Thursday, July 31, 2008

I don't know where to start ...

... to identify this.


I was sitting at my daughter's computer, staring at the wall, when I saw movement. A spot of cream, barely lighter than the wall, that's all it was. But it was crawling.

I got out the camera and took a few quick photos first. Then I reached for the desk lamp to turn it around to shine on the wall. When I looked back, my spot of cream had left. I couldn't find it again.


These are the two photos that turned out, blown up to their maximum size. The bug would be barely a millimetre or two long, I think.

I think it's a larva of some kind, but what kind? Where do I start looking?

Help!
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Chinatown Critters

Seen in Chinatown last week, mostly overhead ...


Lamp base in an antique store


Pigeon on an old wall


Lion atop a lamp post


Behind a dusty window. Toothy.


Above it all


Paper dragons
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Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Cornucopia

Strathcona Community Garden, continued ...

(Part I, here)

Tide flats. It wasn't all that long ago, as geographical features go, that the garden area was a tide flat; the water is still there, barely under the surface. In spots, it determines the use of the land.

I ended the previous post with a photo of a wooden ramp that leads to a small pool. A bench on it provides a resting place surrounded by greens and flowers; I sat there to listen for frogs ...


... and discovered a secret shrine:


In that "cave" in front of Laurie, a small Buddha sits, presumably to spread his beneficient karma over the garden.

buddha
He's not the only guardian angel here:


On the post of a shady arbor.

pink
One of the many flower plots. Due to good karma, fairy dust, compost, or hard work? Or all of the above?

borage
Borage.

Going on, deeper into the garden, we came to a row of espaliered fruit trees, painstakingly pruned and secured, bearing red apples and hard, green pears.

pears
"This espalier uses the oblique cordon system with the tree stock grafted onto dwarf rootstock."
Next, the waterlily pool:


... a mirror in the centre of an herb garden with gravelled paths, following a Tibetan Buddhist mandala pattern. Butterflies flutter here from one herb to another, dragonflies zip to and fro, and the bees are busy.

bees
Time for a break, and a cooling drink of water.

lily padsAnother pool pic. Just because.

Back through the vine walk, heaped with grapes, clematis, kiwis and honeysuckle:

shady walk
... to the garden house,
"a space for meeting, seed collection, herb drying and archives / library. The building was created using sustainable and reclaimed materials, and incorporates natural systems such as solar power, rainwater collection, grey water cleansing as well as a composting toilet."

Solar panels.

figs
Figs.

Time to go home for tea. We walked back around the west edge of the plots, past a children's area,

wagon
... and a berry patch,


Black gooseberries.

... down the path, and home, sunburnt (again!) and foot-weary.

We missed the wetlands area, down in the southeast corner, the composting bins, and the native sweat lodge. A route for another day.


Section of the Environmental Youth Alliance map.
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And still the void ...

I've got a migraine. This is what it feels like.


Decipher that, if you will. I'm taking an ibuprofen and going to bed.

See you tomorrow!

Monday, July 28, 2008

I just had to pass this on...

It made me smile. And cry at the same time. Especially the kids.

Watch the video (4:29) | digg story

Thanks, Bing, for passing it on!

Greening the dump

Downtown Vancouver is shaped like the belly of a seahorse, with Stanley Park being the head. It swims between Burrard Inlet and English Bay; False Creek bathes the lower back.

At the beginning of the 20th century, the water continued down and around the tail as tidal flats. A dam was built at Main Street, the "land" was deeded to the CPR (who later gave some of it back, as unusable) and the wetlands were slowly drained and filled. What is left now, is a large, barren area, partly wasteland, partly scarred by railway lines and warehouses. I have marked it on the map in pale brown.


On the north side of this blot, a small bright green V marks the Strathcona Community Garden. This was originally part of the tide flats; over the better part of half a century, the city has been gradually filling it with soil, garbage and gravel. In spots, the water still surfaces.

The flats have seen varied activity over the decades: railway parking, industrial landfill, city garbage dump, "Hobo Village" during the Depression years, and later on, the site of the main city firehall and mixed industrial use. All of this, of course, was laced together with the irrepressible blackberry thickets.

Since the end of the 1970s, residents of the area have been working towards creating a shared garden on the dump. It has not been easy; between the difficulties of the terrain, the encroachment of the city, conflicts with other worthwhile projects, and the on-again, off-again battles with the city government, it took ten years to formalize a temporary lease on the property, in 1985.

The garden at first covered 3.5 acres; in 1993, it was expanded to include the Cottonwood, along the street to the southeast, and the Environmental Youth Alliance garden (on a blackberry-infested garbage heap), bringing the total area under cultivation up to 7 acres.

Enough stats; on to the photos. Follow our footsteps:


The sign on Hawks Avenue does not encourage visitors; it doesn't even mark an entry-way. Up at the corner of Prior, a narrow wood-chip trail cuts through the blackberries and bindweed.


This wild border serves a useful purpose or two: it insulates the garden from the smoke and racket of Prior Street, and provides a safe habitat for birds and other wildlife. Besides, it disguises the garden, discouraging non-garden-oriented visitors. It almost discouraged us; we passed the corner several times before we noticed the trail.

Around a gentle curve, the garden dozes in its sunny enclosure. At first, we wander among the expected allotment fare.


Lettuces and other salad greens.


Big blue cabbages.


Herbs in containers.


Nasturtiums and dillweed. With a chair for the weary weeder.


With the occasional decorative element thrown in. Here, crab shells on poles.

The plots go on and on, and we went around and around, up and down the rows. A few gardeners worked quietly on their squares of land; a woman showed us her neighbour's grape vines, woven together with flowering purple clematis, white bindweed, and laden with green grapes.

Heading for the garden shed, for another tool, perhaps. Scarlet runner beans bloom overhead.

The plots petered out. We passed a row of tall boxes; beds raised to waist height.


I learned later that these beds were built for the use of disabled gardeners, who would not be able to handle the stooping and lifting that most ground-level gardening entails. (Oh, my aching back!)

A few picnic tables under fruit trees, and this round "dining suite" in a sunny spot. And just beyond, the orchard; apple, pear, and crabapple trees.


And across the orchard, the beehives, housing the pollinating crews.



Doing the map dance.


To be continued: water features, solar panels ...
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Saturday, July 26, 2008

Hard at work

I'm still sorting Community Garden photos; the promised history, etc., will be delayed until tomorrow.



... Now, where was that hoe?
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Friday, July 25, 2008

They call it the "BiodiverCity"

A scant half dozen blocks from the bustle of Chinatown, we walked into a fragrant oasis, quiet except for the buzzing of a million bees and the chatter of chickadees and sparrows.

Strathcona Community Garden. Once a dump, now ... let me show you:



Environmental Youth Alliance map.




Apples, redding up.




Yellow squash.




Weeding the rows of onions.




A few plots on the southeast corner.


Tomorrow: history of the garden, current projects, more veggies, fruit and flowers, beehives, and a hidden Buddha.
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Thursday, July 24, 2008

Fifty-six legs

One thing about a vacation; I've got a whole new batch of insects and spiders to look at. Even when I've only travelled a few miles.

I've been prowling around the house and garden here in Strathcona, looking in all the corners and under leaves. And here are some of the spiders I have found.

(I just crashed my daughter's computer, trying to browse BugGuide, and now the mouse won't work. So IDs will have to wait.)


Found at night, in a corner of a bedroom. So elegant!


This is another night prowler. Very tiny, a few millimetres toe to toe. But an efficient predator, judging by the detritus. He is extremely shy, so as soon as the camera gets anywhere in his vicinity, he turns tail and buries his nose in the corner. Wishing for a real hole, no doubt; he pulls in the legs and bundles himself up into a tiny spot of black. I haven't been able to see the pattern on his back clearly at all.


A daytime spider. These are all over the garden. I've been pruning and weeding, and they take off running in every direction when I bag up my cuttings.


This one was on the underside of a hydrangea leaf, along with the zebra jumping spider I posted this morning. Daytime, again. It's trying to climb up the slippery, shiny dog dish; the reflections make it very leggy.

Daytime. On the kitchen window frame. She sat there, unmoving, while I raised and lowered the window, maneuvered my hand, the camera, my head around in the gap, tried again and again to take a photo backwards; not a sign that she had noticed anything unusual.


That lump? I think it must be eggs, and she's standing guard. "You'll get to my babies only over my dead body," she says.

Below that window, on the wall; a smaller spider. It has no web, but sits in the same place all day.


And tonight, out on the porch, I found one of the cross spiders in its web. Most of them are active in the daytime, building webs across pathways where humans will run into them. I am surprised to see a web still intact at night.

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