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Gardening, Puttering and Adventure Thread, Dec 21

bulb of month amaryllis a.jpg

Merry weekend before Christmas! And Hanukkah! It's a time for gardening eye candy. Above, a boxed Amaryllis (Hippeastrum) grown by a cousin whose husband ordered bulbs for her from a "Bulb of the Month Club". Great gift!

Below, another one that started blooming on November 21, grown by her friend:

just starting amaryllis Nov 21.jpg

*

The second amaryllis above looks similar to one type grown to bloom in spring outdoors by Neal in Israel.

D amaryllis rredwhite.jpg

He got a lot of blooms from one bulb! Glorious.

*

It's Winter Solstice Today

Is Winter Solstice the beginning of winter?

History, folklore, verse and weather forecasts at the link.

ice-crystals om.jpg

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Edible Gardening/Putting Things By

Starting to feel like you've already had too much rich holiday food? Turning toward salads? Tomatoes have been pretty awful around here - even those grown in greenhouses. Have you had any good experiences? We've had some good avocados and some bad ones.

We should probably talk again about endive and escarole - classical winter greens.

How about some old-fashioned lettuces, or some newer ones bred for dramatic color or climate adaptation? Get out those catalogs.

Tom Thumb is 150 years old. A miniature Bibb/Butterhead type. My Mom and I used to take a bottle of vinegar and a salt shaker out into the garden to munch on it.

Tom Thumb lettuce baker creeek.jpg

Little Gem is another old single-serving sized lettuce.

Cos. This is a very small, green romaine type. One of the very best tasting lettuces we’ve encountered. A superb heat-tolerant variety that is sure to please! Famous among chefs and home gardeners alike!

little gem lettucee.jpg

Merveille de Quatre Saisons

Bibb/Butterhead. Translating to “The Marvel of Four Seasons,” this famous French butterhead is a standard for flavor and quality! A true marvel both in the kitchen and the vegetable patch. A pre-1885 heirloom; crisp and tender. The fine flavored leaves have a reddish color, and it can be grown almost year round in many locations. The ruby-rose leaves form a distinctly attractive rosette head, but can also be enjoyed as young baby greens.

30-48 days to maturity (30 for baby greens)

merveille de quatre saisons.jpg

Devil's Ear

Leaf. Originally Devil’s Ear comes from Abundant Life Seed Foundation. It has very large, spreading, loose-leaf heads. Leaves are large, wavy-margined, and suffused in burgundy. We love its nutty, crisp texture and bitter-free flavor. Slow to bolt, and it stands a very long time in the garden.

DEvils ear letuc.jpg

This may be one of those lettuces from which you can cut the outer leaves and leave the center ones for the next week.

Merlot

Leaf. Reputed to be absolutely the darkest red lettuce in existence, making it tops for anthocyanin (antioxidant) content as well! Leaf lettuce with wavy to frilly leaf margins and very crisp, waxy leaves! Excellent bolt resistance, and good cold tolerance for a late fall to winter crop. Recommended as a cutting type for baby greens production or cut-and-come-again harvesting. We feel, along with our friend William Woys Weaver, that this variety is destined to become a classic, and it certainly deserves it! A rich source of potassium and vitamin A.

merlot lettucce.jpg

What is your favorite type of lettuce? Do you prefer a single type or a mix?

*

Cut Flower

Are you giving anyone flowers for Christmas? This one, or a relative, might be included:

star of bethlehemm.jpg

Star of Bethlehem

How long since you have read a South African gardening magazine? I have met some people who are really dedicated to protecting the plants of this region.

Ornithogalum thyrsoides -
Chincherinchee, Tjienk, Star of Bethlehem

Chincherinchees or ‘tjienks’ belong to the genus Ornithogalum and are members of the Hyacinth family that includes indigenous garden favourites like Eucomis, Lachenalia and Veltheimia.

There are more than 120 species of Ornithogalum and the name is derived from the Greek words ornis and gala, meaning ‘bird-like’ and ‘white’ respectively. In Roman times, bird’s milk was used to describe anything special or admirable.

Ornithogalums have a disjunctive distribution in Africa, the Middle East, southern Europe and western Asia, but most species occur in Southern Africa – mainly in the winter rainfall regions of the Northern, Western and Eastern Cape. There are also a number of summer-growing and evergreen species such as Ornithogalum Saundersiae (Giant Chincherinchee) and Ornithogalum Longibracteatum (Pregnant Onion).

There's a lot more information about the plants than you see in most American gardening magazines. More at the link. Blooms may last 6 weeks when cut. The plant is very poisonous. Don't you love the name "Chincherinchee"?

"Ornithogalum Thyrsoides is seen to great advantage when grown in rock garden pockets inter-planted with the mauve, late spring-flowering annual, Senecio Elegans (Wild Cineraria)."

The latter is recognized as a potentially invasive weed in coastal sand dunes in California.

*

Puttering

Super-puttering with friends and family

Something fun for the kids in a little city:

Want to take a Magic Elevator ride to the North Pole?
Ten months ago I approached the City . . about a special project I had in mind. Inspired by a video I had seen about an attraction in a mall in Canada. .

With a budget to buy materials, I got started. I had to build the magical elevator, Santa's Workshop, and design the computer program that would take the families to see Santa. The journey starts by a greeting from Santa's elf, step into the elevator, and the journey begins. When you arrive at Santa's house, you ring the doorbell and Santa is there to greet you.

I have never worked on anything of this magnitude and there were times I just didn't think I could get it done. . .

A special thank you to so many people who helped out.

starting santa 2.jpg

elevator better.jpg

elevator 2 better.jpg

santa e 3.jpg

santa e 4.jpg

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Adventure

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Gardens of The Horde

bird o paradise.jpg

Hi Katy,

Just back from some early winter maintenance at our vacation home in northern Israel. The gardener was at work the other day and managed to save some birds of paradise for Mrs. BD to take back home to Jerusalem.

Regards from Jerusalem,

Biden's Dog

A fascinating flower. It's the City Flower of Los Angeles.

*


From Don in Kansas:

While most of the yard is dormant, one of the daffodils got the dates mixed up and is blooming now. Unless the temperature gets extremely cold soon, I should have flowers in the garden for Christmas.

daffys in dec c.jpg

What a happy Christmas gift!

*

Hope everyone has a nice weekend and a lovely Christmas and Hanukkah.


If you would like to send photos, stories, links, etc. for the Saturday Gardening, Puttering and Adventure Thread, the address is:

ktinthegarden at g mail dot com

Remember to include the nic or name by which you wish to be known at AoSHQ, or let us know if you want to remain a lurker.

*

Week in Review

What has changed since last week's thread? Gardening, Puttering and Adventure Thread, Dec. 14. Check the late comments you may have missed.

Any thoughts or questions?

I closed the comments on this post so you wouldn't get banned for commenting on a week-old post, but don't try it anyway.

Posted by: K.T. at 01:00 PM




Comments

(Jump to bottom of comments)

1 I came to chew bubble gum and putter, and I'm all out of bubble gum.

Posted by: Cicero (@cicero43) at December 21, 2024 01:04 PM (guGkK)

2 Good afternoon Greenthumbs

Posted by: Skip at December 21, 2024 01:05 PM (fwDg9)

3 I had some leaves still to finish gathering then cold, wind and now Winter happened. Guess if I don't get them they won't go anywhere.

Posted by: Skip at December 21, 2024 01:08 PM (fwDg9)

4 Seeing all the photos makes me wish I didn't have a black thumb. I could probably even kill a plastic plant.

Posted by: Hour of the Wolf at December 21, 2024 01:14 PM (VNX3d)

5 The Santa Experience is a very impressive project! I commend its creators for their imagination and their amazing carpentry skills!


*tosses blow-molded light-up Frosty in the dumpster*

Posted by: Cicero (@cicero43) at December 21, 2024 01:18 PM (guGkK)

6 Your photos are a highlight every week!

Posted by: Tom Servo at December 21, 2024 01:19 PM (zQ3t+)

7 Eat your greens.
-Frank Z.

Posted by: Eromero at December 21, 2024 01:26 PM (jgmnb)

8 Thread of the world's most beautiful towns and villages at Christmas

Many of those places in Europe are worth seeing on any day

Posted by: javems at December 21, 2024 01:27 PM (8I4hW)

9 BD,
The bird of paradise is a beautiful flower.
Nice choice.

Posted by: Diogenes at December 21, 2024 01:27 PM (W/lyH)

10 Took mail out, not fit for man or beast with winds

Posted by: Skip at December 21, 2024 01:30 PM (fwDg9)

11 My puttering will be in the basement painting miniatures

Posted by: Skip at December 21, 2024 01:31 PM (fwDg9)

12 I love some of the names of those lettuces.

Posted by: KT at December 21, 2024 01:34 PM (xekrU)

13 When living in Susanville, I learned that the ice crystals in the branches are called "pogonip," a Northern Paiute word meaning "white death."

Posted by: Captain Obvious, Laird o' the Sea, Radioactive Knight at December 21, 2024 01:35 PM (fzQGK)

14 My puttering today, tomorrow and Monday is making peanut brittle.

Posted by: Captain Obvious, Laird o' the Sea, Radioactive Knight at December 21, 2024 01:36 PM (fzQGK)

15 Puttering today: Rigging license plate lights that look OEM. Guy ran into the back of me, Progressive has refused to settle, truck can't pass inspection without the lights, lights cost $300.00+ at the dealer. No way I'm paying.

Posted by: Mike Hammer, etc., etc. at December 21, 2024 01:37 PM (XeU6L)

16 Saw a small sport's up car with Christmas lights all over it yesterday in my travels about the county

Posted by: Skip at December 21, 2024 01:39 PM (fwDg9)

17 Puttering in the garage today.
My favorite room in the house.

Posted by: Quarter Twenty at December 21, 2024 01:39 PM (dg+HA)

18 Captain Obvious, Laird o' the Sea, Radioactive Knight at December 21, 2024 01:35 PM

Paiute in Susanville, CA? "Pogonip" is a good word.

Posted by: KT at December 21, 2024 01:41 PM (xekrU)

19 Hey honey! Look what I just found!!

*drags in blow-molded light-up Frosty he found in the dumpster.*

Posted by: Cicero's neighbor down the street at December 21, 2024 01:43 PM (dg+HA)

20 Wow! The photos in the gardening thread are always great but today's are spectacular. Think I'll be trying a few sketches from them.

Posted by: JTB at December 21, 2024 01:43 PM (yTvNw)

21 Horse manure reference so on-topic??

Insider Paper @TheInsiderPaper 2h
JUST - Biden has signed the stopgap funding bill. The shutdown has officially been averted.

Posted by: andycanuck (hovnC) at December 21, 2024 01:48 PM (hovnC)

22 BD,
The bird of paradise is a beautiful flower.
Nice choice.
-

Its the most "exotic" plant growing in our garden. All other tree, flowers and plants are more appropriate to the mountain climate and location of our home in northern Israel.

I expect it to be a few months before we see some new flowers blossom toward the start of spring.

Posted by: Biden's Dog sniffs a whole lotta malarkey, at December 21, 2024 01:50 PM (1xs6C)

23 Oh well, another Trillion in the hole

Posted by: Skip at December 21, 2024 01:54 PM (fwDg9)

24 16 Saw a small sport's up car with Christmas lights all over it yesterday in my travels about the county

was it a bimmer? My friend's son did that with his car

Posted by: kallisto at December 21, 2024 01:56 PM (dCxaZ)

25 the pics of the greens look so yummy...and nutritious!

and Locorotondo, Italy...wow. Would be delightful to visit there.

til then, I'll have to stick to a Christmas Village closer to home:

https://tinyurl.com/5dy2h6bf

Christmas in Cape May NJ

Posted by: kallisto at December 21, 2024 01:59 PM (dCxaZ)

26 My ex-coworker is insistent that I get some sort of garden going next year. I have a small cheap walk in greenhouse that I want to set up. I'd like to try that Elliot Coleman system, where you do winter hardy green, covered with frost protection in an unheated greenhouse. I am not a fan of lettuce as it doesn't agree with me.

Been a mild winter to date. I'm hoping we get enough rain this spring I can turn over a patch.

Posted by: Notsothoreau at December 21, 2024 02:02 PM (NQtI0)

27 Wasn't a BMW, but certainly a two door. It had lights all over it

Posted by: Skip at December 21, 2024 02:03 PM (fwDg9)

28 ...Wasn't a BMW, but certainly a two door. It had lights all over it. Posted by: Skip at December 21, 2024 02:03 PM (fwDg9)


They used a Mercedes C-220 for a Christmas Play in New Jersey. It was carrying three Wise Guys and they followed that three-pointed star.


Jim
Sunk New Dawn
Galveston, TX

Posted by: Jim at December 21, 2024 02:10 PM (Xo+UM)

29 Wise Guys, eh?

Posted by: PaleRider at December 21, 2024 02:27 PM (UKUm3)

30 Gosh that's some purty lettuce. When I first grew just-plain leaf (must have been black-seeded Simpson), I was resolutely warned about how short the season was and how easily it all bolted. I used solar-cloth tenting, and a couple of other tricks, with mixed results. Then I went 20' farther up the garden and planted in the shade, and doubled the season. So I learned from that. Little Gem will grow right out in the sun, if it's not too dry. Great little plant.

'Health' note: if you're growing dark greens because they are so good for you (and for most, they are) and have a history of folate stones, be prepared for a doctor to tell you to eat less lettuce and spinach. You just can't win.

Posted by: Way,Way Downriver at December 21, 2024 02:33 PM (zdLoL)

31 29 Wise Guys, eh?
Posted by: PaleRider at December 21, 2024 02:27 PM (UKUm3)


*hits Curley on head with mallet*

Posted by: Moe Howard at December 21, 2024 02:40 PM (TcVeV)

32 31 29 Wise Guys, eh?
Posted by: PaleRider at December 21, 2024 02:27 PM (UKUm3)

*hits Curley on head with mallet*
Posted by: Moe Howard at December 21, 2024 02:40 PM (TcVeV)


You guys!

Posted by: Larry Fine, the Peacekeeper at December 21, 2024 02:43 PM (PiwSw)

33 13 When living in Susanville, I learned that the ice crystals in the branches are called "pogonip," a Northern Paiute word meaning "white death."
Posted by: Captain Obvious, Laird o' the Sea, Radioactive Knight at December 21, 2024 01:35 PM (fzQGK)
-_-_-_-_-_-_-
Ah, the hazards one misses growing up on the high plains. Met a gal from Indiana who asked me, 'Where are all the trees?". I told her, "We thought you were gonna bring 'em."

Posted by: Don in SoCo at December 21, 2024 02:46 PM (52uDx)

34 My "gardening" has consisted of rearranging furniture to accommodate my late uncle's old Christmas cactus. He had a degree in botany, among others, and worked as head gardener on Belle Isle in Detroit for a time.

His sister - my aunt - inherited it when Uncle died. It did a lot of traveling before she passed it on to me a couple weeks ago. It's not going to bloom this year.

Posted by: NaughtyPine at December 21, 2024 02:49 PM (KdWM9)

35 Way,Way Downriver at December 21, 2024 02:33 PM (zdLoL)

I've never heard of folate stones, but if you have a history of oxalate stones, you need to avoid spinach, chard, beet greens and maybe some other greens, veggies and nuts.

Lettuce is very low in oxalate, spinach is very high. But some people with other kidney problems may need to limit lettuce because of its potassium content.

Posted by: KT at December 21, 2024 02:54 PM (xekrU)

36 Wise Guys, eh?
Posted by: PaleRider at December 21, 2024 02:27 PM (UKUm3)

*hits Curley on head with mallet*
Posted by: Moe Howard at December 21, 2024 02:40 PM (TcVeV)

Niagara Falls? Niagara Falls?

Posted by: Hour of the Wolf at December 21, 2024 02:58 PM (VNX3d)

37 I don't know how but our Christmas cactus is starting to bloom right on schedule. We've had it for years, a two bit (literally) remainder from the garden center. It has never died but never grown. It just continues. Perhaps it represents a miracle or a mystery. :-)

Posted by: JTB at December 21, 2024 02:59 PM (yTvNw)

38 JTB at December 21, 2024 02:59 PM

Yay! A Christmas Miracle!

Posted by: KT at December 21, 2024 03:07 PM (xekrU)

39 MEOW THREAD

Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at December 21, 2024 03:09 PM (U81Si)

40 NaughtyPine at December 21, 2024 02:49 PM

Plants with a family history are the best. In addition to Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter cacti, some indoor begonias and hoyas can be passed down.

Posted by: KT at December 21, 2024 03:09 PM (xekrU)

41 I am not a fan of lettuce as it doesn't agree with me.

Posted by: Notsothoreau at December 21, 2024 02:02 PM (NQtI0


Notsothoreau, this might not be the culprit in your case, but I have found that I'm fine with lettuce if I wash it myself, specifically if it's "pre-washed". There's something they use on pre-washed lettuce that often causes digestive distress for me. Fortunately, it rinses off okay.

Posted by: Emmie at December 21, 2024 03:18 PM (Sf2cq)

42 From Boise area: Lows 32-36 F, highs 39-57. We're starting to get winter rains. White Christmas not in the forecast.

Interesting we should be talking about lettuce and spinach. Due to a health problem that turned up recently, I've been advised to eat a lot more vegetables. The first change I made was from a meat-cheese sandwich for lunch, to a tuna-mayo-spinach salad topped with a few dried blueberries. The side effect losing a few pounds, in just the first week - definitely not complaining! I'll be taking my lettuce and spinach growing efforts more seriously this year. Oh, and yesterday I harvested fresh parsley to add to my salads! I had no idea it would make it to late December without freezing out.

We cut one of the blue spruce trees from our wind-row as our Christmas tree - our first tree cutting. We planted them at double density so we could do this. Blue spruces have very pointy needles...

Husband's Puttering was to frame more of his old mosaics and hang them in the master bathroom. Mine was to take the "vanilla meltys" left over from making peppermint bark, melting them with crushed candy canes, and using that to coat roasted almonds.

Posted by: Pat* at December 21, 2024 04:49 PM (A6A+8)

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