and please forgive *my* ignorance, but just exactly how does beer get rid of slugs? do they drink it and then try to drive home and wrap their little slugmobiles around dandelions and stuff?
Foxy Lady: oh - do You mean the movie? because i looked at the whole article but didn't see any other pictures...and i didn't notice the movie was a movie until i just now went back to see what the heck You were talking about.
spicieangel: i don't know offhand, sorry - though if Ms. ajtgirl does mail order - or if You're in the New York area - She may be able to help You. if not, and Your local gardening center doesn't sell them, there's always buying online. :)
and i imagine they are something like the air plants You had as a kid, though i don't know for sure.
spicieangel: what were those air plants we were talking about a few weeks ago, Ms. ajtgirl? think those would be apt candidates for Ms. angel's driftwood project...
nobleheart: i love the smell of lilacs myself. we have some very straggly (but very big!) ones in our side yard whose delicate bouquet saved them from my thinking they were gigantic weeds and pulling them up.
wow...and the article skip referenced also says this:
Known for centuries as Lucky Bamboo, the plant is not a bamboo at all (botanical name: Dracaena) but a resilient member of the lily family that grows in the dark, tropical rainforests of Southeast Asia and Africa.
Ms. Fox: or perhaps if You can't or don't want to move Yours You could put something over it to shelter and protect it when it rains? a translucent tarp held up with some kind of sticks or a trellis-like rig or something, maybe? something to serve as an instant and temporary greenhouse.
i'm sure if such a thing is commonly done, Ms. ajtgirl will be able to tell You about it...
Foxy Lady: yes Ms. Fox. i read someone else's saying they talk to people all over the world and everybody's experiencing it. it's the way some people have been carelessly messing with the environment, i'm sure.
nobleheart: here's a very interesting site for learning to identify plants by features. which isn't quite the same as identifying them right out, but which should be of more interest to members of this fellowship who don't already know how to do this.
ajtgirl: we've got a nice steady rain falling on long island right now. lighter than it was an hour or two ago, and the thunder and lightning seem to have abated. but our lawn and planty-plant-plants can sure use the rain.
Eriisa: well i'm glad You asked, Ma'am, because i've long wondered myself but i guess i wasn't quite curious enough to actually go look it up. now i have.
evidently the simplest way to describe sprinkler system winterization is to say it's the process of removing all the water from the system's pipes so that the water doesn't freeze, expand, and crack them. and evidently there are three ways to do it, which are described in detail here.
i hope this answers Your question, Lady. it answered it better than *my* curiosity demanded it be answered...
i only just called to have the sprinkler company come and de-winterize our sprinkler system for the season. they're probably going to be working in the rain!
Foxy Lady: not here yet, Ma'am. but it's lovely out there. beautiful temperature, and almost completely still...the breeze, if you can call it that, is so slight that i wouldn't know it was there if i didn't see leaves and the clapper thingy on the wind chimes moving just the teensiest bit.