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It's been a day with particularly high ups and low downs.

Starting with the bad news, I've found out that the funky looking growth on one of my rosebushes is actually a very bad, very infectious disease that they say is so awful that you not only have to immediately root out and burn//bag with nothing else the bush, but you can't put another one in the ground for at least 2 years.

Although I am at best a neglectful gardener, I started populating that strip of land with imported roses when I moved in over a dozen years ago. They were all David Austen roses with Shakespearean names. (Sweet Juliet has the nicest tea rose scent, while Rosalind has a medieval beauty.) The voles got about half of 'em, but the rest have triumphed over adversity, including the really impressive one that still blooms profusely every spring even though the voles ate 2/3 of its roots and it's only being held upright by the bush behind it.

Three of the plantings are showing the infection; the whole area's going to have to be rooted up. I'm most likely going to simply pave it over at this point; cover it with crushed rock and decorative stones and try roses again elsewhere after the 2-year ban has passed.

(We would discover this just as the area finally goes into summer's killing heat. Just what I wanted to do in 90+ degree heat, rip up long-established plants and jockey large pieces of slate & granite.)

On the upside, I've discovered what to do with my cache of odd coins: give them to this guy to do his thing. I've already ordered a couple of coins from him. I'd like to wear the shilling to Sherlockian events (a shilling is the most-often-mentioned coin in canon) but probably won't dare to as that will probably seem like I've presumptuously invested myself in the BSI. However, I did make sure that I was buying a George shilling so I can wear it to Discworld events, as it is literally "the King's shilling."

My non-painted coin collection includes 6 shillings & sixpence. If I get 5 more shillings (either singly or as two-shilling coins), I can make a necklace worth Watson's monthly army pension. But that is probably way, way, WAAAAAAYYYYY more geeky than necessary.

Date: 2012-06-19 12:59 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mechturtle.livejournal.com
That's too bad about the roses, they sound really cool. What disease is it?

But that is probably way, way, WAAAAAAYYYYY more geeky than necessary.

Pfft. Is there such a thing? :)

Date: 2012-06-19 01:14 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neadods.livejournal.com
It's rose rosette disease. Makes the thing grow tendrils.

Date: 2012-06-19 01:01 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] redpanda13.livejournal.com
Bummer on the rosebushes. I guess that means putting them out with trash, not with yard waste and composting pickup, if you have that.

Some years ago we got scale on some of the euonymus hedge. I checked the book at Behnke's and it recommended a product... whose fine-print label said "Do not use where runoff occurs." Where does runoff NOT occur? In Death Valley no problem, but with a storm drain in the corner of the yard going right down to the lake, forget it. So we cut them all down. The next year they started growing back and have been scale-free, but it sounds like yours is a more serious disease.

Do take it easy this weekend. Sunday may be slightly less hot.

Date: 2012-06-19 01:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neadods.livejournal.com
Sunday would be my first chance anyway, as I'll be up at Gillette Castle on Saturday.

Yes, it does mean putting them out with the trash. And also dealing with the poison ivy that's twining up one of them. *sigh*

Date: 2012-06-19 06:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] inamac.livejournal.com
Pity about the roses - especially as they are David Austen, which are beautiful old fashioned ones (I have a pink one rioting outside as I type).

The enamelled coins are lovely - there are a number of people who do that here, and sell at craft fairs (the Irish and Australian coin designs make particularly beautiful jewellery).

I keep finding odd old pre-decimal coins around the house - if I did up any shillings I'll try to remember you (can't guarantee Victoria ones though).

Date: 2012-06-19 10:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neadods.livejournal.com
None of mine are Victorian; all George or Elizabeth, picked out of my change when I first visited. Decimal, but still stamped "shilling."
Edited Date: 2012-06-19 10:16 am (UTC)

Date: 2012-06-19 10:52 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] inamac.livejournal.com
When Britain went decimal in 1971 the new minted coins (Elizabeth head) had 'Five Pence' on the reverse - but the old shilling coins were (then) the same size as the 5P and were still legal tender, though not actually 'decimal coins'.

It does confuse people that the shilling was worth twelve old pence but only 5 new pence. (A the florin/two shillings was technically the first British decimal coin as there were ten to the pound.)

This is one of the (many) things that Connie Willis gets wrong in her wartime books.

Date: 2012-06-19 10:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neadods.livejournal.com
Somewhere I've got a coin actually marked "new pence."

This is one of the (many) things that Connie Willis gets wrong in her wartime books.

I've been sort of avoiding her wartime books even though (American) people say they're thrilling because I've heard so many British people bitching about her total lack of basic historical research.

... well, that and the whole "somehow people of the future have advanced technology but cannot get a message through in any medium even though this audience has phones/answering machines/cell phones/texting/email" that the plots all seem to be based on.

Date: 2012-06-19 02:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] not-hathor.livejournal.com
Oh, that's a shame about the roses!

Those painted coins are beautiful! Somewhere (probably in my old jewelry box, which is maybe in the closet?) I have an odd collection of coins from foreign climes -- mostly from the Caymans, I think, but some from England. I wonder if there's a size limitation; I imagine the larger coins would be easier in some ways, but more difficult in others.

And why shouldn't you wear your shillings, if it makes YOU happy? Geeky not bad, especially if it's not hurting anyone.

Date: 2012-06-19 10:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neadods.livejournal.com
It's a real shame about those roses. I've nursed them for a long time.

Re: Please enlighten the clueless.

Date: 2012-06-19 05:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] redpanda13.livejournal.com
Baker Street Irregulars, the best-known Sherlock Holmes fan group in the US, founded in 1934. Based in New York City and open to new members by invitation only. Many, many "scion societies" across the country have their own policies and are usually open to pretty much anybody.

I made this joke at the Adventuresses of Sherlock Holmes dinner in 1991: "How many BSI does it take to change a lightbulb?... We don't know, because the BSI never change anything." That happened to be the evening when the BSI first admitted a few women as members, so I had to drop the joke after that. They've been better about that since.

Re: Please enlighten the clueless.

Date: 2012-06-19 10:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neadods.livejournal.com
PS - I don't know about your city, but Columbia has Watson's Tin Box(.org) and I'm doing the presentation in July, ifyoureinsterested...

Re: Please enlighten the clueless.

Date: 2012-06-19 10:15 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neadods.livejournal.com
[livejournal.com profile] redpanda13 got it, but I'm going to toss in that a shilling is what Sherlock Holmes paid the "street urchins" that were the canonical Irregulars, and thus when people are inducted into the BSI, they get invested with a shilling.

Which is presumably not brightly painted, nor has George VI on it.

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