
It was hard to keep up with myself last week, and with all the friends, projects and tasks that fill my life to overflowing. I guess I was somewhat playing catch-up after my mountain retreat the previous week. The garden got gently rained on three times that last week of September, which is unusual. Combined with fog on other days, the dampness caused mildew in the planter boxes, but mostly the lower leaves of the tall zinnias have been affected.
When I noticed the Japanese anemones looking better than ever, it occurred to me to plant a few more this fall, maybe some pale pink ones — but I corrected my impulsivity in time, and won’t be taking on one more project, what with so many others unfinished. A more reasonable goal would be to try to take better care of the anemones I have, and see if they can be encouraged to be taller and more robust. It’s a sign of their middling health, that they do not ever spread and multiply, and their flowers are few and small.
The sneezeweed I grow in a pot looks as well as it ever has. I bought it a few years ago at a native plant nursery, because I love the mountain versions of the flower. I put it in a pot so I could be sure to water it enough; the irrigation settings for most of my garden are set for drought-tolerant plants, and sneezeweed is not one of those. My type is pretty plain, or at least monochromatic, compared to the mountain ones.

In search of fancier kinds, a few months ago I browsed sneezeweeds online for quite a while, and ordered seeds for this one, Purple-Headed. When I am looking at
seed catalogs or even plants in nurseries, all the options seem so do-able and desirable. But once the time comes to get on with the actual work of planting… well, I literally drag my feet. So who knows what will happen with these seeds…
I used my sourdough starter twice last week, first to make a large pan loaf of seeded wheat-and-spelt bread. This is the recipe I have been trying to perfect, but perfection hasn’t happened yet. I may have to pause the sourdough project while I branch out and reach back, to other breads I have made or have wanted to try, like chocolate bread, Indian flatbreads, and applesauce rye.
Buttery Sourdough Crackers was a satisfying recipe that used a bit of starter. This picture shows the dough as it was resting overnight, along with leaves of the lemon verbena that I am drying, after pruning my plant for the first time ever.

I used this recipe for: Rustic Sourdough Butter Crackers as my jumping off place, substituting half dark rye flour, and adding sesame seeds to one half, and poppy seeds to the other. I baked them a lot longer than the recipe called for. The resulting crackers are nice and crispy and easy to eat. The butter ingredient plus the sourdough tang is a great combination.

My friend Lucy and I took another one of our monthly walks, up in the hills again but to a park she hadn’t been to before. It’s mostly very brown up there now, but the poison oak is making red splashes in the landscape. And my old friend tarweed!

The Seek app tells me this is not either of the species I saw on my way up the mountain last month, but Hayfield Tarweed. And it seems to come in white or yellow versions, in one case growing side by side:

The third online Beowulf class was this week, and I spent more than two happy hours in the company of the most delightful teachers, Richard Rohlin and Jonathan Pageau. They both love the subject, and Richard is definitely a Beowulf scholar from way back. I will have to at least quote a couple of lines from the poem here eventually, though it seems that unlike me, most people I’ve talked to got an introduction to Beowulf in school. So you may already be more familiar with the story than I.

At the end of the week, I remembered: apples! It’s time to make a trip my favorite apple ranch, and see which of their 30+ varieties is available now. I squeezed it in on Saturday afternoon, and added a stop at a nursery out that way, hoping they would have starts of some kind of leafy greens I could tuck into spaces in the planter boxes after I take out zucchini and tomatoes and eggplant. They did!
So here in the back of my car is a mix of apples Empire, Jonathan and Macintosh; and six packs of Swiss chard and collards. I do have chard growing right now, but I think I need more. And I wasn’t able to get collards started from seed in August.

One more glad sighting of late summer I want to share, is this half wine barrel that was unplanted through last winter:

When I put in some snapdragon plants in late spring, I noticed a couple of tiny mystery plants that didn’t look like weeds, so I left them undisturbed. Now everything has filled out and I find that I have beautiful Thai basil and tropical sage complementing the snaps. Gardens are ever surprising.
Happy October!

How blessed to be leading such a busy and fulfilling life. You are a fine example to us all.
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One of my favorite colors is the red of poison oak in the fall – nothing like it, even in museum paintings I have seen… Having a quarter schedule in college, I started classes toward the end of September. The poison oak looked so beautiful twining up the hundred-foot-tall Coast Redwoods on my drive back to Humboldt each year.
D.
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What a pleasant surprise to find that the unidentified plantlets are indeed Thai Basil and sage. I love garden surprises. Usually. Sometimes the surprises are weeds.
Your white Japanese Anemones are so pretty that I’ll dig out a few September Charm ( pink) and put in white ones in the same enclosed area. I find them very invasive but where I have them they are surrounded by concrete walkways. so can’t go anywhere. Nevertheless every year some have to be dug out or I think they’d choke themselves.
Enjoy those lovely apples!! GM
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Surprise Thai Basil? That is a wow indeed. The half-barrel looks very lush and so colorful. Everything happily soaking in that rain.
I just bought my first portulaca and will see where I can put it. Your anemones look so healthy. Mine are much more subdued this year. Will have to puzzle this one out.
Those crackers look sublime. I just picked up a buy-nothing pizzelle iron that had been listed as a waffle iron. Will see if it’s worth keeping or handing off to someone who wanted a pizzelle maker.
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Haha — that one anemone bloom was looking healthy enough to show.
I bet portulaca love it where you live!
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Hello lovely GJ! Oh my! So much loveliness still in the garden! I am hungry for sourdough. I wonder if the Lord will give me some starter! You are so delightfully busy and always learning. I love that about you! xo
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Knittergranny, the Lord has provided all the wild yeasts you need, for you to make your own starter 😉 — but I know, it does take several days to get going strong. I have started my own several times, and also been given starter starts from at least three different people over the decades.
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Oh, I envy you your Empires! Now that I think about it, why would you, in California, have Empires (the New York state apple), when I, nearby in New England, can’t seem to find them? Although a knowledgeable woman I ran into at the supermarket thought they might be gone by around here. But I thought I often buy them throughout the fall and winter?
There are more varieties every year, it seems, and that is probably the reason that Empires are being pushed aside by the newcomers. (you can probably tell I’m disturbed by this whole business!)
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I’m also concerned about the situation. I understand that most of the orchards in my area are ageing out and need to be replaced, because they aren’t as healthy and productive as they used to be. But the farmers don’t have the money to do that. If they did, I imagine they would plant whatever new and popular variety would sell the most in the short term.
I get to have these traditional varieties (and some new ones) because the original owner of the ranch I go to liked planting lots of different types. He died a couple of years ago and I don’t think his children are as keen on the whole operation as he was. But so far they are keeping it going, and continuing to sell the vintage and/or unusual apples.
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I love your mystery plants and how they turned out to be Thai basil! Everything is so beautiful, Gretchen. Your blooms are simply glorious.
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How wonderful to still have so many beautifully blooming flowers in your garden! “Rain on zinnias and seeds on crackers” is such a appealing title, both of which I love
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So comforting to read about the garden, the homemade crackers, the hike, wildflowers and the apple ranch (different than an orchard or just a different word). So glad to have found you again and so sorry to have missed your comment on my blog two years ago! I’ve finally responded. So glad to be back in touch.
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