Merry month of May

I love this time of year. The garden changes daily, and while this means that I can’t possibly keep up with the mowing, it also means that there is something new blooming every time I go outside.

The azaleas are in full swing and the rhododendron is getting started.

Azalea bed

The unidentified purple things (probably also some stupid oversight on my part) are blooming everywhere – whatever they are, they spread.

Purple flowers

One tree peony has started blooming, though not the other one.

Peony

I love the colors – it makes me want to dye things. And plant things. And play hookey from work.

Azalea colors

This past weekend was a camping medieval recreation event near Pittsburgh. This is one of the few events that I can truly dress like a Viking, with all the layers (linen, wool, wool, wool), because it is rarely cold enough here for that much wool. Friday night it was 34F, which is definitely cold enough. I was comfy, but a lot of people weren’t. Saturday night it rained, and made me happy that I didn’t have to camp like a Viking, but was staying in a modern waterproof tent.

I worked diligently on the socks (mostly the multicolored ones), though I did learn that trying to knit in the dark in 40F temperatures is not sensible, and leads to frostbite and unknitting the next morning. Wouldn’t you think this was obvious?

I also came away from the event with plans for:

  • a new sprang project
  • two pieces of tablet weaving
  • some spinning I’d like to do
  • and of course more knitting
  • Plus I want to write a book. Or several. The writing doesn’t intimidate me, but making enough samples to illustrate it adequately may be beyond my capabilities, or at least my available time.

3 responses to “Merry month of May”

  1. Laura Avatar
    Laura

    Hi!
    I think the blue plant might be bee balm/bergamot. I will need to hear about the sprang/tablet weaving, also, of course.
    –Laura

  2. Phiala Avatar
    Phiala

    It isn’t a mint family member since it doesn’t have opposite leaves or the right kind of flowers, nor are the leaves at all aromatic.

    It reminds me more of a Centaurea than anything, but I can’t find an
    ornamental Centaurea that looks like that. I’ll take a better picture.

    Oh, er, um… take a look at this page:
    http://www.floracyberia.net/spermatophyta/angiospermae/dicotyledoneae/asteraceae/centaurea_montana.html

    That’s the one, I think – Google to the rescue!

  3. Laura Avatar
    Laura

    Always good to know what’s living in your garden. It did seem oddly early for bee balm, but I thought I might have just forgotten. If you don’t have bee balm, you should get some–years ago I saw hummingbird moths that loved the red ones; maybe you could entice some to move in. http://www.naturalsciences.org/education/treks/hummers/pages/Hummingbird-moth-at-bee%20balm-1.html
    http://www.butterfliesandmoths.org/
    (I naturally had to do some “research.”) For PA, there is one pictured under Sphinx moths.

Welcome!

I’ve been doing stuff with string for quite some time, and describing it to others online since 1996 or so at Phiala’s String Page.

I also do some science and write some fiction.

I’m Phiala most places on the internet.