.  We picked through this pile to find balusters and brackets in good condition, and we traced templates.

It's a good thing that we made this visit to Idlewild when we did, because this is what it looked like early one morning a few months later.

Photo taken by a firefighter and published in the Free Lance-Star.


I got a phone call from a friend of mine, telling me that Idlewild was on fire.  I immediately felt nauseous.  It was arson, and no one has yet been charged with the crime.


Photo published in the Free Lance-Star.


This beautiful building was now a charred shell.  Engineers determined that the walls were sound, and that the building was restorable.  Idlewild is owned by the City of Fredericksburg, who paid to remove the debris from the inside, sifting it to make sure that nothing important was lost, and to reinforce the remaining structure to keep it from further deterioration now that the roof and most of the floors are gone.

Photo from the Virginia Department of Historic Resources.


Some of the beautiful porch ormaments are still in place, and can be used by a future owner to replicate what is lost.



Through the tireless efforts of volunteer researchers, and the cooperation of the planning department of the City of Fredericksburg, Idlewild was recently listed on the Virginia Landmarks Registry and the National Register of Historic Places.  The city's goal is to sell the property to someone who will restore it.  Our current economic climate makes this very difficult.

My dream for Idlewild is that it will one day rise from the ashes,  and once again be the beautiful, graceful manor house that it was in the past.

For our porch, I plan to use my tracings and photographs of Idlewild as inspiration to create a graceful Gothic porch to crown the facade of our old house.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Auction of Rare Roses in Southern California.

If you love roses and are convenient to Thousand Oaks, California, you will want to attend this auction on Saturday.  (that's March 12 ... like two days from now!)  The Ventura County Rose Society works all year to collect rare and unusual roses for this auction, which is their major fundraiser for the year.  The selection is always stellar!

The enormous arrangement of roses in this vase contains only three stems of Morey's Pink.


The society members and volunteers work with nurseries and individuals to gather roses that are usually not widely available.  The auction CATALOG reads like a wonderful encyclopedia, and contains beautiful photos of each of the roses in the auction. 

Baby Cecile Brunner


Camellia Rose


Each year, there are always roses in this auction that I cannot resist.  For those of us who live on the complete opposite side of the country, the society has an online bidding program.  A member on site will bid at the auction on behalf of online bidders, and any roses won will be shipped to the winner (shipping charges are additional, but reasonable).  The online bidding rules are HERE.

Sneezy


"Grandmother's Hat"


I have my eye on a few of the auction roses this year ... but I'm not going to tell you which ones until after the auction is over and I know if I won them or not.  (My checkbook will appreciate it if I have as little competition as possible during the bidding.) 

Smoky


Star Dust


Here are all of the pertinent details:

VCRS Rare Rose Auction
March 12, 2011 - 10:00 a.m.
Stagecoach Inn
51 South Ventu Park Rd
Newbury Park, CA
Click HERE for the map.

Click HERE to go to the catalog.  (It's a .pdf, so you must have Adobe Reader installed to view it.)

(The photos in this post are some of the roses in the auction that I already have in my collection and that I really enjoy.) 

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

More Roses in Bags

I went to Big Lots yesterday to pick up a few things.  It was not a surprise to find bare root roses in bags thrown onto a shelf in the garden supply department. 



These poor things were in unbelieveably awful condition.  Take a really close look at the canes on the roses in the photo below.  Look how many of them are dead or damaged.



This rose received particularly rough treatment while it was being cut back and processed.  Its skinny little canes were shredded.  No one in the 'quality control' portion of the process thought to remove it from the pile.



Usually I find mostly hybrid tea roses in these displays, and this was the case here, too.  I was surprised to find Reine des Violettes, a lovely hybrid perpetual under different circumstances.  I guess nothing is immune to this sort of treatment.



There ARE standards for the grading of bare root roses, as set by the American Rose Society.

Grade 1.  Hybrid teas and grandifloras must have three or more strong canes, two of which are at least 18 inches (45 cm) long.  Floribundas meet the same standards, but the canes need only be 15 inches (38 cm) long.  Polyanthas must have four or more canes at least 12 inches (30 cm) long.  Climbers and ramblers must have three or more canes 24 inches (60 cm) long.

Grade 1 1/2.  Hybrid teas and grandifloras must have two or more canes at least 15 inches (38 cm) long.  Floribundas must have two or more canes 14 inches (35 cm) long.  Climbers must have two or more canes 18 inches (35 cm) long.  Polyanthas which do not meet Grade 1 standards are not graded.

Grade 2.  All classes must have two or more canes 12 inches (30 cm) long.

This is what a bare root rose SHOULD look like, with healthy green canes and abundant roots.  There is no way that a decent root system could possibly fit into these little bags.



Notice that there is no indication of Grade on these packages.  These are absolutely the bottom of the barrel, being packaged and sold for whatever paltry amount the sellers can get for them.



As I finished my shopping and got in line at the register, I noticed that the man in front of me had four roses in his cart.  I asked if he was familiar with how to grow roses.  He told me he wasn't, and I gave him some advice on how they should be prepared and planted.  I also told him to save his receipt, and reminded him to be sure to bring the plants back if he has a problem with them.  I didn't have the heart to tell him what I was really thinking.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

My View of Friendship

There are a lot of syrupy sweet emails going around cyberspace that talk about love and friendship.  With most of these, you read them and hit delete.  I got this one over the weekend from a friend, and it TOTALLY sums up our friendship ... and it demonstrates why I love her like a sister. 

Darlow's Enigma, Hybrid Musk, found rose


"Here is a series of promises that actually speak of true friendship.  You will see no cute little smiley faces on this ... Just the stone cold truth of our great friendship.


1. When you are sad, I will help you get drunk and plot revenge against the sorry bastard who made you sad.

Awakening, Climber


2. When you are blue, I will try to dislodge whatever is choking you.

Alba Meideland, Climber


3.  When you smile, I will know you are thinking of something that I would probably want to be involved in.

Basye's Purple Rose, Hybrid Rugosa


4. When you are scared, I will rag on you about it every chance I get until you're NOT.

Jean Guichard, Wichurana Rambler


5. When you are worried, I will tell you horrible stories about how much worse it could be until you quit whining.

"The Bishop", Hybrid China


6. When you are confused, I will try to use only little words.

"Peggy Martin", Multiflora Rambler


7. When you are sick, stay completely away from me until you are well again. I don't want whatever you have.

Little Buckaroo, Miniature


8. When you fall, I will laugh at your clumsy ass, but I'll help you up.

"Puerto Rico", Hybrid Tea, found rose


9. This is my oath .... I pledge it to the end. 'Why?' you may ask ~ because you are my friend."

Banshee, Damask Hybrid


My wish for you is that each of you has at least one true friend who is as dear and honest as this.

(All of the roses in the photos in this post are among those that were just added to updated inventory on my Hartwood Roses web site.  Click HERE to go to the catalog.)
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