Indian summer is now doing what it does every few years or so. It was more than ninety degrees for a second day here yesterday, and was even warmer in the Santa Clara Valley. As typical, it happened after cooling weather already started to feel like autumn. It is not a good time to relocate vegetation, which I started to do while the weather was still cool. Also, I must briefly increase irrigation. Not all of these Six are relevant to the weather or any particular theme. Actually, half are irrelevant. The last is open to interpretation. It is not a good picture, but is likely the best.

1. Water from the spigot occasionally gets slightly colorful here. Water from the streams and creek is clearer. It is a consequence of hydrant flushing. It is harmless for irrigation.

2. Unidentified ferns needed to be removed from where an old fence was replaced. I can not simply discard them. I buried them elsewhere so that they can regenerate next year.

3. Unidentified spirea was also in the way. Of course, although I do not expect much of it to survive, I relocated it also. I typically cut this spirea back to the ground during winter.

4. Marah macrocarpa, wild cucumber develops huge tubers that can weigh more than I do. This one is merely about a foot and a half long, so is relatively small, but now what?!

5. Portulaca grandiflora, moss rose is not mine, is not here, and did not give me a good picture. Nevertheless, I feel obligated to share at least some summery floral color today.

6. Rhody did not cooperate for this picture either. I can not explain how he so efficiently hid behind only one yawn. As bad as this picture is, it just might be the best of these Six.

This is the link for Six on Saturday, for anyone else who would like to participate: https://thepropagatorblog.wordpress.com/2017/09/18/six-on-saturday-a-participant-guide/

9 thoughts on “Six on Saturday: Best or Worst for Last

    1. I know that I save too many, and consequently must share some of them with neighbors, but that wild cucumber must go. It can not be composted or go into the chipping pile, so may go into the trash. I suppose that we could make a jack o’ lantern with it, or just roll it into the middle of the road and leave it there. Perhaps I could just leave it on a neighbor’s porch.

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  1. Good grief, that wild cucumber boulder 😂 I had no idea they even grew tubers, let along monster ones. Cripes. Rhody definitely is the highlight, and I am glad to see his teeth look very healthy. Such a photogenic fluffball!

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    1. Those massive tubers, or whatever they are, are why they are so impossible to kill. They store enough resources to regenerate many times after their tops get pulled off.
      Rhody does not cooperate with me for pictures, but he poses nicely for his friends.

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