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Monday, May 29, 2006Hey!![]() Have you cuddled a bunny today? Labels: bunnies ![]() Wednesday, May 10, 2006Purple Flower Poem![]() Among the geranium, a rash of purple campanula begins, scattering like Chinese fireworks through the delicate tan and yellow tips of saxifrage, encircling a group of bloody cranes' bills perched on rock. I want to name these flowers for you, a litany of colors that begin where there is hardly any, only the gentlest hint of evening-flush at the base of the throats of narcissus and sweet william, sharing a bed with verbena. Deep blue and slightly furry as a concord grape, the salvia cardinalis burns a wine color of intense sweetness on my tongue. We could have a curry laksa with it, even cheese—perhaps a soft brie or kesong puti sprinkled with peppercorns, or a whole clove of roasted garlic to smear on the slightly dusty surface of a saltine cracker. That reminds me of my grandmother's room and the smell of her lavender-water, distilled from the lavandula angustifolia, whose spears are so rigid to the touch and announce themselves with such radiant distinction. I want to glow like them, a field of me headier than a bottle of decanted scent, unblushing as a recitation of the contents of antique pomanders tied with silk string. Petals pressed into the cool ivory of journal pages: delphinium, pasque flowers, linseed and flax; linum perenne, the soft-hooded acanthus spinosus, purple phlox, and velvet lupine. Veronica incana, the powderpuff balls of hesperis matronalis-the ones they call sweet rockets-clearer than rain, exploding like breath from the furiously kissed mouth; like fizzy candy, like eskimo stars in the milky sky. ~*Luisa A. Igloria*~ Labels: poetry ![]() Tuesday, May 09, 2006Fun Facts Ladybugs (technically ladybird beetles) are good guys because they eat insects that feast on our plants, especially aphids. A female ladybug can chow down about 70 aphids in a day -- 5,000 in her lifetime. They can also eat bean thrips, beetle grubs, scales, spider mites, whiteflies and most soft body larvae. Basically, they are good guys that eat the bad guys. Invite them into your yards with welcome arms! Ladybug larvae have the biggest appetites, which is why it's important to recognize these babies so we don't mistakenly squish them. They look like tiny black humpback alligators.![]() The beautiful color-swirling appearance of these tulips is referred to as a 'break'. It's caused by a virus :The word 'tulip' comes from the turkish word for 'turban'. In a wildlife phenomenon still not fully understood by scientists, hundreds of millions of North American monarchs migrate each year - up to 3,000 miles - to Mexico. In their winter colonies, they mass together in clusters on fir trees. The butterfly sanctuaries and the spectacle, which is considered an endangered migratory phenomenon, have become a popular ecotourism destination. The expression "You Are What You Eat" is certainly true for Monarch caterpillars. They eat only milkweed, which contains chemicals that make the Monarchs taste bad to predators. The ancient Greeks believed mushrooms came from Zeus's lightning because they appeared after rains and reproduced and grew inexplicably. Although we understand more about mushrooms and where they come from now, much remains to be learned. While some species are edible, others contain dangerous toxins. Saffron is the most precious and expensive spice in the world. It comes from the dried stigmas of the saffron flower, Crocus sativus Linneaus. Each flower contains only three stigmas. These filaments must be picked from each flower by hand, and more than 75,000 of these flowers are needed to produce just 1 pound of Saffron. Holly plants are dioecious, which means 'two houses'. Essentially this means there are boy hollies and girl hollies. The girl holly will not bear the beautiful red berries unless there is a boy holly within a reasonable distance that can provide pollen. Other plants are monoecious, 'one house', ie. corn, in which both the female and male reproductive parts are on the same plant.![]()
Labels: plant facts ![]()
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