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Ruby's Garden

Ruby shared these photos of her garden. (Click for larger.): "Here are some pictures of what I have going on this year.

[Below] is my climbing rose surrounded by herbs (chives, thai basil, sage, oregano(s), and rosemary, which is trying to take over). I keep most of the herbs in pots for better drainage. We have heavy clay soil, and I've found that some of the perennial herbs don't make it through our soggy winters in the ground.""I put the tomatoes [below] at the end of the driveway because they get hot blazing sun there all day and seem pretty happy. (Yes, that is a pink flamingo hiding in the butterfly bush!) I have a bronze fennel behind the butterfly bush, and eastern tiger swallowtail caterpillars eat the whole thing down to little nubbins. But then I'm rewarded with swarms of butterflies on the butterfly bush all summer! I have a screen porch next to this little patch, so I get to sit there and watch them. I'm also experimenting with some watermelons in this patch this year.""[Below] shows a jalapeno pepper plant (lower right) nestled in with some perennials.""[Below] is a strawberry pot absolutely overflowing with thyme."________Photos and text: Ruby

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  • Lavender Blue shared these photos of her garden. (Click for larger.)

  • Melinda shared these photos of her garden-in-work:"Here are 3 pix of what I brought w/ me from the condo when we moved to the little house w/ big deck. As you see, so far they aren't in the ground, but I did just get the raised bed, so hopefully I'll get it together [soon]."

  • Sherri, where's Sherri? Sherri (the other one) this is for you. And for Melinda. And anyone else with a garden. I planted some herbs yesterday.* I know, this is a far cry from squash and tomatoes. But I'm limited by space and sun. And the deer, oh dear. (It's in the 40s here this morning, I hope they don't wilt.) This is my garden.

    I'd love to experience your gardens vicariously. So if you (or others) have food-growing photos you'd like to share, I'll post them.


  • They became unstuck in time a day later.
    "So it goes."
    - Billy Pilgrim 1________
    Photo above: Homegrown, from a couple days ago. It's frozen water in the cut-off bottom of an old gallon jug. I use it as a water feeder for birds. They, however, use it as a bathtub. There's one particular female cardinal that sits in it at night (if it's warm enough) for about 5 minutes. The water comes up to her neck. She occasionally flutters her wings.

  • There was a full moon last night. It will be visible tonight too, and according to NASA, it will be the brightest full moon you'll see for the next 16 years:"That's because it's the highest-riding full moon until the year 2023."

  • Melinda's raised-bed installation:


    Click for larger.________Photos: Melinda

  • "Fool me once, shame on...
    Shame on you.
    Fool me ... you can't get fooled again!" 1________1 US President No. 43, Nashville, TN, Sept. 17, 2002.
    Photo: Advertisement for FritoLay corn chips scanned from March 2008 AARP magazine.

  • Every day, a little bit of my faith blows away ...

    Cancer Docs Profit From Chemotherapy Drugs
    Situation begs the ethical question: Are they overprescribing?
    "The significant amount of our revenue comes from the profit, if you will, that we make from selling the drugs," says Dr. Peter Eisenberg, a private physician who specializes in cancer treatment.________

  • The UK Department of Health released its "Health Profile of England 2007". They noticed a trend:

    The UK Government Office for Science projected that trend 40 years into the future and determined that a "bold whole system approach is critical":

  • The Mississippi House of Representatives has floated a bill (HB 282, below) that would make it illegal to serve obese patrons.

    The gentlemen below are the Bill's authors. From left to right: W. T. Mayhall, Jr. (R), John Read (R) , Bobby Shows (D). It appears to be a bipartisan effort.

  • I'm still wondering ... is cultured meat living?

    A group of artists from the Tissue Culture and Art Project (TCA) in Australia grew this steak for their exhibition "Disembodied Cuisine".


    Click to read captions, and to see some cultured meat up close.

  • Boy, do I get excited over new foods. Red quinoa! New for me, old for people who live in the Andes Mountains of South America, who, according to the box, have been growing it for more than 5,000 years. I wonder what they served it with. Maybe it's old for lots of you too, but I'm having fun with it!

    It's a little more crunchy than the white quinoa I'm used to, if you could call quinoa crunchy at all. Otherwise, it's pretty similar in taste and cooking time.

    The rusty red color of the grain blooms to a foggy purple color when cooked. (Click for larger.)

  • Famed for its wine. Wikipedia has Burgenland inhabited since the Stone Age. How many years ago that was, I can't tell. I wonder if Burgenlanders enjoyed wine back then.

    Below is Willi Wetschka (right) and his friend in the barn of Wetschka's winery, 2007.


    Click to enlarge.________

  • The photos below are from photographer Peter Menzel's 2005 book, Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.

    Menzel traveled to 24 countries, visiting and photographing 30 families for the book. Each photo represents the weekly food intake for the families pictured. (Each family was asked to purchase, at Menzel's expense, a typical week's groceries. The book lists the food items in detail, broken down by food group and cost, along with how the food was raised and prepared.)

    I came across Menzel's photos on Amber's Blog (on Gaia), her post from November 27, 2007. She has a few more there, and some interesting comments.

    Germany: The Melander family of Bargteheide
    Food expenditure for one week: $500.07

  • Until after the esophagogastroduodenocolonoscopy.1 Well, not all eating. This is tonight's dinner:


    And tomorrow's breakfast too. Actually, just 4 Dulcolax. But the whole bottle, 14 complete servings of that MiraLax must be enlisted to perform the unsubtle function.

    I had reservations posting this. But, well, what's a blog for? So, if you have any experience with this procedure, your comments are welcome!
    ________1 A combined esophagogastroduodenoscopy and colonoscopy.
    Photo: Homegrown. I wish it wasn't.

  • Lots of things to write about but I think I'm going to take a Spring Break. I've been neglecting my tomatoes.


    ________Photo: Homegrown

  • The Swedish grocery store chain, ICA, is considered one of the most trusted retail brands in Sweden. It celebrated its 90 year anniversary this year.1

    According to Wikipedia, a documentary aired on Swedish television last week that showed ICA employees:"... relabeling out-of-date ground meat, as well as grinding down other forms of meat past their 'best before' date to make ground meat (mince)."

  • Squeezing a minute while the pie is in the oven to toss a big thank you out to all my visitors! Thank you for all your kindnesses - for reading, commenting, teaching me, and helping to make this blog one of my favorite hobbies. Cheers!

    ________
    Photo: Homegrown

  • Speaking of life...

    ________Photo of daffodil shoots: Homegrown. Shot February 27, 2008; 19 degrees F.

  • This one's for Ronald:

    Craft Brewers Reformulate Beer to Cope With Hop Shortage, Wired, May 10, 2008"Prices of the commodity [hops] are skyrocketing as hop supplies have plummeted, forcing smaller brewmasters around the United States to begin quietly tweaking their recipes, in ways that are easily discerned by serious imbibers."

    "[Brewer Shaun] O'Sullivan is lucky. One of his most popular beers is Watermelon Wheat, which "has virtually no hops in it," he says."I don't know. Watermelon and wheat?
    ________

  • No, really. A comprehensive, online, free!, encyclopedia of every living thing on the planet. One page for each. Millions of pages. And it's a wiki - a collaborative, updatable effort from people all over the world. I can't think of a more ambitious project facing the internet.

    And it went live on Tuesday (although it may be slow, it's getting over a million hits per hour):
    Encyclopedia of Life (EOL)

    Here's what the New York Times had to say:
    The Encyclopedia of Life, No Bookshelf Required

    Here's its official blog:
    Encyclopedia of Life Blog

    Here are some sample pages (clicking the image will take you to EOL's demo page):

    Yeti Crab

    Death Cap Mushroom

  • Ronald's comment reminded me of this.

    Libby's Ingredients: Mechanically Separated Chicken, Partially Defatted Cooked Pork Fatty Tissue, Beef Tripe, Partially Defatted Cook Beef Fatty Tissue, Vinegar, Salt, Spices, Sugar, Flavorings, Sodium Erythorbate And Sodium Nitrate.

    Paul Krzyzanowski posted this photo of his collection:

  • I saw this ad while flipping through the Sunday paper. I was going to say something about it, but I think I'll just put it up here and let you say something about it. Maybe I'll say the thing I wanted to say if no one says it. But I think someone might say it.
    Click for larger.________Photo: Homegrown. Scanned from January 6 newspaper insert.

  • The National Resources Defense Council has published this wallet card to aid in selecting fish. I know it's difficult to read. Clicking on it will take you to the original .pdf source where you can make some good quality printouts.

    ________

  • Our neighborhood sets out little bags of sand with candles on Christmas Eve. When the sun sets, we light the candles. If lots of people participate, when you drive down the street you feel like you're taxiing down a runway.

    ________Photo: Homegrown

  • A "Thank you." to RB who sent along this NPR interview with Michael Pollan.

    Author Comes To Natural Food's 'Defense'

  • Below is a photograph of Santas from the Volunteers of America. The time is 12:45 pm, November 25, 1941. The place is Chicago.

    Do you notice anything odd about this photograph?

    Click to enlarge.________Photo: Scanned from Saveur Magazine, December 2007.

  • In my thinking-out-loud comment under RS and Colon Cancer, I spoke of the social pressure to eat a certain way.

    Below is an example. It's a photo of the entrance foyer of a large food store where I shop. A mountainous display of some food item always occupies this space. This week a mountain of soft drinks was being erected. The last display was a mountain of chips, crackers, and dip. At the top of the display (they weren't done piling yet) is often a wide screen television showing people consuming the food in the display, interspersed with "fun" activities ... sports, parties. I can't imagine these are just props, that they don't include them in their inventory without the intention of selling them.

  • Sometimes pointing to where it hurts doesn't give the best clue as to what's wrong. It doesn't help that human anatomy can vary so much.

    Below are two images of the large intestine. There are 3 sections visible ... the ascending colon on your right side (left in pictures), the transverse colon that goes across the top, and the descending colon on your left side (right in pictures).