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"The Devil is in the Details"

  • Jul. 21st, 2008 at 5:26 PM





.....And this tree apparently.

   
The Devil's Tree is a solitary oak, with some dead limbs, growing in an undeveloped field on Mountain Road in New Jersey. Local legend, and a book based on it, has it that the tree is cursed or the property of the Devil. Supposedly, those who damage or show disrespect to the tree in its presence will shortly thereafter come to some sort of harm. Even simply touching the tree has been said to cause unexplained effects, such as hands (or toes?) turning black afterwards.

Thats funny I don't remember touching the tree with my toe, 
or even visiting New Jersey?

ooouch!
Oh no wait, now I remember, it wasn't Satan's tree, 
It was a stroller in my hallway, and it was dark.

Or was it Charlie....
http://www.break.com/index/charlie-bit-me.html

The remakes are all over the net:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_rkhbvm5YOo

I know you all could have gone the rest of your lives without having to see my toe monstrosity.

In Winter, supposedly, the ground beneath the tree is free from snow no matter how much has fallen or how recently (sounds like Texas). It is said that slaves were hanged from the tree in colonial times, and that the Ku Klux Klan gathered there for lynchings. The hangings are said to have been done using the branch that runs almost parallel to the ground.
 
Despite the dire warnings of the legends, enough damage to the tree has occurred that its lower trunk  has had to be protected with a section of chainlink fence wrapped around it. The site is now constantly patrolled, and a movie is bound to follow.

Anyway I digress...

When people say that the devil is in the detail, they mean that small things in plans and schemes that are often overlooked can cause serious problems later on.........well, yet again I fear the worst.

Pups and seeds mixing it up.
.....
 I certainly did not count on the beanstalk developing seeds! thousands of them. The fallen Agave was not content with dropping thousands of tiny replicas of itself, oh no, it looks like it is adopting a two pronged assault, a remarkable technique. Perhaps for a grand finale the beanstalk will slowly raise itself vertical again and explode like a missile, sending millions of pups and seeds over the entire neighborhood. You can see that the pups have got a lot bigger since my last few posts. My Midnight Limbo antics under the tiki lamps continue to knock off more and more babies, revealing more and more seed pods.
If anyone in Austin wants some of these pups, drop me a line. I only have a few thousand!
 
The seed pods remind me of the worms in Dune

Or maybe

Or possibly.


Detail of the seeds. It is dropping thousands of them in a line under stalk. "Feed Me Seymore!"

Oh, I have a very bad feeling about this.
 
Remember last week I thinned out my pond, well the lillies have relcaimed 
their territory, almost entirely.

This water looks way too inviting right now.

And here is a top view of my smaller feeder pond. I anchored a small baby lily under the small pump, and a day later it had reached the surface! There is only about an inch of organic matter in the bottom so I am not sure it will be stable in here. This tank will be the fish tank for a day or so when I put on my waders and clean out the main pool (first time in 5 years). There is so much organic matter in this pond it actually breaks the surface of the water at one point.

 
Remember my groaning tomato plants . . well a lot of fish emulsion later and voilla....
What?


Other things strutting their stuff right now:


Amaranth getting really big really fast, they need a little 
supplimental water in this heat but they are total troopers. 
They love to grow and will self seed readily in just plain 
old decomposed granite, like these chaps.

Frosty foliage on the Arizona Cyprus, looks like deer antlers.

Contempory Art from the Hoja Santa.

Step across the line and you immediately self combust.


Sit on this at this time of year and you will be immediately 
bottom branded, your posterior will bare a remarkable
resemblance to a victorian stained glass window.
I have a couple of these little stools. They fit aesthetically 
with my rusty arched gateway and are the perfect height for 
pond gazing.

 
Cosmos and Lantana still burning bright despite the temperatures.

Stay Tuned for:
"A Walk Down the Garden Path"

All material © 2008 for east-side-patch. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.










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Comments

(Anonymous) wrote:
Jul. 23rd, 2008 02:30 pm (UTC)
Hi fellow Brit. Thanks for visiting my blog. Isn't it fun gardening in Austin? You have to get control over agaves. Get those pups out early on in the game. Although they provided you with an interesting photo shoot they tend to make the mama look pretty messy. In fact looks like they did her in! Same with the Amaranth-every seed from that plant germinates. I had thousands in my gravel this year.
Is this the film industry mimicking nature? Interesting.
[info]east_side_patch wrote:
Jul. 26th, 2008 03:01 am (UTC)
Agaves
Thanks for your comments.
Did the Amaranth become a problem? I love this plant but it sure does like reseeding in decomposed granite, and I do have a lot of that! I would hate for it to become invasive.

It is funny that my blog seems to have naturally found it's own "film and nature" theme, I did not plan it that way. I am glad you find it interesting.

Regards,
ESP.

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