tomjasz
1 GW
FYI phytophthora is not as persistent as you indicate. It is likely other pathogens. At least that what my experience and microscope has shown.

It's presently only 4 times a year for bulk collection of "stuff". People do illegally dump a lot of stuff in the alley or street anyway, but it isn't useful stuff to me (anything scrap-wise useful gets picked up almost as soon as it's dumped by scrappers that must spend thousands of $$ a month just driving around in circles, and most everything else is just real garbage, often construction waste like broken up concrete that people don't wanna pay ot haul off so they dump it wherever they can sneak it in).dogman said:I forget not every city has the grappler service we have. Every two weeks a different truck comes with a claw to get couches, construction trash, or yard waste. So here in the fall, go to the neighborhood with the rich people, and bags of leaves are there for the picking. A nice resource for the compost pile.
Well, mostly my trees don't get more than two real waterings a month (filling up the space inside hte berm around them; I dunno how many gallons it is but it's a fair bit, perhaps 12-15foot wide circle at least 6-8inches tall, depending on which tree it is). The four mulberries closest to the house get 2x a month (what amounts to 4x for the biggest one, since it also gets all the greywater from the shower, and what amounts to possibly 2.5-3x a month for hte one next to the backdoor since it gets the greywater from the kitchen). All the others just get once a month, cuz I can't really afford to do more. (and I usually do them when it looks like rain, so the higher humidity will cause less evaporation loss while it soaks in).Chances are your mulberries are ok, they are prone to root rot primarily when planted in bluegrass or fescue lawns, which get overwatered to keep them alive this far south.
The wet areas likely have returned to better soil health, but the the dry areas, once wetted for the first time in a year, would cause a huge bloom of phytopthera in the whole area. Also, just trying to keep plants alive in the furnace months of may and june can mean the soil is kept too damp. Its looking like three of my damianita plants got that this year. Overwatered because I was trying to revive a nearby lantana.
Possibly--could also be bugs. We have a number of "new" kinds of beetles around, including little black ones that I also see at work in dog food sometimes (haven't found any in the actual dog food I have at the house, thankfully, so far), and some larger red/black beetles (not ladybugs, though we have those too), and some gigantic hand-length beetle that seems to like the amaranth a LOT, but not lantana, mulberry, or whatever that "eucalypus"-whatever tree is.It's also quite possible that the pumpkin simply fried in the sun, but took another two weeks to actually die.
But it was quite an unusual surprise, and I'm not likley to forget seeing it for a while
amberwolf said:....But the highlight of the highlight was when a plane flew right across the face of the moon while I was looking, and surprised me so much I fell backwards on my butt!:lol:
No, but there are still puddles in the backyard from yesterday's rain, evne when I left the house today. Front is just really damp/sort of muddy. Not even enough for my bike to sink into the mud or throw chunks when I turn around in the dirt part of the yard to get on the street. It'd probably sink like a rock in the backyard, in the areas with no grass. :lol:dogman said:Wow, incredible video on the news from Phoenix. Looks like you got a years rain in one day. Hope you didn't flood.
About as close as one could ever expect, that's for sure. Kinda like Hachi and Nana (but being daughter and mother I didn't expect much different). I could've dealt with a Nana/Bonnie situation, but it wouldn't ahve been a lot of fun all the time, and certainly not as stress-relieving as this pair is.I hadn't looked in here lately, YAY, you have a perfect pair now.
We finally lost our last bloodhound to old age and cancer a few weeks ago. She'd been a real bitch all her life, a rescue we couldn't ever find a forever home for. Anyway, the last year she's been bitchy and snappy, in some pain even with rimadyl.
In that sort of situation, I'd be physically separating the dogs and shuffling them around (liek I did with Bonnie and Nana, and later Fred), cuz that's easier than dealing with the fighting, and a lot less worrying/stressful. But I don't know how possible it would be in your situation. At least you don't have to worry about it anymore.The last 3 months or so, she lost it mentally, and just picked fights constantly. No matter if another dog was in the house or not. The two bernards got sick of it, and were constantly on alert for the next fight. We were breaking up 6 or more spats a day. What a pain in the ass that was.
It's actually helping having more than one. I guess I got so used to having a bunch that the back of my mind kept wondering where the others were all teh time, cuz now I am sleeping better, despite being awakened by Yogi falling/rolling over on me for tummy rubs at all hours. :lol: I still have nightmares just liek before..but it is easier to get to sleep, and easier to get back to sleep after waking, etc.Bertha the bitch is gone now, and WOW, instant heaven here now. Two perfect St Bernards, a boy and a girl. Just like you have now. It's a great way to live, and I'm so glad you have the same thing.
I just shave the belly/chest/neck, and leave the rest. I'm a little afraid he'll get skin damage / sunburn (like Nana did cuz of her short hair) when he wanders around or lays in the sun otherwise. Plus I think his fur is padding him when he bonks into things, and keeps him from getting cuts all over when he runs thru tree branches and whatnot chasing cats or shadows. :lol:He looks pretty furry, you might consider shaving him down. My dogs sure like it in summer. Grown out to about 3/4 by now, but I keep the bellies nearly naked so they can belly down on cool concrete, or belly up in the AC breeze.