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January Windowsill [message #10527] Sun, 25 January 2009 18:09 Go to next message
jmeadows  is currently offline jmeadows
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January Windowsill


Smooshes!
Re: January Windowsill [message #10529 is a reply to message #10527 ] Sun, 25 January 2009 18:25 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Black Bear  is currently offline Black Bear
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But, as I say, in January I need flowers.

A sentiment I can wholeheartedly agree with. I often have blooms on my hibiscus in winter, but January means it's still recovering from having been moved and moved back again (making room for the Xmas tree) and thus is unlikely to do anything but droop balefully at me for the next month.

The single geranium is charming!


"The time is always right to do what's right."--MLK Jr.
Re: January Windowsill [message #10531 is a reply to message #10527 ] Sun, 25 January 2009 18:26 Go to previous messageGo to next message
jmeadows  is currently offline jmeadows
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Well...yay no frost?

We're supposed to have snow flurries here tonight, (hm, well earlier they said so, but they seem to have changed their minds), but it's sticking around freezing. This is much better than the nights it dropped to 3F. That was ridiculous.

The windowsill looks fabulous. Very warm and green. Mm.


Smooshes!
Re: January Windowsill [message #10542 is a reply to message #10529 ] Sun, 25 January 2009 18:43 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Robin  is currently offline Robin
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Oh, a hibiscus! Yes! I need a hibiscus! :)
Re: January Windowsill [message #10544 is a reply to message #10542 ] Sun, 25 January 2009 18:44 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Black Bear  is currently offline Black Bear
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Robin wrote on Sun, 25 January 2009 18:43

Oh, a hibiscus! Yes! I need a hibiscus! Smile


Mine would probably beg you to adopt it; I'm a rather neglectful owner. Smile Hmm, reminds me I should water it tonight...


"The time is always right to do what's right."--MLK Jr.
Re: January Windowsill [message #10545 is a reply to message #10542 ] Sun, 25 January 2009 18:45 Go to previous messageGo to next message
b_twin_1  is currently offline b_twin_1
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Robin wrote on Sun, 25 January 2009 18:43

Oh, a hibiscus! Yes! I need a hibiscus! Smile


I want one too. Unfortunately that *is* one of the plants I lost in our rugged frost session a couple of years ago. Sad I'm waiting for everything else to grow up and change the micro-climate.

[Updated on: Sun, 25 January 2009 18:46]


I've got a plan so cunning you could put a tail on it and call it a weasel ~ Blackadder
Re: January Windowsill [message #10552 is a reply to message #10527 ] Sun, 25 January 2009 19:35 Go to previous messageGo to next message
skating librarian  is currently offline skating librarian
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Lovely windowsill photos.

I will have to think winter windowsills some day ... or maybe I should just paint some pictures of a lovely array on a sill and laminate them to window shades for a trompe d'oeil effect. No watering, no taking a chill, and no temptation for the cats to nibble.
Re: January Windowsill [message #10556 is a reply to message #10527 ] Sun, 25 January 2009 23:36 Go to previous messageGo to next message
kfoster2047  is currently offline kfoster2047
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And rhodos. Isn’t that pink-edged white ruffly one darling?

I love rhododendrons. I fell for a ridiculously expensive one last year in frothy palest pink but it never made it through the summer (and they are supposed to do well in our area.) The naked bush is still there and I keep hoping that it will pop back to life this spring. Things do that a lot around here. They sulk and go dormant and (assuming they live at all) look miserable for a couple of years and then all of a sudden they are ten feet tall and ambushing you when you walk up the driveway.

But we went to Lowes for a switchplate today and I came home with another one simply covered in buds that should become frothy deep pink flowers. (I also came home with a gardenia, a blueberry bush, an orchid, and a husband who wasn't quite sure what happened. My English gardening gene only seems to come out in the Spring and he forgets what it's like.)


Karen
Re: January Windowsill [message #10558 is a reply to message #10527 ] Mon, 26 January 2009 02:38 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Fake Frenchie
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You know, Robin, that picture is much more tidy than what I was imagining based on your verbal descriptions. What I was imagining was more like a college student's digs than an English country cottage. Wink
Re: January Windowsill [message #10560 is a reply to message #10527 ] Mon, 26 January 2009 03:56 Go to previous messageGo to next message
AJLR  is currently offline AJLR
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Quote:

that’s the kitchen table at which I sit reading the six or twenty months’ accumulation of magazines


In my experience, one can put six months' accumulation of magazines in a neat stack somewhere and when you come back to them a day later they have become very friendly in the meantime and there's now 18 months' worth there!

Quote:

I just hope it survives to be repotted and grow on: you never know with florist’s as it were occasional plants, like occasional tables, as opposed to nursery ones, which are assumed (sometimes incorrectly) to have a will to live


Yes! I've got a gardenia like that. I was given it by a friend, two years ago, at Christmas. As is normal for many of these things, what looked like one plant was in fact four rooted-and-about-to-flower cuttings. I've always found gardenias tricky anyway, with all the ericaceous and rainwater (!) requirements, but I've managed to get one of the cuttings now to grow into a plant (although not yet a well-shaped one) and we're struggling grimly on in partnership, the two of us.

I like the colour you've got on the wall, under the windowsill! Smile


"Never let a computer know you're in a hurry."
Re: January Windowsill [message #10561 is a reply to message #10527 ] Mon, 26 January 2009 05:57 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Lucy Coats  is currently offline Lucy Coats
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I particularly like your pavo tailusmuticus giganticus plant. Looks like it's flowering beautifully despite the central heating. Razz lol

[Updated on: Mon, 26 January 2009 05:58]


Lucy xx
"'Thou shalt not' might reach the head, but it takes 'Once upon a time' to reach the heart."
http://www.scribblecitycentral.blogspot.com
Re: January Windowsill [message #10562 is a reply to message #10527 ] Mon, 26 January 2009 07:49 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Susan in Melbourne  is currently offline Susan in Melbourne
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I really need to bring my garden inside in the cool. It's looking a bit oven-roasted at the moment, and things will get worse as the rest of this week is going to be 40C (104F). Gasp. Our tanks are down to about half full, so I think I'll actually do some watering with drinking water in my allotted pre-dawn time tomorrow.
Anyway, happy Australia Day everyone! Public holiday today, and we were humiliated in the cricket match with South Africa. Can't win 'em all.
And Australia Day coincided with Chinese New Year this year, so happy new year, too. Year of the Ox coming up, I think.
Re: January Windowsill [message #10576 is a reply to message #10545 ] Mon, 26 January 2009 18:26 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Robin  is currently offline Robin
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Houseplants? Don't you do houseplants? I know, I know, One More Thing. But the only way you're going to have a hibiscus in this climate (or Blackbear's) is as a houseplant.
Re: January Windowsill [message #10577 is a reply to message #10552 ] Mon, 26 January 2009 18:28 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Robin  is currently offline Robin
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[Hellgoddess]
No taking a chill indeed: on the really cold nights when you want to draw your curtains tight you CAN'T because your windowsill plants will freeze.
Re: January Windowsill [message #10578 is a reply to message #10556 ] Mon, 26 January 2009 18:29 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Robin  is currently offline Robin
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Good luck with the gardenia. Gardenias take one look at me and die. Sigh.
Re: January Windowsill [message #10579 is a reply to message #10558 ] Mon, 26 January 2009 18:30 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Robin  is currently offline Robin
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Well, it IS an English country (well, small town) cottage, you know. I did tidy it up a little for the photo. But cameras lie too. It's messier and more crowded in person. :)
Re: January Windowsill [message #10580 is a reply to message #10560 ] Mon, 26 January 2009 18:33 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Robin  is currently offline Robin
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AJLR wrote on Mon, 26 January 2009 03:56

Quote:

that’s the kitchen table at which I sit reading the six or twenty months’ accumulation of magazines


In my experience, one can put six months' accumulation of magazines in a neat stack somewhere and when you come back to them a day later they have become very friendly in the meantime and there's now 18 months' worth there!

Quote:

I just hope it survives to be repotted and grow on: you never know with florist’s as it were occasional plants, like occasional tables, as opposed to nursery ones, which are assumed (sometimes incorrectly) to have a will to live


Yes! I've got a gardenia like that. I was given it by a friend, two years ago, at Christmas. As is normal for many of these things, what looked like one plant was in fact four rooted-and-about-to-flower cuttings. I've always found gardenias tricky anyway, with all the ericaceous and rainwater (!) requirements, but I've managed to get one of the cuttings now to grow into a plant (although not yet a well-shaped one) and we're struggling grimly on in partnership, the two of us.

I like the colour you've got on the wall, under the windowsill! :)



Yes, magazines reproduce at a SHOCKING rate. They do it upstairs on the BED too (wicked things)!!

I am SO IMPRESSED at someone who's kept a gardenia going. They FRIGHTEN me. I'm afraid to walk past them at the florist's for fear they'll die just from being BREATHED on by me and the florist will make me pay . . .

Ah, my lovely deep green? Yes, I got bored with beige and ecru and the entire cottage, barring the bathroom, is in dark colours: dark green, cranberry red, and salmon-orange. Haven't decided what I'm going to do with Third House.
Re: January Windowsill [message #10582 is a reply to message #10576 ] Mon, 26 January 2009 18:46 Go to previous messageGo to next message
b_twin_1  is currently offline b_twin_1
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Robin wrote on Mon, 26 January 2009 18:26

Houseplants? Don't you do houseplants? I know, I know, One More Thing. But the only way you're going to have a hibiscus in this climate (or Blackbear's) is as a houseplant.


I do have some African Violets. One major drawback is lack of window sills. They don't make them any more.... *sigh*

Just not sure how a 7' hibiscus would go in the house..... (do they have miniatures??)


I've got a plan so cunning you could put a tail on it and call it a weasel ~ Blackadder
Re: January Windowsill [message #10586 is a reply to message #10582 ] Mon, 26 January 2009 19:27 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Black Bear  is currently offline Black Bear
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b_twin_1 wrote on Mon, 26 January 2009 18:46



Just not sure how a 7' hibiscus would go in the house..... (do they have miniatures??)


Hibiscus don't have to be 7' tall! Smile They're a bush, you can prune 'em and they just fill in. Mine's a bit leggy, because I don't water it as often I should. But it's only about 5' tall. The ones we had at the botanical garden where I used to work were kept to a manageable 5-6' high indoors...


"The time is always right to do what's right."--MLK Jr.
Re: January Windowsill [message #10591 is a reply to message #10578 ] Mon, 26 January 2009 21:23 Go to previous messageGo to next message
kfoster2047  is currently offline kfoster2047
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Call me an optimist. We planted two last year that died. Of course, we also planted them using "top soil" that turned out to be completely sterile. On the other hand, we have another one that has been lving (if not thriving) for several years and I hope that this will be the year it decides to stop sulking and enjoy itself.


Karen
Re: January Windowsill [message #10598 is a reply to message #10580 ] Tue, 27 January 2009 00:13 Go to previous messageGo to next message
R and B  is currently offline R and B
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yes, I love those colors Robin- my office/den/extra room whatever you want to call it is a bright sunny yellow with cream trim on the windows and since this room although small is south facing it gets great light and is very cheeerful. You can imagine how I loved the whole idea of sun light in 'Sunshine".
altho we have not had a lot of sun of late-it's very grey and drear, very much like Maine in november-not good for anyone who suffers from seasonal affect disorder. Thank god this does not last long-a few months not 6 months!

The blog seems very quiet tonight-where is everyone?
Re: January Windowsill [message #10601 is a reply to message #10598 ] Tue, 27 January 2009 03:58 Go to previous messageGo to next message
AJLR  is currently offline AJLR
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R and B wrote on Tue, 27 January 2009 05:13


The blog seems very quiet tonight-where is everyone?



All of us Northern Hemisphere people are probably drooping around in corners, affected by sunlight-starvation! Smile

I like yellow on the walls, too. Our sitting-room walls are a sort of golden/egg-yolk colour.


"Never let a computer know you're in a hurry."
Re: January Windowsill [message #10602 is a reply to message #10601 ] Tue, 27 January 2009 05:04 Go to previous messageGo to next message
b_twin_1  is currently offline b_twin_1
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AJLR wrote on Tue, 27 January 2009 03:58

R and B wrote on Tue, 27 January 2009 05:13


The blog seems very quiet tonight-where is everyone?



All of us Northern Hemisphere people are probably drooping around in corners, affected by sunlight-starvation! Smile


Haha ... there's this little corner of Oz that I am in that is melting at the moment. ::wilts::
::tries to send excess sunlight to the Northern Hemisphere::


I've got a plan so cunning you could put a tail on it and call it a weasel ~ Blackadder
Re: January Windowsill [message #10603 is a reply to message #10602 ] Tue, 27 January 2009 05:39 Go to previous messageGo to next message
AJLR  is currently offline AJLR
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b_twin_1 wrote on Tue, 27 January 2009 10:04


::tries to send excess sunlight to the Northern Hemisphere::


Thank you, much appreciated. Your sending obviously got this far at least because it's brilliant sunshine here at the moment, even though very chilly. I may go and stand in it at lunchtime (if it's still there), see if I can develop in-built solar panels very quickly. Smile


"Never let a computer know you're in a hurry."
Re: January Windowsill [message #10606 is a reply to message #10603 ] Tue, 27 January 2009 06:59 Go to previous messageGo to next message
holmes44  is currently offline holmes44
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AJLR wrote on Tue, 27 January 2009 05:39

b_twin_1 wrote on Tue, 27 January 2009 10:04


::tries to send excess sunlight to the Northern Hemisphere::


Thank you, much appreciated. Your sending obviously got this far at least because it's brilliant sunshine here at the moment, even though very chilly. I may go and stand in it at lunchtime (if it's still there), see if I can develop in-built solar panels very quickly. Smile


you should try here,it was -34 this morning and went up to a balmy -18 in the afternoon.

[Updated on: Tue, 27 January 2009 06:59]


Bonnie Holmes the faster ahead I go, the more behind I get
Re: January Windowsill [message #10608 is a reply to message #10606 ] Tue, 27 January 2009 07:23 Go to previous messageGo to next message
kfoster2047  is currently offline kfoster2047
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We were in Quebec City over New Year's - we loved it but it was CCCCOOOOOLLLLLDDDDD!


Karen
Re: January Windowsill [message #10609 is a reply to message #10527 ] Tue, 27 January 2009 07:32 Go to previous messageGo to next message
holmes44  is currently offline holmes44
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Quebec city is about 4 hours from where i live.


Bonnie Holmes the faster ahead I go, the more behind I get
Re: January Windowsill [message #10610 is a reply to message #10580 ] Tue, 27 January 2009 07:55 Go to previous messageGo to next message
AJLR  is currently offline AJLR
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Robin wrote on Mon, 26 January 2009 23:33

Ah, my lovely deep green? Yes, I got bored with beige and ecru and the entire cottage, barring the bathroom, is in dark colours: dark green, cranberry red, and salmon-orange. Haven't decided what I'm going to do with Third House.


Which way does Third House face? South at the back, or...? Our yellow-walled sitting-room faces south, so it gets lovely and sunshiney (if there is such a word) in there with even the slightest hint of the stuff. Very comforting, in winter.

Is the garden soil at Third House reasonable, or claggy Hampshire clay?

Apropos of the gardenia, she and I have grown close over the past year. I breathe on her and say 'good morning' every day and she waggles her leaves in return. Smile We're not giving up on each other!


"Never let a computer know you're in a hurry."
Re: January Windowsill [message #10615 is a reply to message #10591 ] Tue, 27 January 2009 12:46 Go to previous messageGo to next message
shalea  is currently offline shalea
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Gardenias for me take a few years to settle in before they really thrive. I've got a Kleim's Hardy that will hopefully reach the "thriving" stage any time now, a more traditional-looking August Beauty that hit that point last year and I now realize (much too late of course!) that I've probably planted to close too the deck steps, and an unknown variety (grown from a cutting of a giant fifty-year old plant in Wilmington, NC) that's reached "very happy" and is roughly the size of an overstuffed loveseat/settee.
Re: January Windowsill [message #10617 is a reply to message #10615 ] Tue, 27 January 2009 13:39 Go to previous messageGo to next message
kfoster2047  is currently offline kfoster2047
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Gardenias for me take a few years to settle in before they really thrive.

Glad I am not the only one! To be fair, the one I have which is not thriving has had a hard life. I planted it at the old house where it was too shady and too dry and then transplanted it to the new house and chunked it in in a hurry in a very sunny bed. Poor thing! But it's still alive and it's starting to look more perky. I am trying Frost Proof ( http://www.brighterblooms.com/product/frost-proof-gardenia.h tml) this time.


Karen
Re: January Windowsill [message #10623 is a reply to message #10610 ] Tue, 27 January 2009 19:58 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Robin  is currently offline Robin
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Sitting room and small bedroom face south, over the garden, at Third House, so gold is a possibility . . . although I'm having small mad thoughts about lurid wallpaper. :)

Once the Building Work Is Over, which has now become my mantra, I may give Third House a gardenia as an attic-warming present. :) It has some very nice house-planty windowsills. You can give me lessons in saying good morning to gardenias.
Re: January Windowsill [message #10624 is a reply to message #10615 ] Tue, 27 January 2009 20:01 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Robin  is currently offline Robin
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I believe they are no crankier than any plant outdoors?? It's those of us that have to grow them as houseplants who despair.
Re: January Windowsill [message #10647 is a reply to message #10576 ] Wed, 28 January 2009 00:28 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Diane in MN  is currently offline Diane in MN
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Robin wrote on Mon, 26 January 2009 17:26

Houseplants? Don't you do houseplants? I know, I know, One More Thing. But the only way you're going to have a hibiscus in this climate (or Blackbear's) is as a houseplant.


They are sold as standards and patio plants here in the summer. I bought one once and brought it in at the end of summer, tried to grow it as a houseplant, but it had some weird sporadic leaf-dropping affliction, possibly because of or possibly in addition to whitefly, and eventually I got fed up and disposed of it. They are annuals here, and I don't mess around with annuals except for my pots of impatiens.



"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
Re: January Windowsill [message #10648 is a reply to message #10580 ] Wed, 28 January 2009 00:47 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Diane in MN  is currently offline Diane in MN
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Robin wrote on Mon, 26 January 2009 17:33


Ah, my lovely deep green? Yes, I got bored with beige and ecru and the entire cottage, barring the bathroom, is in dark colours: dark green, cranberry red, and salmon-orange. Haven't decided what I'm going to do with Third House.



That is a lovely deep green; I have what looks like the same color in my guest room and bath, so I can applaud your taste with complete honesty. Smile I love real color on walls and have pale neutrals only in the hallways. I don't much like wallpaper, and want color to wake up my rooms.



"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
Re: January Windowsill [message #10649 is a reply to message #10606 ] Wed, 28 January 2009 00:50 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Diane in MN  is currently offline Diane in MN
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holmes44 wrote on Tue, 27 January 2009 05:59


you should try here,it was -34 this morning and went up to a balmy -18 in the afternoon.


I'm not sure about northern Minnesota, but you're a lot colder than we've been today. YOU've got bragging rights now!



"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
Re: January Windowsill [message #10650 is a reply to message #10527 ] Wed, 28 January 2009 00:56 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Diane in MN  is currently offline Diane in MN
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The mystery, however, is that while she should be an apple-blossom geranium, which is to say intensely double and somewhat resembling little pink roses††, for life on a windowsill in winter, she’s gone single.

Well, apple blossoms are single, aren't they? She's living up to her name!



"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
Re: January Windowsill [message #10651 is a reply to message #10601 ] Wed, 28 January 2009 01:00 Go to previous messageGo to next message
katinseattle  is currently offline katinseattle
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AJLR wrote on Tue, 27 January 2009 00:58


I like yellow on the walls, too. Our sitting-room walls are a sort of golden/egg-yolk colour.


Yes! Yellow walls! Most of my inside walls are a sort of cream with a hint of butterscotch. Even Seattle's grey winter light looks warm when it bounces off that. The north facing kitchen with its small window is the brightest, purest, sunshine yellow I could find. My daughter blinked a bit when she saw that, then warned me to watch out for planes landing on the roof at night. I'm not a happy cook; I need all the invigoration I can get in the kitchen.
Re: January Windowsill [message #10653 is a reply to message #10651 ] Wed, 28 January 2009 01:18 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Diane in MN  is currently offline Diane in MN
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katinseattle wrote on Wed, 28 January 2009 00:00

AJLR wrote on Tue, 27 January 2009 00:58


I like yellow on the walls, too. Our sitting-room walls are a sort of golden/egg-yolk colour.


Yes! Yellow walls! Most of my inside walls are a sort of cream with a hint of butterscotch. Even Seattle's grey winter light looks warm when it bounces off that. The north facing kitchen with its small window is the brightest, purest, sunshine yellow I could find. My daughter blinked a bit when she saw that, then warned me to watch out for planes landing on the roof at night. I'm not a happy cook; I need all the invigoration I can get in the kitchen.



When we moved to the Seattle area in the mid-80s, we looked at LOTS of houses with yellow walls, countertops, etc. The house we bought was painted yellow throughout. I suspected it had something to do with compensating for grey winters. We did some moderate remodeling before we moved in to that house, and repainted it with a lot of deep blues. And I liked the green and grey winters very much; you folks have had a rough time with storms this year, but I still think western Washington has a great climate.



"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
Re: January Windowsill [message #10662 is a reply to message #10527 ] Wed, 28 January 2009 06:57 Go to previous messageGo to next message
holmes44  is currently offline holmes44
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i am not a good gardener,most plants do not survive me but i have found iris who have some really nice colors do well for me.i even have a black iris.


Bonnie Holmes the faster ahead I go, the more behind I get
Re: January Windowsill [message #10668 is a reply to message #10647 ] Wed, 28 January 2009 09:45 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
Black Bear  is currently offline Black Bear
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Diane in MN wrote on Wed, 28 January 2009 00:28

it had some weird sporadic leaf-dropping affliction, possibly because of or possibly in addition to whitefly, and eventually I got fed up and disposed of it. They are annuals here, and I don't mess around with annuals except for my pots of impatiens.


Yeah, mine lets me know when it's feeling crankety by dropping half its leaves. I wouldn't call it the most successful houseplant I've ever owned, but it puts up my with my vague watering schedule and poor light levels surprisingly well for a tropical. They can sometimes winter over outdoors in Indiana, but it's a bit of a crapshoot.


"The time is always right to do what's right."--MLK Jr.
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