It will probably take me all day tomorrow to clean up and dead head them all, Hopefully they have time to come back.😢
JAN'S JABBER......... Just me jabbering on about things that interest me and hopefully you!
Monday, July 23, 2018
Trashed
20 minutes of torrential rain, wind and hail is all it took to completely trash all my plants. They were so full of flowers that none of the greenery was visible. Not any more. They looked a lot better in my previous post of June 18th and they weren't completely filled out at that time. The poppies in my last post-gone.
Wednesday, July 18, 2018
New
The poppies have gone crazy this year. I have dozens of them.
I bought 2 blueberry bushes last year and planted them in the fall. One of them has blueberries on it. The other looked like it was getting blueberries but they turned brown and shriveled, so no berries there.
I bought two more bushes a few weeks ago and both have berries forming and this bush pictured had two ripe ones-one for me and one for DH!!
It will be 11 weeks tomorrow with the shingles. It is actually PHN (post herpetic neuralgia) now. After weeks and weeks of excruciating pain it's finally starting to ease off. I still get the pain but it isn't constant and it's usually when I have been out in the sun (heat), or when I've over done it. I get periods off feeling good so I think I'll get 'whatever' done and then I pay for it later. Still can't have a shower without paying for it later! I'm starting to cut down on the meds. What a slow process-I mean reducing one pill a week! After three weeks I've gone from 21 pills a day down to 18! I'm hoping to speed up this process a bit next week.
So much stuff to get done around here and none of it, or very little, getting done. Very frustrating.
Bye for now.
It will be 11 weeks tomorrow with the shingles. It is actually PHN (post herpetic neuralgia) now. After weeks and weeks of excruciating pain it's finally starting to ease off. I still get the pain but it isn't constant and it's usually when I have been out in the sun (heat), or when I've over done it. I get periods off feeling good so I think I'll get 'whatever' done and then I pay for it later. Still can't have a shower without paying for it later! I'm starting to cut down on the meds. What a slow process-I mean reducing one pill a week! After three weeks I've gone from 21 pills a day down to 18! I'm hoping to speed up this process a bit next week.
So much stuff to get done around here and none of it, or very little, getting done. Very frustrating.
Bye for now.
Monday, June 18, 2018
The Garden Today
I took a walk around the garden this morning.
This is the first peony to bloom, there are close to a hundred buds on the plant and it is about 5 feet tall!! Sadly the blooms last such a short time, and even shorter if it rains, which is forecast for Friday, or it gets really windy.
David Austin rose, just loaded with flowers.
Lots of baskets and pots of petunias.
These baskets are just loaded with little flowers, can't remember the name of them. Takes for ever to dead head them!
Lots of pansies, salvia and lobellia.
Martha Washington geraniums
Red geraniums
Hostas
Begonias loving the shade
Having shingles has certainly curtailed my planting this year. I've only planted about half of the pots and baskets I usually do and very little in the veg department. Some of my flower beds are-as my mother would have said-'choked with weeds'. It's amazing how the heat brings on the nerve pain and I can only manage about 45 minutes in the garden and then I'm done. Hopefully, slowly but surely, I'll get some of it in order, but if not there's always next year!!
Friday, June 8, 2018
Books 8-10
All By Myself by Mary Higgins Clark
Fleeing the humiliating arrest of her husband-to-be, Celia Kilbride, a jewelry expert, hopes to escape from public attention by lecturing on a brand-new cruise ship-the Queen Charlotte.
On board she meets eighty-six year old"LadyEm".Immensely wealthy, Lady Em plans to wear her priceless emerald Cleopatra necklace, which, according to legend, places a deadly curse on whoever brings it to sea.
The Queen Charlotte is three days out and Lady Em is found dead-and the necklace is missing. Is it the work of her devoted assistant or her lawyer-executor Is it the scholar who is lecturing on board, or a guest on the ship who is planning to spread his wife's ashes at sea? Or is it the young lawyer who tried to persuade Lady Em to return the necklace to Egypt? The list of suspects is large and growing.
Celia does not realize that her friendship with Lady Em has not escaped the notice of the killer. With the help of her new friends Willy and Alvirah Meehan, she must avoid the danger that awaits her before the ship reaches its final destination...
Another fast, easy read from MHC. Her books are very predictable and usually always have a happy ending. If you want a book that doesn't require much brain power, this is the book.
Gray Mountain by John Grisham
In a matter of days Samantha moves from Manhattan to Brady, Virginia, population 2,200, in the heart of Appalachia, a part of the world she has only read about. Samantha's new job takes her into the murky and dangerous world of coal mining, where laws are often broken, communities are divided, and the land itself is under attack. But some of the locals aren't so thrilled to have a big-city lawyer in town, and within weeks Samantha is engulfed in litigation that turns deadly. Because like most small towns, Bradey harbors big secrets that some will kill to conceal.
I really enjoyed this book, although the main character, Samantha, made some foolish decisions at times that put her own safety in great jeopardy! The book highlights the injustice of strip mining and mountain topping and the effect it all had on the economically poor people living in the Appalachia valley. It made you feel so bad for these miners that had black lung from working in the mines, but really had no options. As most books I found the ending predictable but I still enjoyed it.
Name of Dead Girls by Eric Rickstad
In the small Vermont town of Canaan, college student Rachel Rath is being watched. She can feel the stranger’s eyes on her, relentless and possessive. And she’s sure the man watching her is the same man who killed her mother and father years ago: Ned Preacher, a serial rapist and murderer who gamed the system to get a light sentence. Now, he’s free.
Detective Frank Rath adopted Rachel, his niece, after the shocking murder of her parents when she was a baby. Ever since, Rath’s tried to protect her from the true story of her parents’ deaths. But now Preacher is calling Rath to torment him, and threaten Rachel. Then local girls begin to vanish, and when a few are found, Rath along with Detective Sonja Test, must unravel the threads that tie these new crimes to that long-ago nightmares. Soon they will learn that the truth is more twisted than anyone could guess, rife with secrets, cruel desires, and warped, deadly loyalty.
Detective Frank Rath adopted Rachel, his niece, after the shocking murder of her parents when she was a baby. Ever since, Rath’s tried to protect her from the true story of her parents’ deaths. But now Preacher is calling Rath to torment him, and threaten Rachel. Then local girls begin to vanish, and when a few are found, Rath along with Detective Sonja Test, must unravel the threads that tie these new crimes to that long-ago nightmares. Soon they will learn that the truth is more twisted than anyone could guess, rife with secrets, cruel desires, and warped, deadly loyalty.
This book is the sequel to The Silent Girls that I read in July 2017. I enjoyed the first book and enjoyed this one as well. The book picks up where the first one ended. It was very suspenseful and scary and had you wanting to keep reading far later into the night than you should. There are twists and turns along the way and a quite surprising ending. Highly recommend both books.
Is anyone else having trouble with blogger? It's taken me ages, over several days, to write this post-very frustrating. The text keeps jumping all over the place and the font changes at will. So glad to get this finished and can't wait to hit Publish!!
Friday, May 4, 2018
Monday, April 16, 2018
Book 5
The Chilbury Ladies' Choir by Jennifer Ryan
As England becomes enmeshed in the early days of World War II and the men are away fighting, the women of Chilbury village forge an uncommon bond. They defy the vicar's stuffy edict to close the choir and instead "carry on singing," resurrecting themselves as the Chilbury Ladies' Choir. This story tells the home-front struggles of five unforgettable choir members: a timid widow devastated when her only son goes to fight; the older daughter of a local scion drawn to a mysterious artist; her younger sister pining over an impossible crush; a Jewish refugee from Czechoslovakia hiding a family secret; and a conniving midwife plotting to outrun her seedy past.
I enjoyed this book although a lot of it was very predictable. It is written as a series of letters and diary entries by different characters in the story. Through these letters and diary entries we see how the women in the village change and grow. They seem to draw strength from one another. For the most part the men are away at war and so it is left to the women to step up and take charge. Easy reading.
Edit: Somehow this post ended up in my drafts and it should be dated sometime in March.
Edit: Somehow this post ended up in my drafts and it should be dated sometime in March.
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