The other day we got the first harvest from our garden
That's a green bell pepper and a bunch of snow peas. I wasn't quite sure when to harvest the pepper. I've heard that the orange, red, and yellow ones are just matured versions of the same crop, but eventually I didn't want to keep risking it to the insects. So far just the one has come in, but that's a lot better than nothing and the season is still young.
We've also managed to harvest some parsley and arugula. There's a lot of green tomatoes on the vine. Our zuchinis are healthy but they haven't produced anything yet.
The sunflowers are looking very promising.
I think our record is like, eight blossoms. At this rate we will far surpass that. I think that of the nine kongs that sprouted from the ten seeds we planted, each of them is still living. They don't seem much larger than the regular ones, though.
We have a few weird sunflowers that I'm rooting for. One of them has a loop in its neck.
I've not seen anything quite like it. For a while, a lot of the flowers were having trouble supporting their own weight, so I staked up the ones that were really struggling. I found this peculiar plant and tried to correct its posture, but in doing so I accidentally split a seam in its stalk. Seeing that I'd do it more harm than good by forcing it, I just tied it to a piece of bamboo and decided to see what it would do. Right now it isn't the largest of its peers, but it's still showing a lot of zest for life.
Not far from it, there was a flower that was broken and laying on the ground. I propped it up, its stem connected by a sliver. The next day its leaves were pointing to the sky. Now, weeks later it appears to have mostly healed.
In an even more extreme example, we found a regular sunflower growing just off from the Kongs. We know it wasn't one of them, because it grew outside the shelter we initially built for them, and it happened after we transplanted them. Maybe a seed came loose from a previous years' crop.
Anyway, one day it's top leaves were fully decapitated. Its bottom leaves were still healthy though, and here it is now.
It may be hard to see, but it actually grew a second stem from its bottom leaves! The first new set were crumpled looking, but the new ones are normal. Don't know if this setback will prevent it from blossoming, but I'm really impressed by the effort!
Also, I've tried my hand at painting again. I've only done one, so it's not quite worth a Gallery blog post. But I took photos of it in graduated sequence, which is kind of cool.
It's The Magician tarot card, but as a crow guy! I replaced the table with a stump, mostly because I didn't trust myself to angle the table in a way that it wouldn't look weird. The fact that a stump is more crow-like was a happy side effect. For a similar reason, I have the sword standing up, piercing the wood. I do like the way it causes the eye to follow a height gradient from the staff to the scepter in the Crow Magician's talons.
One of my biggest pet peeves in the tarot is that Cups and Pentacles are both gold in colour. For this, I made each of them distinct. Reddish-brown for the Wand and element of fire. Gold for the Pentacle and earth. Silver-blue for the Cup and water, and a green-handled Sword to repesent air. I know that the blade of the Sword is actually just a lighter silver-blue than the Cup, but who's ever heard of a green-bladed sword? Also, green isn't a primary or the colour of air so it's a stretch, but at least each symbol looks different, which is mostly what I cared about.
My cat Kieran bit my ankle at one point, which is why there's a black smudge in the first three images. I managed to cover it up with some foliage, thankfully.
The figure is actually based on an Australian crow. I had an image in my mind of eye whites against dark feathers. I thought that if this were true of European or North American crows, it would be fine because it would either be where I live, or where the tarot originated. But both those locations have black-eyed crows, and the ones I imagined are from Australia. Oh well, I still wanted the light-dark colour contrast.
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