An old blog, but I'm hoping to bring it back. In 2020, I ran for President of the United States as the nominee of the American Solidarity Party, drawing some 42,000 votes. For most of my career, I taught history and other subjects, mostly in secondary school, nine years at a missionary school in Colombia, one summer in China, and the rest in California. I hope to spend my remaining years writing.
Monday, January 07, 2008
Oak Leaves, Chickweed, Stinging Nettles, & Miner’s Lettuce
Winter has not yet brought enough cold weather to knock the last leaves from our back yard oak tree (Quercus lobata), but already the weeds think it is spring. The young Miner’s Lettuce (Montia perfoliata) would be unrecognizable for someone familiar only with the very different leaf of its adulthood. The smaller ones are almost indistinguishable from the Chickweed (Stellaria media). The Stinging Nettle (Urtica dioica) thinks it can hide from me. I’ll try to pull it soon, before it spreads to the whole yard. The Miner’s Lettuce already has most of the back yard, but I like it. I only try to keep it from spreading to the neighbors’.
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