April 10, 2021
— Open Blogger
When I saw them, I thought they were a

And this was my second effort, ten days later, after getting and studying the 3-hour Workshop video.

Posted by: Open Blogger at
01:21 PM
| Comments (78)
Post contains 407 words, total size 8 kb.
I used to paint but haven't in years.
Posted by: BeckoningChasm at April 10, 2021 01:27 PM (OU+8W)
Posted by: skywch at April 10, 2021 01:28 PM (Y/Ps0)
Posted by: Martini Farmer - Now a Pirate, Hoisting the Black Flag at April 10, 2021 01:30 PM (3H9h1)
Posted by: Skip at April 10, 2021 01:31 PM (Cxk7w)
A few daffodils blooming here. Too early to plant veggies since I'm not doing snow peas. I've been tearing down some old woven wire fence. It has been harder than that sounds because it had 2x6s on top and was wired to several posts where the posts wouldn't hold a staple anymore. Plus I've been pulling all the staples instead of just tearing it all up with a tractor and tossing posts and wire together into a dumpster. But it's a good reason to be outside for a couple hours in the afternoons when I need a break from the computer before I finish up my WFH day in the late evening.
Posted by: palerider at April 10, 2021 01:35 PM (Aashi)
Posted by: Skip at April 10, 2021 01:35 PM (Cxk7w)
Empire, much improvement. I'm impressed.
Posted by: Infidel at April 10, 2021 01:35 PM (E0OEG)
Posted by: Skip at April 10, 2021 01:38 PM (Cxk7w)
Posted by: palerider at April 10, 2021 01:40 PM (Aashi)
Learning how this new site works is kind of exciting!
For certain values of "exciting." I usually end up repairing a lot of the comment formatting in HTML mode, but I'm OCD like that.
After yesterday's deluge, the front porch was covered with dirt and stuff (much of which poured out of the rotten gutters that need removing). So, this morning I gave the porch a good sweeping. Pulled out some of the long-dead tomato vines that were hanging over their boxes, clutching leaves and debris like a hen hugging its chicks. So, Spring cleaning and getting some boxes ready for this year's attempts to get something that lives.
Desperately need to prune back the pair of pears.
Biggest job ahead is a lot of the yard that was neglected in past years and is overgrown. The cats love to hunt there, but I get worried about what's in there that's hunting the cats. Want to get it back to lawnmowable.
One thing that really looks great this year is the redbud. Pretty much no maintenance required, which is the only reason it survives.
Posted by: mindful webworker - planted foolishly, harvested chaos at April 10, 2021 01:40 PM (BqVVi)
Posted by: Mrs JTB at April 10, 2021 01:41 PM (7EjX1)
Posted by: palerider at April 10, 2021 01:45 PM (Aashi)
Posted by: Mrs JTB at April 10, 2021 01:46 PM (7EjX1)
I do know I stink at watercolor though. That's a tough one.
Posted by: Pug Mahon, in the Big Sky Country at April 10, 2021 01:46 PM (4l77G)
Posted by: AZ deplorable moron at April 10, 2021 01:46 PM (gtatv)
Pepper transplants will be tomorrow if it stops raining. I'm trying Slovana sweet peppers and jalepeno hot peppers this year... also both new to me.
I just planted Black Beauty and Butterstick squashes. Black Beauty was a huge producer for me last year, so I'm excited about them for this year now that I know a little more about growing them.
Posted by: G. Gnome at April 10, 2021 01:50 PM (OQcPl)
I have gotten 40 or so Bartlett pears a year, but they are a nuisance to get the timing right ... pick when they come off the tree easily, put in the frig for a week, then take them out to ripen for a couple days as needed. Maybe if one is canning them they could all be picked at peak ripeness, idk.
I'm not getting the plant that shall not be named thingy ... but it looks like the same plant in both pics.
Posted by: illiniwek at April 10, 2021 01:51 PM (Cus5s)
Is anyone else watching the YT channel "Crime Pays but Botany Doesn't"? Guy with the thickest NJ accent you've ever heard. Sounds like he ought to be a car mechanic but he knows more about plants than anyone I've come in contact with.
Posted by: creeper at April 10, 2021 01:51 PM (XxJt1)
Thinking about the old graybox days.
It isn't easy being green.
Posted by: mindful webworker - planted foolishly, harvested chaos at April 10, 2021 01:52 PM (BqVVi)
Posted by: palerider at April 10, 2021 01:53 PM (Aashi)
More to be started, a big unruly prickly pair with bright red flowers and a Mexican post (columnar with every tiny flowers).
Posted by: AZ deplorable moron at April 10, 2021 01:53 PM (gtatv)
Posted by: ... at April 10, 2021 01:56 PM (uEbPt)
I love that we have an actual Bob Ross artist in The Horde. Any more out there?
I haven't done any Bob Ross artwork yet, however I did watch the youtube his son did and will probably try out his technique. The thing with Ross paintings is you need the correct tools: fan brushes, palette knives. It's not any kind of sophisticated or ingenious brushwork.
If I ever get around to it I will send the pic
Posted by: kallisto at April 10, 2021 01:58 PM (DJFLF)
The peaches and nectarines are sorta overgrown.
(that was pre-populated in the comment bow when I re-freshed the page)
Posted by: AltonJackson at April 10, 2021 01:59 PM (DUIap)
mine gets crowded out by other weeds, but has "endured" in places ... I wish it would take off around the porch ... mowing would stop it from spreading in my case, or 2-4D if necessary. Maybe in the south it is more problematic, but in New Orleans I recall it was a common ground cover.
I've read the Bradford Pear is also invasive, but again, have never seen that around here. Lots of little maple/oak trees pop up every year, but I have not noticed any small Bradford Pears.
Posted by: illiniwek at April 10, 2021 01:59 PM (Cus5s)
I did pencil all my life then moved to digital pencil and now digital painting. I have found myself strangely drawn to charcoal this last few years. I think I have some software that does a good approximation of it but I haven't installed it yet.
Agree with you about watercolor. No chance for me there.
Posted by: ... at April 10, 2021 02:00 PM (uEbPt)
Posted by: creeper at April 10, 2021 02:01 PM (XxJt1)
Oy. GREEN dangit.
Posted by: G. Gnome at April 10, 2021 02:01 PM (OQcPl)
That was me. Thanks.
For Illiniwek, one problem with Bradford Pears is that they tend to shatter in storms. Especially if they are forked. You want to keep a strong central leader branch on those trees.
Posted by: KT at April 10, 2021 02:08 PM (BVQ+1)
I do know I stink at watercolor though. That's a tough one.
Maybe you can get some inspiration from this painting by my boyfriend John Singer Sargent:
Now that's a watercolor!
Posted by: kallisto at April 10, 2021 02:11 PM (DJFLF)
I was just thinking about those flowers the other day; when I was eight or nine years old I used to pick them from my neighbor's flower garden, which was conveniently located along the roadside. Boy did that piss her off.
Posted by: squeakywheel at April 10, 2021 02:11 PM (mL2J9)
There's house down the road a ways that has a really long driveway lined with Bradford Pears. Two years ago we had an ice storm that decimated them. They look like shit today because the owners never trimmed them.
Posted by: Martini Farmer - Now a Pirate, Hoisting the Black Flag at April 10, 2021 02:12 PM (3H9h1)
Posted by: Ronster at April 10, 2021 02:12 PM (ymjdW)
Posted by: kallisto at April 10, 2021 02:14 PM (DJFLF)
I thought it was too high key to be Venice. His paintings of that city are pretty moody and dark.
Posted by: kallisto at April 10, 2021 02:15 PM (DJFLF)
Posted by: Infidel at April 10, 2021 02:16 PM (E0OEG)
Posted by: wareagle82 at April 10, 2021 02:22 PM (+Kpte)
At Christmas I received an amaryllis bulb. I planted it and it produced lovely pink and white blooms in the dead of winter. I noticed something growing in the pot alongside it, a couple volunteers. (I'd grabbed a pot off the deck in which to plant the amaryllis.)
I didn't pull them, because I wanted to see what would grow.
The other day I was astonished to see two plants of Salvia Summer Jewel (pink), just as healthy and dainty as can be, grown indoors! Didn't know it was possible.
It's too cold to put them out just yet, I'm going to wait until next week.
Pansies from last year made it through the winter and are back. Daffodils, and my violet patch is expanding. It's the deep purple-blue shade. I'd have preferred some lighter violets mixed in, but I takes what Mother Nature sent me and I likes it.
My redbud is blooming despite the landscapers merciless pruning of it last year. It survived!
Posted by: kallisto at April 10, 2021 02:24 PM (DJFLF)
Posted by: Quint at April 10, 2021 02:27 PM (fjS2+)
End of season fruits are good for slicing and storing in freezer bags. They add a lot of flavor to cooked dishes.
Posted by: OldDominionMom at April 10, 2021 02:28 PM (dH/BH)
Posted by: Pat* at April 10, 2021 02:29 PM (2pX/F)
My worst invasive is Bush Honeysuckle, which crowds out all undergrowth ... but at least they aren't thorny like the terrible honey locusts that also spread like wildfire. It is all the good fight, and now I have a chipper-shredder to bring to the battle, which helps a lot. Honey Locust (I think) is the only tree with compound thorns .... the thorns have thorns, hard on tires if left laying around.
Posted by: illiniwek at April 10, 2021 02:30 PM (Cus5s)
Posted by: Quint at April 10, 2021 02:30 PM (fjS2+)
I started painting late in life and I'm just in love with this hobby. Keep up the good work!!!
Posted by: Misanthropic Humanitarian at April 10, 2021 02:30 PM (aA3+G)
Posted by: Ronster at April 10, 2021 02:32 PM (ymjdW)
I started painting late in life and I'm just in love with this hobby. Keep up the good work!!!
Posted by: Misanthropic Humanitarian at April 10, 2021 02:30 PM (aA3+G)
that is something I could never do. Churchill did likewise, so you are in good stead. He wanted to challenge himself in different ways. Funny, because war daring do, writing great book, and leading a nation in a time of existential threat were not enough I guess.
Posted by: Quint at April 10, 2021 02:43 PM (fjS2+)
Posted by: skywch at April 10, 2021 02:44 PM (Y/Ps0)
Posted by: f'd at April 10, 2021 02:53 PM (Tnijr)
That is wonderful and I'm so glad to see you trying to learn painting. I want to try myself and have not given up but my lack of talent for drawing might be world class. That doesn't keep me from trying.
Just FYI. Sir Winston Churchill wrote an essay, "Painting As A Pastime". It describes the value of the hobby, how he got started in his 40s during WW I, etc. It is an excellent piece and worth the short time needed to read it if only for inspiration to keep at it. I have the fancy book version but it is available free online.
Posted by: JTB at April 10, 2021 02:56 PM (7EjX1)
Posted by: Novadog at April 10, 2021 02:59 PM (x8pNI)
Internet allowed me to find a tribute page to him, with his work. Seems like a nice rich life after 65. -- "He switched to watercolor after watching the late Ed Whitney conduct a watercolor workshop in City Park in New Orleans. He promptly fell in love with the medium, and for the next 21 years produced hundreds of watercolors. He won numerous awards and sold most of his paintings through French Quarter galleries. For years he taught watercolor through the People's Program in the New Orleans Recreation Department"
https://tinyurl.com/4maum72s
Posted by: illiniwek at April 10, 2021 03:02 PM (Cus5s)
Posted by: exdem13 at April 10, 2021 03:08 PM (W+kMI)
Y'all are making me nervous talking about bell peppers being hard to growthey will be in containers too so maybe that will work.Posted by:skywch
I've only grown peppers in containers. The big thing is to keep them fertilized and watered in well-draining soil. Last year I couldn't find pepper seeds or plants in the store, so I grew peppers from seeds I got from a grocery store pepper. I overcrowded them and cut them back severely and made all kinds of mistakes. I still had more peppers than we could eat. I think it depends on heat more than anything. I'm in Georgia, so not having enough heat isn't a problem usually for us.
Posted by: G. Gnome at April 10, 2021 03:21 PM (OQcPl)
https://tinyurl.com/5a4k3nk
Posted by: Dr. Varno at April 10, 2021 03:25 PM (vuisn)
Posted by: Weasel at April 10, 2021 03:34 PM (MVjcR)
Now that's a watercolor!
-----------
Favorite oil and charcoal portraits of any other painter along with his watercolors. To see one up close is really something to see.
Posted by: dartist at April 10, 2021 03:36 PM (+ya+t)
I really messed up my third attempt, though. I got started later in the day than I should have, and got in a hurry. Big mistake! I had to scrape off the first part and try to wipe that off, so now it's partly sky, partly the liquid white base coat, and what looks kind of like a sand cloud, all garnished with a light brushing thanks to my cat's tail.
So I'm trying to think what to do with it, using Bob's saying about not making mistakes, but having "happy accidents" instead. Assuming I can make something happy out of it, I'll send along a "now and after" set of pictures. If I can't fix it, I'll let the paint dry while a do something different, and re-use the canvas (now extra primed) after it dries.
Posted by: Empire1 at April 10, 2021 03:41 PM (JJatH)
Posted by: dartist at April 10, 2021 03:44 PM (+ya+t)
Hmpfh!
Posted by: Weasel at April 10, 2021 03:49 PM (MVjcR)
Posted by: Skip at April 10, 2021 03:50 PM (Cxk7w)
Posted by: Skip at April 10, 2021 03:52 PM (Cxk7w)
A nice soaking rain now in N. Indiana.
Posted by: Chris Farley to Connie Conehead at April 10, 2021 04:15 PM (n/szn)
Yes they are. Those are Vinca Major - a hearty plant, but a bit aggressive. I use them for growing in the dry shade under trees. However, KT is not a fan of them, so I was trying not to draw to much attention to them. Of course, she makes a whole post about them. LOL
Posted by: 40 Miles North at April 10, 2021 04:16 PM (uWF4x)
Posted by: TwentytwoLR at April 10, 2021 04:36 PM (NHOrA)
The Plant That Shall Not Be Named has sprung up in my front hedge this year. I noticed because the flowers are really brightening up the half-dead-from-Snowmageddon hedges. Is it a noxious invasive I should kill with rake and hoe? Must investigate further.
Posted by: Not From Around Here at April 10, 2021 04:43 PM (wrzAm)
Posted by: Not From Around Here at April 10, 2021 04:50 PM (wrzAm)
Posted by: COMountainMarie at April 10, 2021 04:53 PM (HC+O2)
I burned a lot of deadhead, branches, etc. in an impromptu firepit over the maple stumps that refuse to properly rot away. Killing two birds with one stone. And to kill a third, I drained the snow thrower over the pile before starting the fire.
The daffodils need to be divided. Is that a summer job or a fall job?
Insects of various sorts were annoying me today.
I set off a "bomb" to hornets in the shed. Unfortunately, I pulled the outdoor rug first and discovered a lot of blank ants in it. (I hope not carpenter ants, but they were awfully shiny.)
Then, when I was getting ready to transfer the daylilies to the back yard (and transfer the sedum to the front), bumble bees floated up. They build underground nests, and I'm afraid they're coming FROM INSIDE THE LILY BED!!!! *cue cliffhanger music*
Posted by: NaughtyPine at April 10, 2021 05:30 PM (/+bwe)
I just started doing doing watercolor painting and taking watercolor painting classes as a change from my usual colored pencil and charcoal. Bob Ross "happy accidents†term is taking on a whole life of its own with this LOL
Posted by: keena at April 10, 2021 06:04 PM (f8FVg)
Me: I found the pruning shears, need to get at that apple tree today, the time is just right. Oh crap, it's pouring rain.
J: I'm going outside for a smoke. Me: Oh, here's the shears, whack off some stuff on the apple tree.
J: F' that, I'm not going out in the rain, I'm sitting on the porch and smoking.
End of gardening discussion at the Farmer home. Tho really I'm gonna amble into the kitchen and dig thru the seed box and plan my week of planting. I'll have back surgery on 4/19 so I need to get organized and get some of this done now.
Posted by: Farmer at April 10, 2021 07:29 PM (55Qr6)
We got some information on sources for carnivorous plants for you. Maybe you can look into them during your surgery recovery.
Hoping everything goes smoothly for that surgery.
Posted by: KT at April 11, 2021 11:28 AM (BVQ+1)
And NaughtyPine's insect stories. There are some sort of aggressive bees that look like bumblebees and nest underground.
Posted by: KT at April 11, 2021 11:34 AM (BVQ+1)
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Posted by: Skip at April 10, 2021 01:24 PM (Cxk7w)