I just got a compliment on an iris photo. so I have to post another.
This is the Iris Ellene Rockwell, but really it is a frog picture. I will use any excuse to at all to sneak in photos of frogs. Click on the picture for a better view.
Bob
A recent comment on one of my articles had a link to this site, Jaxt Woodcarvings. For a quick look of the range of product, their storefront www.saint-statues.com is well worth looking at. Their works are classic, delightful and I think, timeless. Some of these works inspire a child like glee while others inspire a sort of hushed reverence. I doubt I would have ever found this amazing collection of classic artwork, still being produced, on my own. There is a bit of humor to this, as the comment giving me this particular link, expressed disinterest with the post I had made. The truth is, that I am not nearly talented enough to come up with enough good content to fill the five posts a week that I make. So I suspect that I will and have, come up with some regular losers. But taken in the context that my other posts were of interest, this may actually be high praise. One of the joys of blogging is finding interests, that you did not know are your interests. I am sure there are thousands of thousands of people out there doing things that relate to strong interests of mine, but I have no clue about them. I am unlikely to do a search on the subject and even if I knew that I would be thrilled by what I found, I would not know what terms to search on best. It does make sense however that others that share your interests would be doing things that might well interest you. Bob Basil is a delightful grace in the yard, and fairly easy to grow as long as you have good seed to start with. I am quite sure that someone has a much better way to collect basil seed, there is no way that what I am doing would work commercially. I will however share the method that has worked pretty well for me. If anyone out there has a better method I would be greatful for the information. Here is some lemon basil going to seed. The dry stems have already lost their seed. The green tufts just above where it has dried, still have seed in them. As the plant drys, the seeds will fall out. A tuft or two above and the seed is not yet mature. in the picture below it is too late, the seed is gone. Here is a flower stalk removed and viewed from the bottom. Right where the brown at the bottom meets the green at the top, black seeds in green ‘bells’ can be seen. Despite only being able to harvest a few of the ripe seed, one stalk can provide quite a bit. Notice the tiny black seeds at the bottom of the bowl. Here is a different sort of basil. It produces a head. This is a nice sweet tasting basil with a touch of cinnamon scent. Below you can see one bright flowering head at the top and a duller head down at the bottom. The duller head is more mature and is producing seed. When I turn it over you can see the black spots where the seeds are. A bit of massaging and shaking allowed me to gather enough to be sure I can grow this again next year. Bob Here is an amazing tool that I have not seen before, I learned about it at Full Chisel. And here at Popular Woodworking is an example of it in use. What it does, is cut a sharp angle and keep cutting. Rather amazing really. This is one of my first attempts. Nothing much to write home about yet. Bob |
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