.comment-link {margin-left:.6em;}

Monday, January 16, 2006

 
hey farmer, my catnip blooms are usually white with maybe just a hint of pink. i will have to investigate this year more closely. the back yards nip was a bit hard to get to, so i went around the house and my oh my does it look good over there. brown stems fully rebirthed. coral bells look happy as clams. no perma frost in the lawn and dammit, i think the rose stems are turning green.
i do NOT like global warming one bit.


bras bras bras. i for one refuse anything but front closure. screw that 3 choice back thingie. i wear 36. i got some 34s in desperation. cool, who needs a wonder bra, just go down a size.
i can't wear underwire. yet. and dammit. i like cotton!

best thing maybe is start making your own.

Comments:
catnip blooms are usually white

Yup - Catnip all right. Why i mentioned it is that Catmint (same family as Catnip but with different growing habits) will often leave long dead stems. Catmint is generally not as tall and blooms lavendar, not white..although some catnip blooms lavendar as well, and has less tolerance to cold. Cats like either and both are medicinal herds. I was just kind of curious to see if Catmint was trying to bloom this time of year. It has been eerily warm here too. 40's and 50's in Jan! It should be in the teens-20's everyday (with 2-3 foot snowfall) on the ground where I am. Its been really warm and is supposed to get up into the high 40's again next week. CFhrist it was almost 60 last week! I'm worried about the fruit trees blooming too early. Then being killed by a frost. Sigh. Some rose stems will stay green though. They should do that, especially the cold hardy varieties. True perennials never really die. Thats why the grass stays green under the snow. But anyway... weird weather.
 
Post a Comment



<< Home

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?