Tuesday, June 22, 2021

Freecycling pedals on, jammed doors and mystery plantings

I think our local Freecycle has come back with a roar. After several years of flagging interest, declining membership and some less than friendly encounters, then the long almost total shutdown since early last year, the spirit seems back.

Yesterday's success with the painting materials encouraged me, instead of traipsing all the way, across two towns to the thriftie, why not offer the bags of yarn that were out there in the car.

Which I did, complete with a picture..

In literally minutes half a dozen polite and friendly requests all giving day and approximate time as requested, came flying into my email. 

This is so much better than before I dropped out, that I'm thinking of not doing thriftie runs at all, at least for identifiable stuff, in enough quantity to be of interest.

And when I offered the bag to the first comer, fair's fair, she replied with great enthusiasm. And it was gone a few minutes later. Yay! 

I had used all I could of the various yarns, and it seemed wrong to cling when another person could really enjoy them. The taker said they were just the thing for some projects she had in mind. This one wasn't a difficult process.

This is how Freecycle was a few years ago, and I'm glad it's back.

Cleaners here today and I went to the Preserve between showers, and provided snacks for biting insects, while getting pictures of wild plants in a special area for insects, butterflies and birds.

There was an absolute congregation of bees working this area

And I need to ask who can identify this? 


Two pictures for ID purposes.

The cleaners, aside from their usual great cleaning, not too hard in the house of a single pet free person, but welcome anyway, managed to jam the patio door lock. This happened when they came last month, too, and now I know it must be them.

Someone, instead of leaving the lock in the horizontal locked position, forced it up the channel completely past the tolerance of the mechanism. I suppose they thought they were securing it, since they're very conscientious about security. I know they meant well. It could have broken the lock.

Each time, I have had to get my (large, strong) contractor friend to come, physically lift the heavy door up from the track, shake it till the lock dropped back in place and lower it. It takes a powerful man to put right the goof of another powerful man!  This door took three burly installers to handle when they put it in.

So all's well, my heart's back in my chest, and my rescuer left with a pot of plum jam. That stuff is currency! And I sent an email asking the  cleaning group please not to do that again. They'll be mortified, but I think we'll recover.

Never a dull moment!




17 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. All this happened before early afternoon when Handsome Son visited. Yes, more action than planned.

      Delete
  2. I don't know what that plant is but I hope someone does because I'm curious now too! Freecycle really is great isn't it. I like knowing I can help someone else out just like you did.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I've met some nice people through freecycle, like-minded spirits.

      Delete
  3. It is great to have such a rescuer who knows what to do and can physically do it. You need more jam just in case.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's one reason, aside from handsome son, why I keep steadily baking and jamming!

      Delete
  4. My plant ID app says Great coneflower. So...there you go. Maybe?

    ReplyDelete
  5. Could that plant be related to our western rayless coneflower Rudbeckia occidentalis (https://garden.org/plants/photo/193522/)? Or perhaps a more typical coneflower before the petals unfurl? It is a sculptural wonder, at any rate!

    Jam for jammed doors - seems appropriate!

    Chris from Boise

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you. These are huge, well over my head. I wonder if butterflies like them ir maybe seeds for birds. The idea of this area is deliberate planting of wild species for wildlife food.

      Delete
  6. I'm pretty sure you're right about the giant coneflower, rudbeckia. Evidently it's also good for native bees. It's right next to the buzzing convention of bees in the other picture I posted. Nowadays no naturalist on-site, cutbacks, otherwise I would have been able to get a discussion right away.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Looks like Clasp Leaf Coneflower to me. Ours bloomed a month ago.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That's a great description of the foliage.

      Delete
  8. that first looks like some sort of sage and the second is a coneflower, as my sister said, clasping leaved coneflower perhaps but ours don't get that tall so maybe a different variety

    you might also put a piece of tape like masking or painters over the lock lever and write 'don't touch, please' on it.

    ReplyDelete
  9. I think we're in agreement on the coneflower. I wasn't asking about the other one, it's lamb's ears, very commonly grown here, wild and tame, a bee magnet.

    It's so good to have a brains trust to bring plant questions to.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Will be interesting to see what that plant identifies itself to be once it blooms. I've never used Freecycle here and quite truthfully don't know if there's an active branch locally. We have a 'Buy Nothing' group I know and I was a member for awhile but never saw anything I was interested in and when I put a few things on offer there were no takers. Luckily we have several thrift stores locally and one of them is glad to take pretty much everything.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Freecycle is a grand way to divest of good clutter.

    ReplyDelete

Thanks so much for commenting. I really appreciate your taking the time, and taking part. Please read the comments and see if your question is already answered!