Monday, April 13, 2026

A Rose Is A Rose Is A Rose. And So Forth


I've written about this rose before and how the man we bought this house from advised me that when it came time to prune it, to smoke a great big joint and proceed from there. 
Well, to my sometimes sorrow, I don't enjoy the effects of cannabis so I've never tried that but up until this year, I have managed to get it pruned and mostly weeded out once a year, at least. 
This is what it looks like right now.


Shameful and neglected. There are at least five kinds of weeds growing around it and all of them...you guessed it! Invasive. Pulling them is even more challenging due to the fact that the thorns on the rose canes are rhinoceros-hide pierce-worthy. This is also what makes trimming the vines a perilous procedure. Despite the fact that I have not come within ten feet of touching the plant this spring, much less doing anything to take care of it, it is blooming about as well as it always does.
Which is to say- few but powerful blooms appear. The scent of these roses is exactly what roses are supposed to smell like and get outta my face with all your fancy hybrids that don't smell like anything. 

I really am not sure what variety of rose this is. I believe it is either a Damask Rose or a Cecile Bruner climbing rose. I keep reading about the differences between those two and there are some things that make it squarely fit into one catagory, and some in the other. Both are quite old, especially the Damask which has been around since the 1300's, I think. The Cecile Bruner is a Victorian era rose. 
Whatever it is, it is hardy as hell and can climb like nobody's business. There are canes that have reached up and into the magnolia tree which abuts it, attaining a height of twenty feet or more so far. 
I do love this plant and it's flowers and I swear I will at least get around to weeding the bed it's in. The building behind it is the old well-pump shed where many things go to die around here. Things that someone does not have a need for at the moment but could quite possibly in the future. 
Someone being mostly Glen but also me. I have Kathleen's soap-making supplies in there and of course I'm never going to use them and they're probably all too old but I just can't bring myself to dump them. I will. Eventually. 

 


Also, eventually, if I don't get on it, that rose is going to eat the shed.
And I suppose that as usual, Shakespeare got it right and a rose by any other name...

The task of taking care of that beauty is one more thing I have on my to-do list in this yard. I get so overwhelmed that I am paralyzed. I've said this before. Even recently. But it's completely true. I know that if I just put on my overalls and grab the proper tools and the garden cart, I will begin and that is at least a start to it.

I didn't feel very energetic this morning and I understand why. I didn't do much physically with the boyos but there was quite a bit of emotional activity going on. The responsibility of keeping them alive is hard enough, keeping them happy, fed, and entertained is a horse of a different color. I don't think anyone says that anymore. Perhaps no one has said it since the Wizard said it in the Wizard of Oz movie. But you know what I mean. 

It took me hours to get myself motivated to go to town but finally I did with the kick in the ass I needed coming from Lily and Jessie who invited me to go to lunch with them. I needed to pick up my hormone prescription too, and that is of utmost importance. 
So I put on a bra-like garment and one of my new Flax dresses. The teal one which is almost the same color as one of my old favorites and off I went to town in my Prius, a stereotypical grandmother on the road of life. 
Or, the road of Buck Lake. 
We met at an Indian restaurant which is rather new and housed in the same building as the old Indian buffet which we loved but which did not survive Covid. This restaurant has no buffet but the food was delicious and the service was terrific and we had a good time. Owen called his mama when he got out of school, as he always does, and she invited him to stop in and join us on his way home, which he did. 
I don't care how often I see that boy (man), I am shocked all over again by his size. It's truly like it happened overnight. At least to me with my old brain which grows less than elastic every day. 
We ended the meal by boxing up all the leftovers and giving them to the growing boy (man) to take home and eat for a second lunch. I'd tell you all the delicious dishes we had but of course I've forgotten. Paneer, lentils, chicken, raita, garlic pita, and a lot of other things were involved. We shared. We also learned that at that particular restaurant, "mild" spice level is really too mild. I wonder if on the order the server writes, "WPM" for White Person Mild.
We debated the question of whether or not you can ask for hot sauce in an Indian restaurant. We meekly questioned the server and he said that no, they did not have hot sauce but he could bring us some chopped peppers and when he brought them to the table he warned us in no uncertain terms that they were HOT. 
They weren't that hot at all. 
But no one charged us an extra 75 cents, either. 

I went to Costco. I went to Publix. What else is new? 
I came home and took off my bra-like garment, unloaded everything and settled back into being home where I find my peace. 

When I went outside to take pictures of the Rose That Ate The Magnolia Tree, Maurice had to follow me out, as usual. She rolled around in the dirt, stretching and practicing her ballet moves.


Or are they jazz moves? 
Whatever they are, they are cat moves and as such, are graceful. 

On my abbreviated tour around the back yard, I checked a pot in which I had yet another giant begonia planted and did not bring in for the cold weather. Having two other pots with the begonias growing in them, I didn't even bother to cover them up. I had zero hopes of it having survived the freezes and yet...


A very small thing which brings me happiness. 

Should I comment on Trump The Christ Healing Lazarus?
No. No I should not except to say that it would seem that even his most ardent supporters are stepping back and saying, "Whoa." 
And other related things. 

I swear- he's going down. He's going down like a water mine in the Strait of Horuz. He also spoke of water boats.

And speaking of which, Mr. Moon has been out on his own water boat today after he got the floor guys all taken care of and they began their work. 

You know, water boats are the best kind of boats. Some say they are the most incredible boats of all. Some say they've never seen boats like water boats. 

I'll shut up now. 

Love...Ms. Moon

P.S. If you want to hear about the first time I ever made soap with Kathleen, you can find that post HERE. 

There are other soap-making-with-Kathleen posts that I just went back and read and found to be pretty okay. If you haven't been here since the dawn of time and sometimes wonder about who this Kathleen was of whom I speak, these will give you some idea. Just put "making soap" into the search bar at the top left of my blog. 
I feel like all of that was another lifetime ago. And in a way, it was. But it is all still a part of my own lifetime and I honor and respect those experiences with Kathleen who is one of the most amazing, different sorts of person I've ever met. I could say "was" but she truly still "is". 
She is still alive in my heart and in the hearts of many, I am sure. 


40 comments:

  1. I’m a soap maker and already love Kathleen even though i don’t remember her story. I’ll look her up. Good luck with the beautiful smelling rose. I’ve never had much luck with roses. It may be because i don’t coddle my plants. They live or die. I’ll water, i’ll weed, i’ll even fertilize if i remember. Lunch with your family is always a pleasure to read about. I don’t have that privilege on such a long term basis. I do so enjoy it when it happens, though.

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    1. I am lucky in so many regards.
      I don't do a darn thing for my roses except try to keep them weeded, watered, and pruned at least once a year.

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  2. I have not made soap, but I have helped my daughter with her candle making business, so I think the concept is similar. She made soap too but never needed extra manpower like she did when making candles she sold online and at shows. BUT enough of that drivel. - I ventured out to the fenced in garden previously mentioned with all the volunteer garlic. This old body worked 3-/2 hours in 80-degree sun - 90% of that time sitting on my little garden stool. There are at least 100 Rose of Sharon seedlings in that garden which cannot be pulled out but must be lifted with a spade. That is another day. Your gardening perseverance has inspired me. We shall see how my shoulders and upper back feel in the morning. I have notg yet addressed the tree saplings in the garden. One vile thing at a time. And the garlic is still there.

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    1. Good lord, Ana! I don't think I could do that! Let me ask you- how do you use your gardening stool? I can't seem to find a comfortable way to sit and weed and it has to be moved every time I need different access. I end up just kneeling in the dirt and knee-walking to the next patch.

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    2. My little stool is a rectangular bench about knee high and maybe 24 inches across. I plant my butt on it spread-eagled and lean forward. Sometimes I sit astride it and other times it is like a child's swing seat. I was wrong about how my body would feel the next day. EVERYTHING hurt especially the backs of my legs and thighs- that leaning over part was like 1,000 toe touches. The arms and shoulders felt like I had done that many jumping jacks. So I went to chair yoga the next morning and thought that would help. Nope.

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  3. Cats rolling and stretching on the ground? Not ballet, not jazz. Clearly, they are all channeling Martha Graham.

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  4. Cecile Brunner is one of my favorite roses, cascading all over everywhere.

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    1. I am quite confused. From what I read, Cecile Brunners are practically thornless and these definitely are not.

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    2. Yes, when you mentioned thorns I concluded it was a different rose.

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  5. Roses should be heavily pruned in winter

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    1. I am aware of that. I just didn't get around to it. I pruned the rest of the roses though. And around here, they sometimes need another pruning in spring as they grow all winter long.

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  6. What a beautiful rose, and so healthy looking! No black spot down there? Or maybe a resistant variety of rose? Either way truly lovely and something you are doing is making it happy! We're now at the beginning of bamboo kicking season here; it's very dry so the sprouts aren't growing very fast but still enough to fill up 4 trash cans along with the pruning. No shortage of things to do outside!

    Ceci

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    1. I don't know about the black spot. I've never seen it on my roses. All the roses I have are heirlooms though and that could make a difference.
      I don't even pick up the bamboo I kick. Well, sometimes I do.

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  7. It always seems that the roses with the worst thorns have the most beautiful scent, which is why I don't grow roses. I hate thorns, even more than I love the scent of roses.
    I make my own soap and do find it amazing that it turns into soap. It's magic, which is what I'm sure the first person who accidently made soap thought too.

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    1. I think of the many, many years of trial and error that it must have taken for people to learn to make soap that isn't harsh. Well, it must have taken a lot of time and trial and error for someone to come up with the idea of mixing lye with ashes. Thinking about this sort of thing is so interesting to me.
      WHO INVENTED SCISSORS?

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    2. Scissors were not invented by one person, but rather evolved over thousands of years, with the earliest known spring scissors appearing in Mesopotamia or Ancient Egypt around 1500 BC. These early tools consisted of two bronze blades connected by a flexible strip. The modern pivoted design was invented by the Romans around 100 AD

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  8. I believe that rose is a Rambler, a bit different from a climberwhich I htink has tendrils to hook onto things for climbing, while a rambler simply has extremely long canes for clambering up and over rooftops etc. And wicked thorns.
    I also think if all someone wants is eye candy then showy hybrids are fine, but if anyone wants their garden to smell like roses the old fahioned types are best.
    "Jesus Trump"? I saw that on the news last night and had to turn away quick smart.

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    1. I sort of hate the popular for landscapes roses known as knock-outs. They bloom profusely and are fairly lovely to look at but they have no scent.
      Did you see that Trump is now claiming he was a DOCTOR, not Jesus in that video.

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  9. Ha ha "White Person Mild"! In the UK it's kind of a game to see how hot you can have your curry after downing a few pints. They probably wouldn't be so enthusiastic without the beer though! I love Indian food but learned not to have it too hot because then you can't taste it. I feel the same way about beer too - not hot, I just don't like ice cold beer as all you can taste is "cold" (to my mind at least, but then I don't drink much beer anyway)!

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    1. Yep. White People Mild. As in, Oh, this ketchup is so spicy!
      Our family goes harder than that for sure. Owen is already addicted to heat.

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  10. You could write a book about invasive gardening! The height of that rose is astounding. I’ve found thorns like those pierce through the toughest protective gear. I just read about your first soap-making. I’m now off to read all about Kathleen. There’s a soap-maker that sells at the public market in Ballard (Seattle) and their products are incredible. I stocked up one time, but it’s just so expensive.

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    1. The ingredients that go into making soap are expensive too! Especially if you're using really good ones with real scents, not artificial ones. And I'm sure that's why small-batch soap (is that a thing?) are so pricey. I've been using Dr. Bronner's bar soap and I like it. It is very mild and seems to do a fine job. It's more expensive than regular shelf brands but a bar lasts a long time.
      Yes. Some thorns are like Maurice's claws.

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  11. "a bra-like garment," hahahaha! And as for Christly Trump Healing Lazarus, the best meme I've seen so far said it was Jeffrey Epstein he was busy raising from the dead, which DOES seem more likely.

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    1. I've been using that phrase for years. I hate bras. With a passion. Always have.
      I saw that some people were saying Lazarus was Jeffrey Epstein too. What I want to know is who in the hell is low enough to make these AI renderings? Doesn't some human have to be involved?

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  12. amazing to me that the Jesus meme is the bridge too far for those window lickers. Child trafficking is just fine but an AI image is their breaking point? Disgusting

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    1. Yeah. Well, I don't understand it either. I don't understand why or how any person voted for that shit. And yet, vote for him they did.

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  13. I don't think you could possibly keep up with all of the things to do in your yard because you have so much yard! But even the wild, weedy parts still look lovely - like the sweet roses blooming in front of the rustic shed! So pretty!

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    1. You're right Ellen. I have, in fact, too much yard. For one old woman, at least. And the weedy parts just make me feel guilty and inadequate.

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  14. The soft pink rose is beautiful, and I do love a nice rose scent in the air. The rose is a real climber. Weeding and trimming back the rose will be an enormous job. I'd be tempted to cut everything to the ground and just start over. I suspect the rose would survive but it would be a risk.
    Each day is a little more insane, anything can happen, invoking Jesus being the latest tactic. The good news is more people are abandoning this leadership.

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    1. When I prune that rose, I absolutely do cut it back to the ground. Or close to it. I'm not sure it can even be killed.
      I think people are getting fed-up with Trump. Him portraying himself as Jesus was a bridge too far for many holy rollers.

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  15. At our favorite Thai restaurant you can request "no hot", "Mexican hot", "Thai hot" or "Laotian hot" which tickles me, I can't help it. We often say that "no hot" is just "white people hot". At another Vietnamese establishment, when I order "a little spicy" I'm convinced the lady thinks it's funny to spice the you know what out of the food and chuckle as I gasp my way through. The Vietnamese do not play with the spice!

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    1. That would tickle me too. It's funny how different cultures perceive the use of different peppers in their food.
      I think that lady would piss me off.

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  16. There are two climbing roses at the base of the big very old white crepe myrtle next to the garage that were all up in the crepe myrtle and the water oak next to it. The last couple of years those very old canes have died and the hurricane in '24 blew everything out. The roses still live and are growing new canes but no roses up in the canopy yet.

    My son was a short dumpy kid until he got to be about 16 at which point he shot up. One year he was shorter than all his boy cousins and the next he was taller.

    In Cozumel one year we were in a Mexican restaurant and the server put down the two dishes of hot sauce in front of us gringos, pointed to one and saud 'hot', pointed to the other and said 'too hot'. The too hot was habeneros.

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    1. It will be interesting to see what happens to those roses.
      Jessie was my child who just seemed to change overnight. She went from not tall at all to being one of, if not the, tallest kid in her classes.
      One time when I was in Cozumel, a server who was a fairly old man, saw me eating some pretty spicy stuff and he brought me a pepper to try and eat. I think it may have been a habanero. This was so long ago that I can't quite remember but I think I was able to get a lot of it down. He was delighted.

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  17. I know what you mean about thorny roses. We have some that are so "sticky," as the English say, that I steer clear of them as much as possible.

    Dave and I were just talking about how badly Trump is running off the rails. I hadn't heard "water boats," but the Jesus meme -- and then his insistence that it represented a doctor -- was truly over the top.

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    1. "Sticky" is a good name for those roses although I'm not sure that word adequately describes the thorns and what they can do.
      Oh yes. Water boats. As opposed to...land boats? From which you can view land sharks?
      Yeah. All doctors dress just like Jesus and have magical light coming out of their hands as they raise the dead. As they do, you know.

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  18. late to the party....but wow...Cecile Bruner.... back in my hippie days in my yellow 100 year old hippie house with the cross street neighbor that had the most lovely Wisteria EVER.....he also had a Cecile Bruner rose....that along with the Wisteria....was claiming his house. he was totally amenable to me going over there with snippers whenever I wanted to snip Cecile's....or Wisteria..... sigh...I lived there 7 years and it was a paradise of sorts in many ways.....these two- being two of them!
    Susan M

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