
BRAVO, 49ers, BRAVO!!!
I just knew we had an offensive line somewhere. And fast guys with good eye-hand coordination.
Thank you, Coach Harbaugh for finding them!!
A short post tonight because I have nothing to bitch about. Isn’t that great?
😉
Come Inside My Head, if You Dare…

BRAVO, 49ers, BRAVO!!!
I just knew we had an offensive line somewhere. And fast guys with good eye-hand coordination.
Thank you, Coach Harbaugh for finding them!!
A short post tonight because I have nothing to bitch about. Isn’t that great?
😉

Ever since I can remember, the NFL schedules an exhibition game between THEM (the Raiders) and US (the 49ers). This years game is Sat. Aug 20th. Which happens to be tonight. I don’t think we are ready to go to the prom yet, but here it comes anyway…
I am still trying to recover from the horrific shellacking we got last week. That, and the interviews afterwards. For the love of football, people! How embarrassing was that? Am I being overly sensitive, or is the “we didn’t know they would be coming out so aggressively” excuse remind you of the Twinkie defense? My jaw hung open in disbelief when I heard that one.
A tip for Coach Harbaugh: You can bet on the Raiders playing hardball tonight. Aggressively. Just sayin’…
GO NINERS!!!
Weekly Photo Challenge:Flowers
I have an Aloe garden in my backyard, and this year one of my Aloe bloomed. When it bloomed 2 years ago, I learned that this is how they reproduce. After it dropped its pods, I discovered several baby Aloes taking root! My garden area has doubled since 2009.
This year I wanted to make a pictorial of the Aloe’s life cycle, to share it with my fellow bloggers and readers. I suspect most people don’t have an Aloe plant in their yard to watch themselves.

My oldest and largest Aloe, “Big Momma”, started growing a stick-like projection shooting up from the center.


A new development this year -the stalk was weak and the four flowers were heavy, so there was leaning. Leaning is normal in the “giving birth” phase because the Aloe wants to drop pods as far from her as possible. But Big Momma was leaning before the flowers matured. Unfortunately, all four were positioned over the cement.

I dared not try and prop up the stalk for fear it would snap and all would be lost. I would have to be Big Momma’s mid-wife and deliver the pods to the garden soil or they would hit the cement and not become babies. I was going to be keeping an eye on things anyway, as I photographed Big Momma’s progress.

The flower petals do not last more than a week or two. They soon begin to dry up and seed pods start to grow.

Two more weeks and the seed pods are growing and taking nourishment from the petals. The petals dry up and drop off.



At the point where the pods were beginning to open was when I bent the stalk to lean over the garden area. I can’t find that photo, so you’ll have to use your imagination.
It seemed to take forever for anything to change. Meanwhile, the ground cover I planted on the non-Aloe half of the garden began to take over the entire backyard. It was growing out of cracks in the sidewalk and hid nearly every Aloe from the sun.

Today’s gorgeous weather inspired me to rip out the ground cover and hunt for babies! This takes a helluva lot of time when it is growing under and around spiny cactus, believe me! I am only 1/5th of the way finished, but I stopped to take a photo of the baby I uncovered so far.


Well, that was close to a 3-month process. I’m proud that my attention span allowed me to complete this little nature pictorial.
Hope you enjoyed it 😉