Tuesday, February 23, 2021

New dinner recipes tried

 Hello, everyone. 

There was a gap in posting because of the disorganization conected with the big freeze and power outage. I have a renewed appreciation for heat and electric lights now!

DD2 had a camping trick she shared with us, when we were puzzling in the chilly dimness.

She taped a flashlight onto the neck of a bottle of clear liquid and the light refracted around part of the table.


The new food is part of renewed emphasis on healthy eating. Sliced mushrooms and onions, roasted broccoli tops and carrots, and cute little meatballs. Tasty!



Wednesday, February 10, 2021

A garden puzzle

 Hello, everyone.

This spring--yes, we're almost in spring now as our average last frost date is coming up in a few days--we have unidentified plants popping up. They popped up last year, too, and I don't know whether to call them allowable as their tiny flowers must be feeding the little flower flies, or weeds. They're really small even when they're as big as they apparently get.


That little thing that resembles parsley or cilantro is it. It's much smaller than a cilantro seedling. The leaves get more divided as the plant gets older, and it has very tiny white flowers. The flowers are not in the umbel form we see on parsley, cilantro, and fennel. It's especially likely to sprout in the clay that has been turned into my herb garden. But it seems content to sprout in potting soil, as here, too. (This is a pot of basil.)


The herb garden last year. The Italian oregano has grown a lot, with graceful stems leaning over the stones, and even a stray branch or runner at the base of the stone now. The assorted basils have mostly died out, not having been pruned, and more rosemary and a Greek oregano have been added. The bare bit by the barbecue has acquired some rain lily seedlings. Who says I can't have flowers with my herbs? 




Thursday, February 4, 2021

Returning to Bentsen Park

 Hello, everyone.

It was a pretty warm day here today, but in the morning it wasn't too bad. We went to Bentsen Park to take a walk and view the birds.

The birdseed feeders were empty, but orange halves had been put up on the fruit boards. Every feeding station was full of birds who were waiting for the chow to come. (They usually feed through the end of February at least.) The first station was full of chachalacas on every branch hoping for the food truck to stop for them. 

At the third feeding station, where the loop joins with the entry road, we saw a sight.



There is a flock of turkeys that lives in the area--wild Rio Grande Turkeys, not loose domestics--and they had come out to the open-area feeding station to look for food. The tom was majestic! With them were also (at least) a dove, an oriole, a kiskadee, and a cardinal. The kiskadee is on the ground by the pole in the first picture. The cardinal is perched on a branch in the second one.

The last time we walked at Bentsen, we had seen just the tom by himself, at this same place. And once before, we had seen the flock at a different feeding station.

It was a pleasant walk today, and we enjoyed watching the turkeys.