I know. I KNOW- you just can't get enough of Maurice.
She's such an easy cat to love, isn't she? So affectionate, so loving, so very gentle.
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
She came and found me last night at the time I am usually heading to bed. I get in bed before Glen because reading in bed before I go to sleep is one of my greatest pleasures. She followed me into the bedroom and after I'd taken my shower and was cozy under the covers, I heard her scratching the mattress foundation (I guess that's what it is) which is what she does before she jumps up to join me and she did.
She didn't settle down immediately though. She seemed to want to do a full body scan and she slowly circled me several times as if to make sure it was me. I kept asking her, "You want a kiss?" and finally, she did indeed put her face up to mine and then her lips up to mine and don't tell me cats don't understand human language. We had a few little chaste pecks and then she lay down on the pillow beside my head. As seen above.
That picture cracks me up. Somehow, by some miracle, I managed to take a pretty darn good close-up selfie. Well, actually it's mostly a picture of Maurice with me photobombing it.
And she slept with me or on me all night.
It took her an entire day to finally leap up into Mr. Moon Daddy's lap but she finally did and I think they're probably napping together in the new recliner as we speak.
It's been drizzling all day long, sometimes coming down a little harder, sometimes a little softer.
I've loved it.
I got a lot done. I unpacked everything, put everything away, did laundry, tried to create some order on the kitchen island, did some sweeping and tidying, made up the guest room bed clean. Mark had washed the sheets so all I had to do was put 'em on the bed.
But the main thing I did today was to pick green beans.
Y'all remember how they had just started to make beans the day before we left? Probably not but that's okay.
So we were gone for eight days and I spent at least an hour out there with my baskets, picking.
Now that was only one side of the trellis. But I had to take a break and eat some lunch before I tackled the other side. I didn't get as many there but overall, I filled up one 2.5 gallon ziplock entirely and another one two thirds full.
It seems to me that the beans are longer this year than I've ever seen them. And not just because they were left on the vines so long. A lot of them were not particularly over-girthy but were long indeed.
Every year I swear I'm not going to plant as many of them the next year as I end up having pickled and canned and cooked so many that, as I wrote a friend, I am weeping over my canner and screaming, "I am not living in a little house on the fucking prairie!" Because not only are they incredibly prolific but they continue to put out beans for months.
I will share with the kids.
I also got two cucumbers and I dug some potatoes which made me realize that scabby-skinned potatoes are not something that just happens because I left them in the ground so long, but are suffering from "common scab," a soil borne bacterium. Streptomyces scabies, to be exact.
That sounds good, right?
You can still eat the potatoes if you peel them which I have been doing the last several years and we haven't died so I suppose that's true. But have you ever tried to peel a bunch of golf-ball sized potatoes?
Is it even worth it?
Sigh.
I got my Roseland side-of-the-road succulents in pots. I need more pots. Of all sizes. One of them is actually planted in with a sea grape for the time being and here's the other one.
Just when I think the camera on my new phone just will not do, I get a picture like this. Anyway, my Picture This plant app says it's a Chandelier plant which is a type of Kalanchoe. It doesn't look great but it's spent about four days in a baggie with its roots wrapped in wet paper towels and anything that can grow on the side of the road in Roseland is a tough plant.
The other one I dug up is supposedly a Life plant and wasn't that Kalancho I bought a month or so ago the same? Could be. And I do believe I already have a pot of this growing, also from Roseland. Here's the new baby one in its temporary nursery bed.
Since I dug it up and put it in the baggy, its root shot this up.
As I said, tough plants. Plus, just about what you'd expect from a plant called "Life."
One more thing I did was to figure out where I wanted to put the darling little golden orange bowls and lids that were sent by Boud.
She also made that beautiful butterfly too.
Perfect.
Lily painted the zinnia picture, my darling friend Lynn made the stained glass, and Linda Sue made the Mermaid Maggie in the seashell which catches the morning sun and creates an ethereal glow.
It's my plant nursery/art museum/laundry room right there where I can see it every time I walk by it or fold my clothes. Mr. Moon made the table upon which much of this happens which you can't see in that picture but which is a work of art in and of itself.
I better go make us some supper. We're still getting the nicest little patter of rain and everything looks so beautiful and on top of that, it's cool enough that I've been in jeans and a thin sweater all day.
And yet still warm enough to be barefoot, i.e., the perfect weather.
Love...Ms. Moon








Welcome home. I love your laundry room with all your treasures.
ReplyDeleteYou have the magic touch when it comes to beans and writing.
Thank you. You have no idea how much I appreciate those words.
DeleteYou've been having potato scab for several years?? Are you always growing in the same spot in the same soil? It may be why they are only golfball sized? Is there some other place you can grow them in fresh new soil?
ReplyDeleteSo nice of Maurice to give you kisses and then sleep with you.
Yes. But up until yesterday, I never realized that what I was seeing on the potatoes was bacterial. I thought they were just getting eaten by ants. And they are only golfball size because that's the kind of potatoes they are. I have a feeling the entire garden's soil is contaminated.
DeleteMaurice gave me another kiss this morning and I didn't even ask for it.
Buy more potato growing bags and clean soil, maybe also seed potatoes if you want to grow larger ones.
DeleteYou have reminded me that I am feeding my friend's ginger cat for a few days. Also reminded me not to bother trying to be nice to her as the one time I thought I would sit and stroke her, she raked me with her nails!!
ReplyDeleteGoing to see the nearly 3 week old , newest grandson today for the first time. They live an hour and half away so won't be seeing a lot of him as he grows . Sadly !
Some cats are just not to be petted. She has given you notice that she is one of those.
DeleteI'm so glad you get to see that baby! An hour and a half isn't next door but it's not that far unless you don't like driving and if that's the case, it is far.
Great capture of Maurice, just the sweet fur-angel that she is (yes, I remember the scratches and I think a bite too!) What a bounty of beans. Hope they are delicious. One of my favorite veggies.
ReplyDeleteMostly bites. She only uses her claws to hold the piece of human in place that she wants to bite.
DeleteThe beans ARE delicious.
You certainly have a lot of treasures packed in the laundry room window photo! Sweet memories for you.
ReplyDeleteI love that window so much.
DeleteWow. I didn't realize you were gone 8 days. I picked full handful of beans yesterday. I don't know what variety they are, packet said blue lake but they def are not blue lake. Good though, and fairly prolific. Nothing you can do to kill off the potato scab bacterium?
ReplyDeleteIf you'd like, I'll send you some rattlesnake beans for you to try next year.
DeleteI haven't done the research on the scab bacteria yet. I was just so bummed yesterday to learn about it and it's too late for this year so...
I'll study it soon.
Maurice does look very sweet in that photo. Glad you’re putting that kalancho in a pot. I regret the one I put in the ground 20 years ago, it sprouts up everywhere. I think it’s called “ mother of millions” and that ain’t no lie.
ReplyDeleteXoxo
Barbara
Indeed! Mother of Millions! Where was it that you planted one outside and it spread so badly? I'm not sure it would thrive well enough here to do so. But I won't risk it.
DeleteCome to think of it, aloes do great here and I have a ton of those I need to remove but they seem to stay in the same area.
Maurice with the dual personality is showing you some love and appreciation today. She also takes a very nice photo.
ReplyDeleteYour bean harvest is impressive. Will the plants keep producing throughout the growing season?
Maurice is...confused. As we say when we are being sweet. Otherwise we say, "That cat is crazy."
DeleteThe beans will keep producing throughout the growing season and beyond.
Huh. My husband's potatoes get that scabby skin thing too. Need to look it up! And I am glad to hear that Mr. Moon's recliner is still a success!
ReplyDeleteCeci
I hate to not be able to grow nice potatoes!
DeleteAnd yes, the recliner is very much a success.
Awesome beans - and a pity about the potatoes but still good eating if hard work, no doubt. Hello Maurice.
ReplyDeleteI always feel like I'm Beetle Bailey peeling potatoes when I start cooking those.
DeleteWould it be easier to peel those little spuds if you boil them first and then the skins just come off pretty easily?
ReplyDeleteI'm glad Maurice kissed rather then trying to nip off a hunk of your lip! That girl may be softening in her older age! Orange cats seem to be posers ... all of them!
Lili's painting caught my eye and would not let go. Really love it. Plants want to flourish in your care. Stick their little heads up and feel safe doing so. Because you are Mary, one of Mr. Rodger's "helpers".
ReplyDeleteA dark day here, a sick Dennis, and a jabbed eye. Still alive and ready for the next fight, though!
I'm glad you mentioned that you are in that first photo too because frankly, when I looked at it initially, I only had eyes for The Divine Miss M(aurice) and completely missed you in the background! Sorry!
ReplyDeleteI too had to study the picture to see you! My little orange and cotton pieces now have a good home! At least I think the cotton pieces are there. I know I sent them, because they're not here!
ReplyDelete