My christmas cactus
Jul. 15th, 2006 11:09 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Here's my meme: drop me a comment telling me about a little thing in your life, so little and perhaps innocuous that you've never mentioned it before in any post you've ever done, but it's been there for years, or at least as long as you've been keeping a Livejournal.
I've been a more or less enthusiastic (if somewhat ignorant) gardener for years. But I have less luck with house plants. I've managed to kill everyone I've ever had, except for one.
My Christmas cactus is twenty-four years old. I got it as a Secret Santa gift from a coworker back in 1982. Which, when you think about it, is pretty amazing, isn't it?
The problem with house plants, of course, is that eventually I always forget to water them for long stretches of time. I've had ivies that I've kept alive for a good long time, for up to a couple years at a time, but if you forget too long, they will croak. The only one I really felt bad about was the ivy that I had sprouted off the ivy in my wedding bouquet. I felt really guilty when I lost that one.
But I can't kill the Christmas cactus. I think there have been times I have forgotten it for as long as a month, and the soil is like concrete. Sometimes the leaves can get a little shriveled. Occasionally, I will re-pot it (about once every year and a half, but my usual practice is to neglect it shamefully.
It always forgives me, though, and it lives.
It has gradually gotten bigger over the years, very slowly. It still is not too big for the oval table inherited from my great-grandfather, where it has been sitting for the last fifteen years or so.
It blooms (if all goes well) around Christmas and again around Easter. You need to lower the temperature at night to encourage the plant to bloom. I never am organized enough to move it to a cooler room, but it is against a window, and since it gets cold in Minnesota, it will suddenly start developing buds in December. On one side only, the side against the window where the ever-so-slight draft cools the air. When it is blooming, I turn it around so that the dark pink flowers face the room.
I've been a more or less enthusiastic (if somewhat ignorant) gardener for years. But I have less luck with house plants. I've managed to kill everyone I've ever had, except for one.
My Christmas cactus is twenty-four years old. I got it as a Secret Santa gift from a coworker back in 1982. Which, when you think about it, is pretty amazing, isn't it?
The problem with house plants, of course, is that eventually I always forget to water them for long stretches of time. I've had ivies that I've kept alive for a good long time, for up to a couple years at a time, but if you forget too long, they will croak. The only one I really felt bad about was the ivy that I had sprouted off the ivy in my wedding bouquet. I felt really guilty when I lost that one.
But I can't kill the Christmas cactus. I think there have been times I have forgotten it for as long as a month, and the soil is like concrete. Sometimes the leaves can get a little shriveled. Occasionally, I will re-pot it (about once every year and a half, but my usual practice is to neglect it shamefully.
It always forgives me, though, and it lives.
It has gradually gotten bigger over the years, very slowly. It still is not too big for the oval table inherited from my great-grandfather, where it has been sitting for the last fifteen years or so.
It blooms (if all goes well) around Christmas and again around Easter. You need to lower the temperature at night to encourage the plant to bloom. I never am organized enough to move it to a cooler room, but it is against a window, and since it gets cold in Minnesota, it will suddenly start developing buds in December. On one side only, the side against the window where the ever-so-slight draft cools the air. When it is blooming, I turn it around so that the dark pink flowers face the room.
Spinnaker Flying!
Date: 2006-07-16 04:31 am (UTC)We would go spinnaker flying all the time. To spinnaker fly you anchor the sailboat, run up the spinnaker sail, detach the two short ends of the sail and rig a pulley seat on a rope between them, set the sail out behind the boat, sit in the pulley seat, get someone to help whip the sail up into the air and OFF you go flying! You are catapulted into the air by the wind catching the spinnaker sail.
It's kind of like para-sailing except you only go up and stay up as long as the sail stays filled with wind. The tip of the spinnaker always stays connected to the top of the sailboat's mast.
Here are some pictures of spinnaker flying. http://thorup.com/spinfly.html
I can't believe I was crazy enough to do that.