Tag Archives: garden

Salamanders big and small

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In the garden disruptions associated with our porch construction, I have uncovered several nests of salamanders, under rocks and buried in the dirt. I have seen two salamander types in our back yard along the Guadalupe River in San Jose, California. From the pictures on the Californiaherps web page, they are:

The big one pictured above is guarding a nest of eggs.  The two species live near each other but not together (the pictures here were taken of salamanders living under different rocks about a foot apart).  I have seen as many as seven in one nest underground – large and small but all of one species.  I once turned on the water hose and out shot a very surprised large salamander who had been hiding inside.  They mostly hold still when uncovered but they can move fast.  I try to leave them alone – only moving them to a safer spot if their current location is dangerous.

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Images Copyright 2012-2013 by Katy Dickinson

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Bricklaying

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This week, we are getting the bricks laid on top of some of our new concrete paths in our back garden. Jack and Rudy Batinich are the masonry contractors working on this project.  The picture above is of Rudy’s work boots – showing the toes of a man who kneels a lot.

  1. They started by sorting our collection of old bricks so that they knew what they had to work with.  We probably need about 200 more old bricks than we have.
  2. Next, we decided on design.  The big area to be bricked will be running bond pattern with a border, and will connect with two walkways – one jack-on-jack (or stacked bond) and the other in basket weave classic brick pattern.  We have about fifty irregular clinker or burnt bricks which will be in the border.

I think this is going to look good and be very functional.

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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Shakespeare Garden Books

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I collect Shakespeare garden books. The photographs in this blog entry are of one of the most beautiful books I own: Henry Ellacombe’s The Plant-Lore and Garden-Craft of Shakespeare, 1896.

What is a Shakespeare Garden? Such a garden can be inspired by Shakespeare’s works, or can include plants he mentioned, or can reproduce a famous play setting. There are many famous Shakespeare gardens, including those at The Huntington (Pasadena CA), Golden Gate Park (San Francisco CA), Brooklyn Botanic Garden (New York), Central Park (New York), Northwestern University (Evanston IL), The Folger Shakespeare Library (Washington DC), and of course the garden of Anne Hathaway (Shakespeare’s wife) in Stratford-Upon-Avon, England.  Check out my Pinterest Board to see pictures of over 50 Shakespeare plants. Most plants mentioned in Shakespeare’s works are still common today, 450 years later.

Publications about Shakespeare plants and gardens have been popular for 150 or more years – since they are in the charming intersection of beauty and literature. Some examples:

  • Beisley, Sidney, Shakespeare’s Gardens, Longmans, Green: 1864
  • Bloom, J. Harvey, Shakespeare’s Garden, Tower Books: 1971 (reprint of the 1903 edition)
  • Carter, Annie B., Shakespeare Gardens / Design, Plants, and Flower Lore, Dorrance & Co.: 1937
  • Chronicle Books, Shakespeare’s Flowers, 1994
  • Crane, Walter, Flowers from Shakespeare’s Garden, Macmillan Publishing: 1980 (reprint of the 1906 edition)
  • Damrosch, Barbara, Theme Gardens, Workman Publishing: 1982
  • De Bray, Lys, Fantastic Garlands: an anthology of flowers and plants from Shakespeare, Blandford Press: 1982
  • Dent, Alan, World of Shakespeare: Plants, Taplinger Publishing: 1973
  • Ellacombe, Henry N., The Plant-Lore and Garden-Craft of Shakespeare, Edward Arnold: 1896
  • Eyler, Ellen C., Early English Gardens and Garden Books, (booklet) Folger Books: 1979
  • Fleissrer, Robert F., A Rose by Any Other Name / A Survey of Literary Flora from Shakespeare to Eco, Locust Hill Press: 1989
  • Fox, Levi, An Illustrated Introduction to Shakespeare’s Flowers, (booklet) Jarrold Publishing: 1990
  • Fox, Levi, The Shakespearean Gardens, (booklet) Jarrold Publishing: 1953
  • Grindon, Leopold Hartley, Shakespere Flora, Palmer & Howe: 1883
  • Hales, Mick, Shakespeare in the Garden, Abrams: 2006
  • Hubbart, Edith, America’s First Shakespeare Garden, (booklet) 1938
  • Hunt, Doris, The Flowers of Shakespeare, Webb & Bower: 1980
  • Huntington Botanical Gardens, Garden Notes, (booklet) 1978
  • Kerr, Jessica, Shakespeare’s Flowers, Thomas Y. Crowell Co.: 1969
  • Law, Ernest, Shakespeare’s Garden / Stratford-Upon-Avon, (booklet) Selwyn & Blount: 1922
  • Pallen, Nancy Shumaker, Shakespeare’s Garden, Cedco Publishing: 1999
  • Pomeroy, Elizabeth, The Huntington Library, Art Collections, Botanical Gardens, Philip Wilson Publishers: 1983
  • Pickles, Sheila, The Complete Language of Flowers / A Treasury in Verse and Prose, Pavilion: 1998
  • Prince, Martha, “Shakespearean Bouquet”, from American Horticulturalist v.64, number 4, April 1985
  • The Printing Corporation, A Trip Through Internationally Famous Golden Gate Park / San Francisco, California, (booklet) 1937
  • Putnam, Clare, Flowers and Trees of Tudor England, New York Graphic Society: 1972
  • Rendall, Vernon, Wild Flowers in Literature, Scholartis Press: 1934
  • Rodway, Avril, A Literary Herbal, Leprechaun Library: 1980
  • Rohde, Eleanour S., Shakespeare’s Wild Flowers, Medici Society: 1963 (reprint of the 1935 edition)
  • Ryden, Mats, Shakespearean Plant Names / Identifications and Interpretations, 1978
  • Savage, F.G., Flora and Folk-Lore of Shakespeare, E.J. Burrow & Co.: 1923
  • Simons, Adelma G., Herb Gardens of Delight, Hawthorn Books: 1974
  • Singleton, Esther, Shakespeare Garden, AMS Press: 1933
  • Thorpe, James, William Shakespeare at the Huntington, (booklet) The Huntington Library: 1977
  • Warner, James A., and Margaret J. White, Shakespeare’s Flowers, Middle Atlantic Press: 1987

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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New Concrete Paths

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We poured concrete garden paths to replace the mud around our new porch – just in time for the ash trees to dump all of their leaves at once. Next week, the path bricks go in.

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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Reusing old, adding new

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John and I last changed our garden paths in 2009. While I work in my office in WP668 (our backyard caboose) today, I can see a work crew noisily building forms to pour the new concrete paths and steps for the porch we are constructing.

Our 1930 house is a combination of Spanish Mission, and Arts and Crafts style. We want to make additions and changes look like part of the original house, so we are combining original and new elements. We are lucky that both styles are still popular. Our new porch will feature new tiles from Fireclay and lighting fixtures from Hinkley that go well with what is already in the house.

Our original downstairs light fixtures are black wrought iron Spanish style, while those upstairs are Art Nouveau (both styles being popular in 1930). Our next door neighbor’s house in Willow Glen originally matched ours. Some years ago, he took out all of his original fixtures during a remodel and generously gave them to us. In addition to replacing my son Paul’s garden-side window with two round windows as part of our porch addition, his room is getting a second wall sconce – since he wanted more light and we had a fixture that matched.  Even though there are just a few brick paths as they were when we bought the house in 1998, we carefully saved extra old brick for reuse. I will be happy to see the stacks of old brick along our back fence, and the old roofing tiles stored on our driveway back in use.

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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Electronic Shakespeare Garden

“Not poppy, nor mandragora, Nor all the drowsy syrups of the world, Shall ever medicine thee to that sweet sleep Which thou owedst yesterday.” Othello [III, 3]
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I am creating an electronic Shakespeare Garden on a Pinterest board. Shakespeare gardens can be inspired by his works, or can include many of the plants mentioned, or can reproduce a setting for a famous scene.  On Pinterest are my pictures of some of the plants mentioned in Shakespeare, plus pictures of some Shakespeare Gardens.

Plant names change over time – what we call a dandelion was in the 1500s a “golden lad” in flower or a “chimney-sweeper” when in seed. Decades ago, I started a paper card file to keep track of the plants in Shakespeare. I use this personal resource, plus the OpenSource Shakespeare Concordance to search for references. There is a surprising range of both horticultural and ornamental plants included in Shakespeare’s works.

“In thy fats our cares be drown’d, With thy grapes our hairs be crown’d: Cup us, till the world go round, Cup us, till the world go round!” Antony and Cleopatra [II, 7]
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Folger Shakespeare Library’s garden, Washington DC
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“When daffodils begin to peer, With heigh! the doxy over the dale, Why, then comes in the sweet o’ the year; For the red blood reigns in the winter’s pale.” Winter’s Tale [IV, 3]
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“There’s fennel for you, and columbines.” Hamlet [IV, 5]
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Images Copyright 2010-2012 by Katy Dickinson

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New Porch

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This summer, we have been fixing up our home – doing small construction and repairs, including: refinishing the front door, filling in missing baseboards, refinishing the floor in John’s office, eliminating some dry rot and fixing a floor that shifted out of level in John’s model train room and workshop, adding a side fence and creating a pottery studio for Paul. Our next project is to add a side porch to the house. The contractors poured the concrete foundation yesterday. Months ago, we bought hundreds of old ceramic roof tiles from a neighbor – which match those already on our 1930 Willow Glen house roof. The “new” tiles will go on the porch roof so that it will look like a natural part of the house.

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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