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Showing posts with label Western wild ginger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Western wild ginger. Show all posts

Saturday, October 28, 2023

October holiday

At my front entryway
there is 
no pumpkins to be carved

Carving a face pumpkin was
so enjoyed by my
late husband.
Since his passing there 
are only decorative pumpkins. 

A friend recently visited and brought me three miniature pumpkins she grew in her garden. She shared that the seeds came from a pumpkins she was given. Perhaps I will save seeds to plant in my garden next year. With some searching the name of this miniature pumpkin is Jack Be Little*.

*Each flattened, deeply ribbed 

fruit measures only 5cm (2") tall

and about 13cm (5") across the top. 

If cured fully on the vine, 

the fruits will last as ornaments 

for as long as twelve months! 

Jack Be Little makes perfect 

little bright orange pumpkins 

for fall decorations, 

and each plant produces 

up to eight fruits.

One of my long time local friends celebrates her birthday on this holiday. She has had Halloween parties in the past where she encourages everyone to wear costumes. I recall Dwight often attended while I stayed home. Since I am naturally a very early riser I go to sleep quite a few hours before my late husband did.

When we as youngsters of course we use to canvas our neighborhood for candy and other offered treats. My mother use to make candied apples to hand out or sometimes popcorn balls. Either were deliciously tasty! When we lived in two different Iowa towns all the kids flocked to our house early for their Halloween "trick or treat". They did not want to miss out on whatever my mom made that year.

For all of you birders out there, I have recently read a fabulous book. The title is Better Living Through Birding: Notes from a Black Man in the Natural World by Christian Cooper. which I highly recommend reading. I must confess that I kept National Audubon Society The SIBLEY Guide to Birds (written and illustrated by David Allen Sibley) within easy reach to look up the birds he mentioned as he often traveled about our planet, Mother Earth.

Asarum caudate
(Western wild ginger)
along the North side of my house

While hanging clothes out on my retractable clothesline earlier this month I looked at the plantings along the North side of my house. There in all it subtle glory was a flower on the Western wild ginger that my friend in Pt. Reyes Station invited me to dig up. Not wanting to have only one I dug up two clumps. One of the clumps is quite challenged where it is planted. Hopefully next year it will have settled in more and also have a flower blossom.  

As this October holiday arrives may we each enjoy a belly



Tuesday, March 1, 2022

Shaping up

Hummingbird sage (Salvia spathacea)
blooming in our backyard. 
I love the stunning flowers
The leaves have a wonderful fragrance
which I love as well.

PageRefuge is shaping up to BE a place of abundance for all creatures that visit, and of course for we two humans who have created such on a very small plot of land. In the midst of honoring our work and enjoying what has been created, I am filled with sorrow witnessing what is unfolding half a world away in Ukraine. Witnessing the suffering and violence is the thrust of Roshi Joan Halifax in her writing. You may read her words by clicking on the Ukraine link above. My question to each and everyone of us is if that democracy can be invaded by the command of the Russian autocrat why not ours here in the United States?


Back to PageRefuge where I would like to highlight Dwight's carpentry:

A mini greenhouse now sits on
the West side of our house.
Here I can start seeds
with a regulated temperature
created by the heat mattress
on the bottom.

Then this past Friday we hired a stellar man who is incredibly strong as well as a hard worker. If anyone is looking for someone to complete a task for them feel free to give me a call and I can give you his name and contact information.


In our backyard where the pear tree and apple tree stood when we purchased PageRefuge now sit two 4 feet by 8 feet raised beds. Initially Dwight was considering building them out of redwood but found the redwood available would not stand up long. Concrete blocks last forever; well maybe not forever but way beyond our life times. Hardware cloth was laid on bare dirt to keep out the gophers. Concrete blocks were positioned on the hardware cloth around the perimeter two deep. Our hard worker took his truck to Grab n Grow and picked up 3 cubic yards of dirt. The organic soil seemed the best kind of "dirt" to fill the raised beds since it will provide fertilizer for 60 days.

Western wild ginger (Asarum caudatum) with flower
transplanted from Auntie T's garden in Point Reyes Station.

At MuRefuge there was not adequate shade thus I have not grown Wild ginger before. I was ecstatic when I noticed the flower in my very first attempt to grow this plant.

“The greatest sorrow of life is witnessing. Experiencing our own sufferings is not as difficult as watching others held in fate’s mighty grip. Bearing our own problems is easier because we are always aware that we can exercise other options - - up to the final one. However, it hurts the most when we can do nothing for others. The greatest sorrow is to see those we love suffer helplessly.“                                                                           DENG MING-DAO


While we witness the atrocities being foisted upon the Ukrainian peoples who are valiantly fighting, to dissipate our greatest sorrow may we