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    Nature

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion
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    • RockChalkinTexas 0R Offline
      RockChalkinTexas 0
      last edited by

      Today's photo is of our Brittany Spaniel, Jasper, that Mike found at a pet store (with papers back then) when he was a puppy and it was just a couple of months after we had moved to Austin in the heart of old Hype Park neighborhood. We rented a duplex on a side street that was a dead end and had a fenced in back yard for $150 per month. He got some quail and began training him in the back yard. Just the best dog ever. Mike would take him to southeastern Kansas to a farm our friends had and could out hunt any other dog. I saw him once catch a pheasant in the air after he had pointed it. We got a female and they had 6 litters. All of the pups went to his hunting buddies up in Kansas and Michigan. Mike would take him to work on the various job sites and when he would be missing, we found him one time in the community swimming pool, he had a girlfriend and he would visit her house and be inside the ac while Mike would be out in 100 degree weather working, and many nights after he couldn't be found, Mike would come and get me and we would be out searching the neighborhood for him. When he was just 6 months old, he fell out of the back of Mike's truck and broke his left hip. He would sleep in the only chair we had when we first moved all that time he was healing. He lived to be 15. We kept one of the males from his last litter, but he didn't get the same genes. The female was bitten by a copperhead in the throat and Mike put Adolph's meat tenderizer on the bite and although she swelled up a lot, she survived.
      Who is your favorite pet?

      image.png

      #RCJH GO KU

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      • RockChalkinTexas 0R Offline
        RockChalkinTexas 0
        last edited by

        UPDATE! Offspring of my banana spider spotted this morning. @nuleafjhawk be aware!

        baby spider.jpg

        #RCJH GO KU

        approxinfinityA nuleafjhawkN 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 3
        • approxinfinityA Offline
          approxinfinity @RockChalkinTexas 0
          last edited by

          @RockChalkinTexas-0 gorgeous!

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          • nuleafjhawkN Offline
            nuleafjhawk @RockChalkinTexas 0
            last edited by

            @RockChalkinTexas-0 Thanks for the heads up!

            America! Where you have the right to be wrong.

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            • RockChalkinTexas 0R Offline
              RockChalkinTexas 0
              last edited by

              I am getting ready to savor the great taste of home grown green beans that I picked yesterday off of the 8 plants that have survived this very wet spring. There is nothing better than eating something you grew and nurtured. They, along with sweet corn we are having, are my most favorite thing to eat and brings back memories of picking my grandmother's in her garden on their farm in South Dakota. I believe my love for gardening stems from the summers I spent at their farm when we lived in Bloomington, MN and our parents would drop off my 4 older brothers and me. They had a well and you would drop the bucket down and pull it up and drink from a ladle. No indoor plumbing. No AC. My four older brothers locked me in the barn loft one day and on another escapade they left me atop a hay bale when the cows came into the pasture. They were brutal but, don't worry, I got them back when they were in junior high and high school. I could earn a couple dollars not telling on them. Worked many times. LOL
              I can almost taste them now.
              harvest 5.27.jpg

              #RCJH GO KU

              C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
              • C Offline
                crimsonblu22 @RockChalkinTexas 0
                last edited by

                @RockChalkinTexas-0 love fresh g beans w/some new taters and some ham!

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                • RockChalkinTexas 0R Offline
                  RockChalkinTexas 0
                  last edited by RockChalkinTexas 0

                  Today's photo is of a crocus. We have lots of these scattered throughout the properties. They seem so delicate. I did not know that they cultivate saffron from these plants!!. Mine are mostly white but have seen a couple of purpleish ones.

                  Crocus (/ˈkroʊkəs/; plural: crocuses or croci) is a genus of seasonal flowering plants in the family Iridaceae (iris family) comprising about 100 species of perennials growing from corms.
                  They are low growing plants, whose flower stems remain underground, that bear relatively large white, yellow, orange or purple flowers and then become dormant after flowering. Many are cultivated for their flowers, appearing in autumn, winter, or spring. The flowers close at night and in overcast weather conditions.
                  The crocus has been known throughout recorded history, mainly as the source of saffron. Saffron is obtained from the dried stigma of Crocus sativus, an autumn-blooming species. It is valued as a spice and dyestuff, and is one of the most expensive spices in the world. Iran is the center of saffron production.
                  Crocuses are native to woodland, scrub, and meadows from sea level to alpine tundra from the Mediterranean, through North Africa, central and southern Europe, the islands of the Aegean, the Middle East and across Central Asia to Xinjiang in western China. Crocuses may be propagated from seed or from daughter cormels formed on the corm, that eventually produce mature plants. They arrived in Europe from Turkey in the 16th century and became valued as an ornamental flowering plant.

                  image.png

                  #RCJH GO KU

                  approxinfinityA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • approxinfinityA Offline
                    approxinfinity @RockChalkinTexas 0
                    last edited by

                    @RockChalkinTexas-0 this one was really cool! I knew nothing about crocus.

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                    • RockChalkinTexas 0R Offline
                      RockChalkinTexas 0
                      last edited by

                      Today's photo is of a couple of blooming cacti. We have a lot of prcikly pear, pencil, barrel, and "old man" (pictured here) with pink bloom. There is an "old lady cactus" too. We have had workers in the past that asked if they could cultivate the edible fruit (red blooms) called "tunas" and the pads to eat. YUCK. Hannah once fell into a pencil cactus patch and for a week I pulled the little stingers out of her. If you even get near them, they shoot their stingers at you.

                      image.png

                      #RCJH GO KU

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                      • RockChalkinTexas 0R Offline
                        RockChalkinTexas 0
                        last edited by

                        Today's photo is of a Trumpet Creeper that I photographed in the parking lot of The Bluebonnet Cafe, which has been there forever. I have one growing on one of my lots out back. However, I am not about to go walking out there because I would be eaten up with chiggers. Because of all our rain this spring, the grass back there is almost waste high. I have a hard enough time working in the garden and mowing and filling up the hummingbird feeders without getting eaten up.
                        Trumpet Creeper may be the most famous hummingbird attractor. Not only are its big, showy red flowers a treat to look at, but hummingbirds will swarm them as fall migration begins. This vine can bloom as early as June, but usually peaks in August and early September. Make sure you give it space to grow, otherwise it can take over and grow on top of other nearby plants.
                        Trumpet Creeper is good for adding some vertical structure to your yard, since it can grow up high on trees, walls, roofs, or almost anything else, leaving plenty of space on the ground for other plants.

                        Butterfly bush.jpg

                        #RCJH GO KU

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