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Backyardnotes

~ All things botanical in photos and words—in my West Seattle garden and elsewhere; seeing and creating art and assorted musings.

Backyardnotes

Category Archives: Weather

APRIL PHOTO A DAY: TULIPS

04 Monday Apr 2011

Posted by backyardnotes in April flowers, Rain, tulips, Weather

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THE EARLY TULIPS ARE TAKING A BEATING with all of the rain we’ve had of late. This one, loaded with raindrops and not quite flopped to the ground caught my eye. Perhaps the mid and late season ones will fare better.

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LAST LEG: DEATH VALLEY

28 Monday Feb 2011

Posted by backyardnotes in Desert, Travel, Weather

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OUR LAST WEEK IN THE SUN WAS SPENT IN DEATH VALLEY NATIONAL PARK. We had such a wonderful time over ten days last year we decided to return and do some more exploring.

After leaving Red Rock Canyon we traveled north to Ridgecrest, CA and then northeast through the Trona Valley and into DVNP. The Trona/Searles Valley is notable for Searles Lake, a large dry lake containing borax and other valuable minerals and the Trona Pinnacles,   “… unique landscape consists of more than 500 tufa (calcium carbonate) pinnacles rising from the bed of the Searles Dry Lake basin. These tufa spires, some as high as 140 feet, were formed underwater 10,000 to 100,000 years ago when Searles Lake formed a link in an interconnected chain of Pleistocene lakes stretching from Mono Lake to Death Valley.” (BLM website). There is an annual event in Trona that looks interesting, the Trona Gem-O-Rama. If you are intrigued in any way by rocks and minerals, this could be for you (and me). The big get here is pink halite.

From Trona Pinnacles it’s about another forty-five minutes to DVNP, along a red road with the Slate range to the west and the Panamints on the east.

Panamint Springs is the west entrance to Death Valley. Last year we drove up into the Panamints to see the charcoal kilns, 8,000 feet above the Panamint valley floor. The kilns were built to burn Pinyon pine to produce charcoal for metal smelting some eighty miles away. At Panamint Springs there is a small resort with café, cabins, and RV campground. Last year we had lunch at the café and Tom like the chili so much he wrote to the owner to ask for the recipe. This year we stopped for a chili-to-go order and lo and behold, there on the bulletin board was Tom’s letter extolling the virtues of the chili and recipe request! He continues to await the arrival of the recipe.

Texas Spring campground was our destination for the next four days. (campground overview above as a storm moved through on day two) above Furnace Creek. This is a wonderful c.g. Great view to the west, of Death Valley and the Panamint mountains rising to 11,000 feet above the valley and the Amargosa  Range behind, to the east. I had hoped to be here the first week or so to participate in the 29th Annual Painter’s Open Camp/Paint Out sponsored by watercolor artist Howard Lucas (Mt. Lassen Art Center). The paint-out was happening last year when we were camped at Texas Spring and we got to chat with him a bit. This year the weather and forecast weather during the first ten days was not to our liking – cold – so I missed out; maybe next year. There are many reasons we like this campground. Scenic value is at the top of the list with amazing color everywhere; we can strike out to the north and/or east and hike until we’ve had enough, which we did on our second day; there are no generators allowed here, so it remains peaceful. A few photos below illustrate the reason to come here and paint, do some hiking, or just chill. January and February have comfortable temperatures, lots of sunshine — a welcome break from northwest winters.

Eastern edge of campground

Northeast

Southern perimeter looking east. Easy hike to the top and not as far as it looks.

Looking southwest to the Panamints as a storm threatened.

On day three a massive sand storm moved through, traveling north to south. The wind began blowing late the previous evening and did not stop for another day. It was so windy that as we stepped from the truck at Dante’s View, 5,475 feet above the valley, we could hardly stand up. The temperature was 44° but felt more like 24°! No hiking here, but the 360° views are spectacular. We made a point of seeing sights we missed last trip, so after Dante’s View we toured Twenty Mule Team Canyon, a borax prospecting area, and made the short walk up to Zabriske Point, an overlook to Gold Canyon and out toward DV. By early afternoon the sand had obscured all views of the valley and the Panamints. Texas Spring had plenty of wind, but it’s like a little cove so we escaped the sand devestation. As sunset approached the winds died off a bit and shifted direction and the sandstorm became a wind event only. We had some dramatic clouds to the south and east lit by the declining sun.

Looking north the valley looks like a huge sea (which it was!).

The setting sun lit up the hills to the east.

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IT’S COLD, FRIGID, BEAUTIFUL AND FAR FROM HAWAII

24 Wednesday Nov 2010

Posted by backyardnotes in SNOW! COLD!, Weather

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THE ONLY THING WARM THIS MORNING was the reflected light on the Olympic mountains from this morning’s sunrise . A cool 23° on the hillside above Puget Sound.

At first light every morning we have several visitors:

They generally don’t like to share the feeders with each other but have been forced to since we are hanging only one feeder at a time (one hags out, one thaws inside).

This was the scene on Monday afternoon before the wind came up big-time. Some time after dark we had gusts strong enough to snap off the top one-third of an Incense Cedar, seen below yesterday. I hope the tree will survive. The falling top missed my vegetable garden by just ten feet!

A little garlic shoot poking through the snow.

Brussels sprout stalks waiting for Thanksgiving dinner.

A couple of maple leaves hanging on make a striking contrast against the snow.

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FROM SUMMER’S LAST FLING TO OCTOBER RAIN

10 Sunday Oct 2010

Posted by backyardnotes in Rain, Tomatoes, Weather, West Seattle garden

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LAST WEEK WAS A LITTLE BONUS — SUNSHINE NEARLY EVERY DAY. The summer-like temperatures are helped to extend the tomato harvest that should have begun in August, but who can complain about fresh ripened tomatoes in October? The leaves from the tomato vines have now been removed to coax the fruit into ripening before the nights are repeatedly in the 40’s. I generally do this near the end of September; seems to help. The photo above was from mid-week, the photo below is today’s rain induced harvest — some ripe, some nearly ripe, and lots of splits, twenty pounds worth. Guess that maps out some of today’s endeavors.

I KNOW THAT FALL IS REALLY HERE because the spiders have been putting in overtime to construct webs of enormous proportions and a lot of them too.


Fall is here with the nodding heads of fading pink anemone japonica. Chrysanthemums, the colors of falling leaves, are blooming, as are fall cyclamen, nerine lilies, little pale purple asters, and fall crocus. Some of the few dahlias that I have seem to be in their prime now with intensifying color in fall sunlight. And yesterday some very real October rain to shock us back into reality. One blessing is the warm temperatures are continuing (Friday morning at 6:00 a.m. it was 57°, yesterday 58°!)

Despite of the dreariness of spirit that rain engenders, all things growing look lovely with the shimmer of raindrops. So I stood on the deck under cover and shot with the zoom to see what turned up.

Nerines and columbine.

The furry pink head of dwarf fountain grass, pennisetum setaceum and salvia.

The rose ‘Playboy’ (above and below).

And finally, raindrops clinging to the leaves of the armandii clematis at the roof edge above the deck.

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PICK AND EAT! GREEN, GARDEN TREATS

18 Friday Jun 2010

Posted by backyardnotes in Native plants, Rain, The beach, Travel, Weather

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Tags

beach glass, fava beans, Gardening, peas, rain

WHERE DID THE LAST MONTH GO? I can hardly believe it has been that long since the last post!

THE PEAS ARE IRRESISTIBLE, PLENTIFUL AND THERE HAS BEEN A LOT OF PICKING AND EATING straight away–no cooking needed! The peas that I have growing are snow peas and snap peas. I have not cooked a single one yet as we have eaten them in the raw state in green salads and as a salad, in a slight variation of the pea and bacon salad found at deli counters over the last fifteen years. On Friday I picked nearly four pounds of peas and over nine pounds of fava beans! Bountiful!

Once the fava beans are shelled, the weight drops considerably. At this stage they are ready for blanching and then slipping off the bitter outer skins to reveal the sweet, tender, green bean inside.

The blanched and shelled beans make a tasty spread for bread when puréed with a touch of garlic, lemon and olive oil. Today I will finish picking the peas and favas so I can finally plant tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, and squash plants. The weather has been so rainy and below normal temperatures for June. But, wishful thinking, summer is just a couple of days away! This might be the latest I’ve gotten the tomatoes into the ground.

Time for a little catch up on what has bloomed over the last few weeks!

Astrancia ‘Ruby Wedding’

Papaver somniferum in lavender

and a frilly red one.

An unknown mushroom that popped up last week after rain. It is eight inches across!

And speaking of rain, it beads up perfectly on the leaves of this hosta ‘Abiqua Gourd’.

LAST SATURDAY we took a trip north to Port Townsend to meet Erynn and a friend and walk to Glass Beach at the foot of McCurdy Point on the Strait of Juan de Fuca. It is a three mile walk each way and with a minus tide there is plenty of time to search for glass treasures and check out sea life that is hidden half of the day.

Beach glass, pottery shards and assorted treasures!

There were thousands of these little sand spirals and piles. Worms?

After walking the beach we checked in at Fort Worden State Park a late 19th and early 2oth century coastal artillery fort on the Strait of Juan de Fuca. It is one of three forts that guarded the entrance to Puget Sound. It is an interesting place to explore and has great views north to the San Juan Islands and Whidbey Island to the east. The old concrete batteries for gun emplacements make for great exploring and photographing,

Lots of dark places down stairs and behind big metal doors.

The lighthouse at Pt. Wilson, just a short walk from the campground.

The lovely, dainty Nootka rose.

Time now for gardening, the weather today is fair and looking good for at least acouple more. We may even have temperatures in the normal range of 70°! Some of the first lilies are in bloom and a pale blue delphinium too. So much to do!

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