Our garden in the San Francisco Bay Area historically has experienced the wet mild winters and dry mild summers characteristic of Mediterranean climates. It's a modest family garden -- its core was formerly a swimming pool -- so we might grow a single plant or a handful of plants, where a larger-scale operation could do long rows or massive beds. Over time we have adjusted to find the right balance for our garden.
On Top
All this new stuff goes on top turn it over, turn it over wait and water down from the dark bottom turn it inside out let it spread through Sift down even Watch it sprout. A mind like compost.
As it's evolved, this site has increasingly focused on vita plantae in the San Francisco Bay Area, so I've rejiggered this blog to reflect that. You will still find plenty of more general posts on life by the bay. Visit the site home or try one of these:
It’s a detail from an artwork prominently displayed in an often-visited place in San Francisco. Who can guess what the artwork is? Take a wild stab! Points for artist, style, well, anything really …
This is a pretty neat piece – if I’m right, it is just outside the deYoung museum walls. The artist is Zhan Wang, it’s very tall, and there are a number of pieces in the series – titled “Scholars Rock” I think.
annexensen
It certainly looks like an aerial view of a land mass and water..I cannot figure out the location though.
xensen
Cold …
debra
hmmm…some sculpture in some pond in some park in some place?
xensen
Warmer …
koko
This is a pretty neat piece – if I’m right, it is just outside the deYoung museum walls. The artist is Zhan Wang, it’s very tall, and there are a number of pieces in the series – titled “Scholars Rock” I think.
xensen
Bingo! Koko nails it. Well done.
(More photos tomorrow.)
Howard Junker
i totally agree with koko, altho i would have inserted an apostrafee to make the possessive of scholars.