A few weeks back we went to the Happiest Place on Earth down in Orlando and the Babe met Mickey the Mouse and all of her favorites. Including the Princesses. All of the Princesses!
Martha Stewart hit me right between the eyes this morning with this quote about happiness. She says that you can be happy for a year - if you get married. And you can be happy for a decade - if you get a dog. But...if you wanna be happy for the rest of your life - plant a garden. See below. I'm adding this to the handful of pieces of garden advice/garden musings/garden quotes that I've collected here on my blog - including: It is better to plant a fifty-cent tree in a five dollar hole than a five dollar tree in a fifty-cent hole , Conifers should come first , never buy just one of anything , Audrey Hepburn's line/quote - "To plant a garden is to believe in tomorrow" and... the best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The second best? Today . Martha's take on happiness fits right in there with these. I first came across this on TikTok in a promo for her Netflix documentary, but....on Instagram is where I found this (nicely laid-out four-pane...
Earlier this winter, I wrote about the old Lou Malnati's menu and mentioned that as I was waiting around for my pie to finish up, I spied an old Chicago Tribune article posted on the wall that included the original Lou Malnati's Italian Salad Dressing Recipe. The Tribune reporter called it "prized". We were set to host a little pizza party over the weekend, so I figured I'd give it a shot. Here's the article as seen through my mobile phone's camera. I'm not a wine drinker, so the fact that the recipe called for Burgundy wine didn't strike me as odd. I went shopping at Angelo Caputos in Addison - a really incredible shopping experience - and when I got to the wine section I found Burgundy wine was carried ONLY in those HUGE jugs. And they were dirt cheap. The only issue is that needed just 4 ounces. We ended up with a whole-lotta-wine that Nat won't drink. I've taken the recipe and modified it a bit by eliminating the percentage...
Last year, we had trouble with our Disneyland Roses. Between pests (Sawfly Larvae), diseases (Black Spot and Rust, I think) and drought, the blooms were few and far between. I fed them and treated the foliage with Neem oil, but I'm not sure I was making an impact. They say that roses are "heavy eaters", so I've been trying to feed them monthly during their growing season the past few years, but I switched over to an "all-in-one" granular product last year. These "all-in-one" claim to feature three different solutions: fertilizer, pest control and disease control. Below is canister of the granular that I recently applied from BioAdvanced named Rose & Flower Care. The instructions say to use a half-capful of the granular around each rose. I sprinkled it around the crowns of all five Disneyland roses then used a small rake to work it into the mulch. Last year, we were showing the first flush of Roses by the end of May . I'm p...
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