My dog passed away and it feels impossible to do anything outside without him
Posts by Alexa
Definitely a legume! The leaves look bean-like
More spooky looking scabiosa flowers and buds - they are reaching upwards toward a gloomy overcast sky.
sPoOkY scabiosas
🌱
A picture showing mostly an overcast sky, light is barely filtering through the gloomy clouds. The very bottom of the frame you can see plants and flowers reaching up - very tendril like. The main focus is showing a scabiosa flower, one open in bloom, the other is a closed blossom. The scabiosas are a new variety called dark vino, and are so dark and rich in color they look black! In this image, it looks like a silhouette. A crow is flying overhead, a bit blurry as it’s in motion - but overall, super spooky flower garden! Grown in Portland Oregon, in an urban yard zone 8/9
Spooky Scabiosas
Still blooming through this awful weather
So tell me, why does my punk son want to go outside???
Clearly he has SOMETHING to prove!!!
His virgin paws… they’re soaked! His papa hasn’t trimmed his toe feathers in awhile - his fur is like ShamWow
But my PUNK son try’s to sneak outside, using the dog as cover
It’s POURING rain, it’s awful, gross, spooky weather rn
No sane person wants to be out there - the dog chooses to wear a rain jacket to go in his own backyard
Virgin paw pads and all that
My two cats are *ndoor cats (though, we like to say homeschooled)
Thank you!
Thank you!
I’m officially a certified horticulturalist 😎
It’s amazing how such small changes can have a major impact! Thanks for sharing!
Another garden path along a fence, this space is constantly shaded.
Another game changer in the garden: improved egress.
No more dead ends and wider paths (~2’ wide)
I accepted nothing will grow along the shadow zone parallel to the fence and turned it into a path.
I’m generally working with a 12’x15’ zone, last year I packed things too tight
The golden retriever is chilling in the garden, sitting on a nice path between two young garden beds full of cover crops and sunflowers.
Fortunately we anticipated the backlash to the sticks.
Strategically placed grain and grass cover crops provided daily enrichment. This guy loves to graze.
Oh - the logs and sticks we added to edge the bed?
If you’re a fan of chewing on sticks till you get sick, you might think it’s a cruel fucked up “joke”
If you’re a fan of just looking at sticks, you might think it’s kinda cute and also cool because it came from a tree you’re chopping down
The golden retriever patrols his garden in the peak hours of the day.
This year the paths along the garden bed were just layered cardboard and paper grocery bags.
Very pleasant to walk on. Kept paws tidy!
2024 we had straw paths and a straw covered dog.
#gardeningreport
A sweet golden retriever steps tenderly down the garden path. This garden path is made of layers of paper grocery bags.
2025 GARDEN REVIEW:
A garden path is the single most important part of a garden!
It’s a defining characteristic of ANY space AND it is one that ALL creatures innately understand if it works or not.
This year, the paths were deemed impeccable by our judge…
#gardeningreport 🌱
2025 GARDEN REVIEW:
To start off, let me introduce the judge - he’s more than just a colleague, he’s my dog and my son.
He has high standards and good values. He rarely barks, never digs, always walks on the designated path…
#gardeningreport
A mutant cherry tomato with suckers growing off the leaf stem (rachis).
Who wants to CYBERBULLY this FREAK of a tomato
a SUCKER on the LEAF STEM?!
🍅 🌱
It’s a terrible thing to have your name hijacked by a corporation
Thank you! He’s very popular
A chipper golden retriever walking down a garden path made of paper grocery bags. This gentleman has finally released his 2025 gardening report, which we will be sharing with you throughout the week. Urban garden in zone 8b, Pacific Northwest.
THE 2025 GARDEN REVIEW IS IN!!! 🌱 📈
Although the season is still going strong, our esteemed reviewer has provided us with an in-depth and nuanced report. This report helps us uphold the quality and functionality of the garden.
Stay tuned as we release these assessments this week!
#gardeningreport
2025 beginning of June: sunflowers are barely peaking out of the crimson clover that covers the bed. Currently blooming in this photo (cause I think it’s pretty), a nice green mulch - some might think it’s too much.
2024 beginning of June: comparing the sunflower growth, you can make out more seedlings because the crimson clover is in a neat row in the bed (as opposed to covering completely).
Comparing 2025 (left) and 2024 (right) sunflowers
Photos taken beginning of June
I went overboard with the crimson clover in 2025 because 2024 I felt like my soil was too dry. Did it help? Maybe. More rain and regrading the garden this year could contribute as well
2025 sunflowers so far
Not the perfect comparison to 2024 sunflowers (different angle and layout, different types, different bloom times), but same 2 months documented
#gardening #bloomscrolling
A polished lady beetle (Cycloneda polita I think) hanging out in the lacy looking, bolted cilantro. It’s a smaller ladybug, spotless, a solid red body, and it’s white markings look like eyes. A very cute and native bug in the Pacific Northwest, found in my urban garden. Photo taken in late July.
The native ladybugs were everywhere this year.
Lots of bug diversity this year, lots of predators.
3 years ago this urban yard had none.
#gardening #nativeplants
I love creatures and critters and that includes plants
Can’t wait for the new South Park episode
“Sustainability” has turned into this ambiguous and useless noun.
Climate adaptation and resiliency is what we should be thinking at this point.
The outrage in the replies are funny to me. In reality, every net zero, sustainability framework, whatever it is- is PR! The marketing worked.
I’m not saying Net Zero is bad - I’m saying it’s a rigged system and we are pretending to sustain something unsustainable.
I’m interested to see how other businesses that push this feel-good marketing as a core part of their identity, handle this as we inch closer to 2030. Sustaining the unsustainable rather than adapting to the inevitable, wasting so much time