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It’s spring! Okay, not really, but the end of February is like spring in Texas, so my green thumb is programmed to start itching early . My daffodils poked their floppy heads up every February and I would be planting annual seeds. I love flowers–marigolds and zinnias are my faves for annuals, but I’ll plant anything. I love to experiment. I used to have a huge vegetable garden, too. Texas is a great place to grow peppers, in particular, and I enjoyed growing all kinds of weird peppers that I didn’t know what to do with.
When we visited our old house in the fall, I saw that the Horrible New People had ripped out every single one of my rose bushes. (This nearly made my cry.) I don’t want to even think about my daffodils. In my imagination, they are still there, poking their floppy heads up. If the Horrible New People dug them up and tossed them, I just don’t want to know. I wish I didn’t know about the roses. I miss my old gardens, but I’m ready to learn to love my new ones in North Carolina. Last year, I didn’t plant anything. We arrived here at the end of March and it was all I could do last spring to unpack and get the house in order. We did have a lovely surprise the day we pulled up to the house. It was March 30 and we’d bought the house in February and hadn’t seen it since. We drove up to the house to move in and the yard was full of azaleas. Everywhere. They were gorgeous. We bought the house rather quickly and the yard was snow-covered, so we had no idea what was here.
But what I miss most about Texas is my sister and my parents. ::sob:: And after that, my duckies. This is my back porch in Texas.
And this is what they’d bring me in the spring.
We have ducks here, but not nearly that many.
This house, like our Texas house, is two acres on a lake, but here the yard is mostly wooded and very shady, and the soil and climate are different, so I’ve got a lot to learn about gardening in North Carolina. I can’t wait to get started! Anyone else itching to plant?
Posted by Suzanne McMinn on February 22, 2005
"It was a cold wintry day when I brought my children to live in rural West Virginia. The farmhouse was one hundred years old, there was already snow on the ground, and the heat was sparse-—as was the insulation. The floors weren’t even, either. My then-twelve-year-old son walked in the door and said, “You’ve brought us to this slanted little house to die." Keep reading our story....
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by Pete on November 20, 2009
November 2009
"First it's glowing, then it's snowing! A pause, then screaming squalls and williwaws. Bright but bitter, then a thaw. Yet again it's cold and storming: What ever happened to global warming?"
Saturday, Nov 21
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Currently: 32˚F
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Hi: 58˚, Lo: 35˚
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I don’t write much on my blog but just did... - Celia on I Want to Do Something for You
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