

ACE OF SPADES GAME WORSE MOVIE
Who's afraid of a movie about trafficking children?Īce was not the only person who noticed how the Guardian quickly switched from being QAnon-adjascent in its concern about child trafficking to joining the media pile-on connecting Sound of Freedom with QAnon. Okay, so the "far right" is paranoid, eh? -K.T. I closed the comments on this post so you wouldn't get banned for commenting on a week-old post, but don't try it anyway. What has changed since last week's thread? Gardening, Puttering and Adventure Thread, July 8Īny thoughts or questions? Be sure to check out the end of the thread. Remember to include the nic or name by which you wish to be known at AoSHQ, or let us know if you want to remain a lurker. for the Saturday Gardening, Puttering and Adventure Thread, the address is: If you would like to send photos, stories, links, etc. And my hardy hibiscus will start up soon. My coneflowers and hardy glads attract the bees and my salvias are popular with the hummingbirds. But I have plenty of other summer bloomers. I especially like the 'spiders' that have the long, narrow petals - like Chesapeake Crab Legs and Spider Miracle. Unpleasant outside even in the early mornings. Gardens of The Horde One sign of summer here is the disgusting heat and humidity, Each of these is only about a week apart,Īnd you can see in the first one that only one palm leaf survived the freeze. You noted that it was usually a slow growing plant - it is, so I decided to take We're going to have to turn some attention to outdoor carnivorous plants again, too!Ī Garden Recovery Hello Katy! Every week I think "I should send something" and I forget, well didn't forget.įirst off, about a month ago I mentioned that my sago palm had almost completely frozen, but it was coming back with amazing speed. Indoor Gardening I did not know that Venus fly traps had flowers but it has caught several flies and now it's blooming! Nan in AZ

Harwood, an art historian at Bates College in Lewiston, Maine. "By 1750, if you only put in one structure in your garden, it would have been a hermitage," says Edward S. But the hermitage, a secluded retreat for a real or imagined hermit that could look like anything from a grotto to a treehouse, eclipsed them all. The short-lived trend, which peaked between roughly 17, was one of the most memorable to come out of the era's shift from perfectly pruned, geometrically aligned gardens to wild, untamed ones in which "the irregularities and asymmetry of nature were charmingly inspirational," says Todd Longstaffe-Gowan, a landscape architect and the author of English Garden Eccentrics: Three Hundred Years of Extraordinary Groves, Burrowings, Mountains and Menageries.Īristocrats outfitted their new landscape gardens with unexpected, whimsical elements like caves, mountains, aviaries and menageries. Remington was one of a handful of men to cash in on-or, in his case, fail to cash in on-England's 18th-century ornamental hermit craze. He must wear a goat's hair robe and never cut his hair, nails or beard. The ornamental hermit he was recruiting to live in the sprawling gardens at his Painshill estate in Cobham, England, must be silent, never speaking to the servants who brought him his daily meals. Ornamental Hermits - Real Live Ones The Honorable Charles Hamilton, an 18th-century British aristocrat and member of Parliament, was explicit in his advertisement. Pretty good crop of German hard-neck garlic for my 2nd garlic crop * July means it's time to harvest the garlic - in the DelMarVa anyway. Got any ideas for him? Some will be made into jam.
