An Ongoing, Erratic Diary
- Friday, November 19, 1999
Why did I promise Section 38 that they'd have their papers back by today?
'Cause I'm a goofball, that's why. Why am I getting four hours sleep to
get them graded on time? It's clear that most of them lost no sleep in
the process of writing them...
Actually, the papers aren't that bad this time around. They seem to have
possibly learned something about argumentation. If I can just teach them
a little about style in the last few weeks, then I'll be well content.
I wonder if you can build up a critical amount of caffeine in your system
so that you're always buzzed? I had five cups of tea yesterday, over the
course of the day. I made them pretty strong, too. I went to bed close
to 1 a.m., and woke up at 5 -- and I feel wide awake (though my body is
definitely tired). I'm brewing another cup now. Maybe if I keep drinking
tea every two hours or so, I'll make it through the day. (Plan for this
evening: watch a movie with Susan. Fall asleep, ideally after the movie
ends.)
I think I was not at all clear about the paperwhites yesterday. Let me
back up and tell you what the nice garden store people told me about
bulbs:
- Bulbs are easy. To plant outdoors, wait until it's cold out, dig a
hole twice as deep as the bulbs are wide, drop 'em in, cover the hole with
dirt. The bulb holds all the nutrients it needs, so ignore until spring,
when you will have a beautiful harvest of daffodils, jonquils, tulips,
irises (my favorites of the bulbs), etc.
- You can 'force' bulbs to grow indoors during the winter by giving them
a fake freeze in your fridge. I need to get the details of this, since I
wasn't paying much attention when she talked about it 'cause I wasn't
planning to do it.
- Paperwhites are amazing because they don't need to be forced at all.
You just stick 'em in a glass and watch them grow. Tall green stems with
delicate clusters of white flowers at the top. Lovely.
Okay, it's just slightly more complicated than that. Just barely. See,
the bulbs do need water. And you can't just let 'em sit in a pot with
water, 'cause if they're soaking in water, they'll rot. So you need to
get a tall glass (I use a pretty wineglass), fill it with nice gravel (or
those fancy decorative little stones they sell at foofy stores), set the
bulb on top of the gravel, and then water the gravel, just enough so the
bottom of the bulb stays damp. The gravel holds it up, see? (The
Victorians used these fancy glass vases with wide bottoms and narrow tops
where the bulbs perched, which served the same function of keeping them
out of water, and you can get simple versions of those at the garden store
too, but I kind of like the effect of gravel in a wine glass, where you
can watch the white roots twine through the gravel). Anyway, very very
easy, and they don't seem to need much sun (the one in my south-facing
windowsill grew two feet before blooming and the one in my north-facing
windowsill grew only one -- but they both made lovely
flowers
).
Okay, that's my garden rant for today. Anyone can try this, though, even
if they have no outside garden space at all -- you just need a bulb, a
glass, some small rocks, and a spot that gets a little sun. I'm all
excited about bulbs now, and I really may try this forcing thing. It
would be lovely to have
irises indoors.
Back to grading. Meep.
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