Showing posts with label Austin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Austin. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

2011 NOT THE SUMMER ANYONE WANTED

My project was scheduled for June. My husband enjoys making hypertufa troughs and planters and the Divas of the Dirt were interested in trying to do it themselves.
DivasoftheDirt,thinking abt Hypertufa
The plan was that Oz would head a hypertufa workshop and everyone would go home with a small trough.
I sent out a note:
Glinda: Oz has the perlite, peat, Portland cement, cardboard molds & a base to work on. For mixing the hypertufa each Diva will need to bring a plastic dishpan/tub thing that holds approximately 12-quarts/3 gallons ... some kind of waterproof, flexible gloves (disposable are fine) so the skin on your hands doesn't come in contact with the hypertufa mixture...We'll be working in the garage - no A/C but shade and a breeze.

Karla: what tools do we need to bring to work in yard while stuff is drying/setting?

Glinda: don't know what we can do out there if we don't get rain... the ground is like a rock.

Mattie had done a lot since her Diva Day: Thought I’d share… After many exhausting hours of sweating I have completed the first stage of the front. I got chopped brick at the stone yard-three trips totaling 1,000 lbs for the border. Might need more but I need a good rain (don’t we all?) so I can see how it settles. Filled in with soil and mulch and plants from friends... What do you think?

Divasofthedirt, new front edging
But we never had summer Diva Day ... so many things happened in both our personal lives and in Central Texas during the summer of 2011.

We stood with hoses in hand, trying to keep gardens alive. We watched the bills for air-conditioning soar and we ate a lot of salads!

We had many happy family visits, went on vacations, said sad farewells.

The weather continued its brutal attack on living things... by June 14th Austin had already experienced 10 days over 100°F. The lake levels kept dropping and the usual Fourth of July fireworks were cancelled. All green things were stressed and we heard reports of even native trees ready to die from the drought.
By July 30th we were on Day 44 of temperatures over 100°F. On August 11th we broke another record... the LOW for the day was 82°F.

We'd given up the idea of a summer date - by the third week in August the possibility of having autumn project days seemed dicey.
Buffy: Does anyone think it will cool off into the 90s' by the time [September] the 17th comes?

Annie:Hopefully, but I doubt it!!

Glinda: It looks as if we will tie the all time days-over-100-degree record today and blow it away tomorrow. Oz bets that we'll then get frost by Halloween.

Mattie: I have been hand watering my new shrubs and trees and hope they make it. Scary when they say that we won’t see the full extent of the damage until after the first freeze. There are so many trees dead already. Yikes. This has been a good incentive to creating more plans for plantings and to rip up more grass…later, when its cooler.

With the drought, the heat and the hot winds came fire - a dead tree or piles of branches could no longer be thought of as brush... now they looked liked FUEL.

Welding started one fire, outdoor cooking another... eventually all outdoor grilling was temporarilly forbidden.
In mid-August, fires in Leander damaged 15 homes

August 24th - we broke the 1925 record for 70 days of 100°F

August 28th tied the all-time Austin high temperature of 112°F set in September 2000.

Fires popped up all around Central Texas from west of Fredericksburg to Steiner Ranch, north to Cedar Park/Leander and far east to Bastrop and Canyon Creek. The devastation was enormous and we all knew people who were affected. Many people were evacuated, some lost property and vehicles, many lost animals in the blazes, some lost everything.

Notices like this went out from government agencies:
More than 4,000 homes have been evacuated in Bastrop County as a wildfire assails the area. With tinderbox conditions raising the specter of more blazes in Central Texas, you might want to consider what you should bring if your neighborhood is evacuated. The Texas Department of State Health Services has helpfully compiled a list of recommended items.

The Bastrop Fire was historic and tragic.

September 11th was day #82 of days over 100°F. The Bastrop fire statistics were given as 1500 houses burned, 35,000 acres burned with several people still missing. The fire was only considered 50% contained. Most of Lost Pines State park had burned, a loss for everyone.

Here we were in the middle of September and for many parts of Austin, the last measurable rain had been a mere inch in early June. New fires kept popping up and it was still hot. Sugar's turn had been planned for mid-September & she decided to stick with that date since most of her project was cutting back, cutting out hackberries that had seeded into borders, removing bad liriope and adding mulch.
We could help her do these tasks... but more than that - we needed to see each other!

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

A VISIT FROM HERMINE

LATE SUMMER - EARLY FALL 2010

Mindy sent out an email about a plant sale near her with great bargains.
Karla couldn't go to the sale, but she shared an odd happening in her parking strip:

I don’t know what happened but realized one day that I had 3 stalks of corn growing in my bed between street/sidewalk...Hope everyone is having a great summer!!

Sugar was surprised: Corn?... do you actually have corn on the stalks?

Karla replied:
Yep...thought it looked like corn stalks, but ...it was right beside those deep red daylilies ... thought they had multiplied ...it kept getting taller and taller and the foliage no longer looked the same – one day..I noticed that something looked like an ear with silks coming out top ... maybe I should have used that area for a veggie garden!...

Buffy's September turn was fast approaching but the date set at the January planning meeting was now impossible for Mindy and Sugar.

Buffy offered to make it a week earlier:
I am really ready for some cooler days... Are you all ready to start gardening again? ... My back yard looks terrible and I can't wait to have you all over! I will try to keep us in the shade and I will have plenty for us to drink

Karla was fine with the new date: I really doubt that your backyard is terrible but I could understand if it did ...too many mosquitoes and then the heat – ugh!!
Looking forward to seeing everyone and hearing about the summer fun!

Glinda said: My only gardening has been watering just enough to keep some stuff alive... soon as it's done I'm ready to run back inside. The plants are downright shabby looking - never saw so many shredded leaves from caterpillars!

Diva-Annie: I'm ready to get back into the garden, the garden of somebody that still has some living plants. mine was doing pretty well for most of the summer, till we got to the really high temps and poof almost overnight everything has died!!

Mindy was happy with the change: I'm totally on board ...brilliant!..Let's do it!

Buffy had a good project plan:
I think I would like to extend my veggie/herb garden area and clean up some beds along with adding compost and mulching....
but she also indulged in a little garden fantasy:
I also want to build a greenhouse, make a path with decomposed granite, extend some beds in the front and add a new bed on the side by the kitchen. Also, add a layer of compost over the front and back yard. Who ever has the tiller don't forget to bring it. Do you all think we can get all of that done in a day??!!

Diva-Annie was not daunted:
Sounds like a great project for the morning! Only question is .."what will we do in the afternooon?"

Hurricane Hermine became Tropical Storm Hermine - arriving in Austin the week before Buffy's project day, dumping inches of rain in a few hours.

Glinda: ..there is no doubt that the ground at Buffy's house has been softened up a little! Oz ran out twice to empty the rain gauge & it added up to almost 12"... Our rolling trash cart (and a few others) floated more than a block down the street...I think Sophia's okay since she's wisecracking on FB ... hope Karla is okay, too?

Sophia chimed in:…12 inches-yowsza! I guess we will be lightly tugging on unwanted plants/weeds on Saturday! I kept waking up thinking we were going to flood but Roger reassured me that we are up pretty high. How is everyone else?

Karla's house stayed dry inside: ...I could not believe that it continued to rain that hard for that long - every time I woke, still going!..Hope everyone is ok!

Sugar's neighborhood is flat: ...my house is dry on the inside as well...however, i have a swimming pool in my backyard! i didn't think it was ever going to stop...feast or famine!

Diva-Annie was fine: ...OK here too, although there are lots of muddy footprints on the carpet!

Mindy reported in: 8 plus inches here... high and dry on the hill, low water crossings went down quickly and all my mud puppies are out in the dog run ...get them in ... for a bath tomorrow...heard I-35 was shut down both ways at Jarrell...Will see everyone Saturday...hear it's gonna be a sauna!!

We were ready for Part 2 of the Diva of the Dirt year.