Rage against the chaos.

Thunderstorm time! Almost each night now. Evening, sometimes into the morning. I'm fine with it as long as I can keep up my daily business, which is a lot these days. I did manage to sneak some gardening in, though - on the rooftop.

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The rooftop garden was quite the mess. Everything was growing everywhere, bugs had taken over the green onions, and spiders had conquered every little space between the plants - without even considering eating the plenty of bugs. Not their favorite food, I guess. At least there were some ladybugs feasting away, and I hope that the spiders didn't get any of those.

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So, Lily and I went to harvest. The onions had been in there way too long already, and weren't growing anymore. I used them as chives-replacement, anyway, but since we were in the middle of a strike, having a supply of onions is pretty nice, as some middle-women and men love to gouge prices. Pretty sure that none of the higher payments went to the farmers. Solidarity is not really thing anymore.

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It was definitely worth it. We ate those onions for a week in every meal, and I re-planted most of the stumps, as I mentioned in my post about peas. Long live the onions!

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Guess what? It's not only the stumps that are growing. As some of the onions were in seed production, I now have many very little plants of long (green?) onion coming out of the recently liberated earth! We'll see if they will make it. The last times, they didn't, just withered away quickly again.

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The insides of the pots all looked like that. Most is grass or herbs that I don't have a use for. Sometimes it's Chia, Amaranth or Chamomille - that's fine with me, they look somewhat pleasant, especially the latter. Grass doesn't. So it had to go.

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And yes, of course I also planted the peas. They're already a lot bigger than in the last picture. The rain does help a lot. I will have to put in the net or grid or wires for them to climb on this week.

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This is what the garden looked like before the frenzy. I had watered everything a little to make it easier to harvest, and also so Lily could get her hands really dirty. And her clothes. No, that was not the idea, but she did it anyway. She did a great job harvesting onions and taking off the dry parts, though.

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This is afterwards. A lot less onions. Since then it has changed quite a bit again, this was two weeks ago - as you can see by the peas in the picture above. And at last, a nice picture of one of the spiders that hang around there. I tried not to disturb them too much during my works, and they remained quite calm while the nets where swinging a lot under the work.

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Isn't she a beauty? Or him. No idea about spiders, either. This is the third generation. The first, huge one was yellow-ish on the back. Ellie had a name for her, but I had forgotten it. Doesn't matter, she's gone, but left a thousand spiders. Some of them went down into the big garden, some staid up here. I'm happy with all of them.

What are your thoughts about this topic? Please feel free to engage in any original way, including dropping links to your posts on similar topics. I'm happy to read (and curate) any quality content that is not created by LLM/AI, as well as read your own experience and point of view, I love to learn!



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Awesome that you have that beautiful garden. Onions must be a luxury with the strike going on, glad you are dong so well. Had some bananas I bought the other day from Ecuador, made me think of you down there. Glad things are going well, I know nothing about spiders down there, you may want to google them to make sure they aren't venomous. I know the Brazilian Wandering Spider lives around there but prefers banana trees. I know farther down in South America we only had to watch out for the "corner spider" which is a relative of the black widow. Jungle spiders are whole different thing, and they move into cities as the cities move into the jungles. Funny how that works!

Take care, I hope Lily is doing well and your bakery is having good sales!

!BBH
!PIZZA

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Funny enough, we didn't have any bananas during the strike - the roads to the nearby valley where they grow were blocked, too 😅

I honestly have no idea about spiders here. In the sierra, I think the most venomous animal is a scorpion, and it's not much more than the sting of a hornet. I once stepped on one, barefoot - but it didn't even sting me. Nice little fellow. I brought him outside very carefully. Didn't hurt me, so I didn't hurt him. Far away from the garden though, as childrens play there.

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Glad it didn't sting you. They have a hard time stinging through skin fortunately. Good of you to save it by moving it safely outdoors! I would google some of those spiders to be safe, most are non venomous for sure. But there are some you need to be careful with as they may bite if accidentally provoked.

The only aggressive species we have in the US these days is the hobo spider that came from England. Instead of retreating it will attack you and likes to hide among boxes. I wear gloves when moving boxes now! lol

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What a cute little spider! Compared to the things we see down here at least! :)

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Yes, I actually had a remark on how the Australians will laugh at that one, but I forgot to put it in there :-D

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"We ate those onions for a week in every meal..."

Onions are so tasty and healthy for the body, too! It's wonderful that you're able to share skills such as gardening with her! 😊

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She loves it! She's always excited about helping me. And I think she likes that gardening gets my mind off things, and focus on her and the plants. Everybody wins, there.

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I like your story about gardening on the rooftop. You showed how even with storms and busy days, you still take care of your plants. It is nice that Lily helps you too. Gardening really teaches patience and teamwork.

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Yeah, it's not really taking care of the plants... they kind of grow by themselves, and sometimes I remember to tend to them :-D

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