A flip and a flop

Just closing the loop by posting a couple pictures I promised.

The flip (for joy) is the new crown molding in the upstairs hall. I love it, though probably no one else would ever notice. It looks so cottage-y and pretty.
crownmold

The flop is about the acoholic paperwhites tip. If I had taken the picture yesterday, there would have been no flop, but today…one errant stalk. Maybe I didn’t start the alcohol soon enough, or maybe it needed to be a little stronger solution. Even so, they still look pretty nice. I’ll keep trying with the rest of my bulbs — it’s a long winter.
floppy-paperwhites

Winter is on my head, but eternal spring is in my heart.
                                                                   ~ Victor Hugo

Happy hour — paperwhite style

I found this tip on a couple gardening blogs I follow and thought it was so neat I wanted to pass it along.

You’ve seen paperwhites (narcissus), right? Lots of people force the bulbs this time of year or buy those little kits next to the amaryllis bulb kits and poinsettias. I think they smell heavenly (though some people think they smell nauseating), but, like everyone else, I had a problem with them growing too tall and flopping over. You can tie them up, but they still tend to look messy.

Well it seems there’s a solution to this problem — an alcohol-water solution. If you start your bulbs in plain water, then dump that out when the shoots get to be a couple inches tall and replace it with a very diluted alcohol solution, your paperwhites will grow less tall without impacting their lovely blooms or scent.

Me, I like a dry and limey gin & tonic, but paperwhites apparently aren’t fussy — you can use any kind of liquor (gin, vodka, whiskey, tequila etc.) or rubbing alcohol (but not beer or wine — too much sugar).

Here’s a site that gives more details. Figuring out the exact proportion of alcohol to water to achieve a mixture that’s about 5% alcohol is a little tricky (at least it was for me) — pay attention to what it says about alcohol percentages (vs. proofs). After much times’in & gazinta’in, I’m trying a solution of 6½ cups water to ½ cup rubbing alcohol. (Remember, I’m a writer. Math is not my thing. I wouldn’t trust my formula — do the math yourself to be sure.)

Here’s how the paperwhites look today — I just dumped off the water and added the alcohol solution. I’ll keep watering with this solution as needed. Hopefully in a couple weeks I’ll be able to show you beautiful, but not floppy, paperwhites in full bloom.

paperwhiteshoots

Now, this kind of science experiment (where someone else has already done the hard work) is one I can get into. Cocktails, anyone?

I’ve taken more out of alcohol than
alcohol has taken out of me.
                                ~ Winston Churchill

The pause that refreshes

Nothing like a vacation to give you a fresh perspective. Fortunately, unlike the last getaway, this one was worth it. Very much a waterfall theme, as the cabin we rented actually had its own waterfall right behind it! Quite amazing that someone would “own” something like this. (Bummer — I took some video with my camera but WordPress can’t accommodate it, so here are a few stills instead.)

 

Two other waterfalls were in the nearby Stone Mountain State Park, plus really interesting views from the granite peaks — it was like the moon up there, all rutted and cratered. Even though we hiked it in the rain and got soaked, it was still really special to be the only people in such a beautiful spot. 

 

 

 

 

This was the only fellow traveler we met en route.

 A wee thing, as you can see.

Because we had a Sunday-Friday rental, we were able to get some things done at home and leisurely pack on the Saturday before we left. The drive through West Virginia was spectacular, even without much fall color yet — what a beautiful state. And if you’ve never taken the drive (3 hours from Pittsburgh) to the New River Gorge — do it! “Bridge Day,” when they close the highway to let people bungee off the New River Bridge, is this coming weekend. Unfathomable.

Coming back late Friday left the whole weekend to work outside in the gorgeous weather (nicer than any we had while we were away) and generally ease back into real life. Except that the actual getaway was kind of short, this was definitely a more relaxing way to do a vacation. And the garden now sports a couple sweet reminders of our trip.

  

All in all, we were happy to have been gone, happier to be home. Just the way it should be.

No one realizes how beautiful it is to travel until he comes home 
and rests his head on his old, familiar pillow. 
                                                                      ~ Lin Yutang

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