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In the mornings I take Tig out on her promenade, which is her daily W-A-L-K around the backyard in her harness and leash. Matt always spells out W-A-L-K when he asks if The Madame (Tig) has gone outside yet, because the dogs he grew up with understood the word "walk" so his family would say DOUBLEYEW-AYE-ELL-KAY to keep the pups from amping up. Tig does not even seem to recognize her own name but, sure, may as well err on the safe said and spell "walk" so we don't get her "excited" about the possibility of going outside.

While walking down the back steps, I noticed this poppy in the process of emerging from its... I dunno what it's called. That case that holds a flower bud before it blooms? Its hat. I noticed this poppy in the process of doffing its hat, which is always super cute because it looks like it's wearing a pretty little dunce's cap. By the time The Madame and I were returning to the house, the little flower cap had been doffed! Good job, little poppy. I'm very proud of you!

Here's another one from a different W-A-L-K:

Oh, the places you'll go in my backyard.

Our neighbors were digging up their back patio(?) which meant Erika AND MATT GOT A FREE PILE OF BRICKS. This is but a portion of our bricks. We have so many more deposits around the yard. We first started using bricks to edge our gardening patches and lawn when our decrepit chimney had to be dismantled. Now everybody in the neighborhood knows that if you have shitty old broken bricks, you just give 'em to Matt and Erika, they'll take 'em.

Lookit my garden!! I'm so frickin proud of all the work we've done on it-- AND STILL SO MUCH MORE TO DO, OF COURSE. We wanna get rid of the lawn entirely and use up the rest of our shit brick piles to make a path from the gate to the house. Plus more grow boxes, obviously. 

Look at thissssssssssss. 

My cup (will) runneth over with potatoes and broccoli (in the fall).

(I wrote "in the fall" but I didn't actually check if that's when you harvest potatoes and broccoli. Hm, ok, a surface-level googling says that potatoes in Oregon are sometime after October and sprint-planted broccoli is: "when the central head reaches 1 inch across it should be ready to harvest in  about a week depending on weather." Ok, cool, but, like, what season is that?)

Here's another poppy wearing its little bud casing like a jaunty beret.

All good things must come to an end, so in conclusion to this Very Good Update, here is a broccoli leaf and sugar snap pea branch(?) that met with an accidental dismemberment but then got to live a second life as indoors decorations:


Comments

Zoltanina

Wow, you guys have done so much work! I love the garden updates, thank you (: I don't know if you get very hot summers. Getting rid of all the lawn will probably change the micro climate in your garden – it will be warmer – and negatively affect the air quality. That is because grass releases oxygen and rotting wood uses oxygen and releases CO2. Though I'm not sure how noticeable the effect will be. I hate people smart-assing on the internet but I also really want you to have the information. Please do with it whatever you want. Just forget it if it doesn't feel relevant. I hope I wasn't overstepping.

Anonymous

Although I really miss your fun & frolicky (?) sex toy reviews, I am smitten with your garden show & tell posts! It's like a little piece of domestic calm to look at your plants, flowers, & dirt bins, and go on vicarious C-A-T W-A-L-K-S with your fur baby. Thank you so much for sharing your bio-space with those of us who are agri-deprived, stuck in apartment complexes where the only connection to growing things is when the landscape guys show up every Wednesday. You are loved, Erica!