Official Squatch Watchers

Oh my gosh he's so cute! A bucket in each hand for balance?



I read that in a whisper so as not to disturb her.




It is hard walking past the pasty butts and not being able to help.

So glad piggies are loving the expansion. I bet that was a hoot to watch.


Rae's post reminded me to go get hen feed.
They were cleaning pasty butts. Not a TSC store.

You know when you walk past people and hear stupid taters that masks you shake your head.....

Walking past where they were cleaning bottoms I hear " I can't believe they can ship them in the egg. I mean like they leave there in an egg and get here all fluffy."

SERIOUSLY! WTH!?!
:th
 
That seems to be true about the Jack in the Pulpits....Trillium too. It took years for mine to multiply. If you pick the flower of a Trillium it won't ever flower again. It will still come up and grow leaves but no flower
My mom’s maternal grandmother used to take clippings of any plant she could get her hands on and try to root and grow them. Seriously, she would go to flower shows or stores and take clippings from their plants. One time, she clipped leaves from an elephant ear. The thing grew great big leaves but never flowered.
Oh my gosh he's so cute! A bucket in each hand for balance?
No. My mom has two horses, she emptied the buckets into their feed pans and he was carrying the buckets back to their house.
 
Night folks... been a long day.
Good night
A long soak may help


I got my first turkey egg today..:love:wee
a little small for a turkey egg but I am sure they will get bigger. Not sure who the daddy is.
Next to a chicken egg

KIMG0136_01.JPG
 
No. My mom has two horses, she emptied the buckets into their feed pans and he was carrying the buckets back to their house.

I figured they were empty. Super cute with two buckets though.
:love
 
Trillium is the flower no one should pick
  • FH Browne for The Reflector
  • Apr 10, 2013
  • 2

5163376175775.image.jpg

WHILE TRILLIUM are beautiful to look at they are also extremely fragile, and picking them seriously injures the plant by preventing the leaf-like bracts from producing food for the next year, often effectively killing the plant and ensuring none will grow in its place. Photo courtesy of FH Browne.
 

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