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  • Bloomscrolling--what's in bloom where you are?
    wtgW wtg

    On another gardening note...I really like a variety of tomato called 'Little Sicily'. Tasty tomatoes, great yields. I have purchased them at Home Depot and at a local garden center but neither had them in stock this year. I don't have a lot of opportunities to get out to do plant shopping these days, so I took a flyer and ordered them from Home Depot online; I was surprised to see them listed. I thought I would probably get a couple of spindly, broken, yellow plants that I'd be schlepping to the store for a refund.

    Imagine my surprise when this very sturdy box arrived with two tomato plants in it:

    alt text

    Each plant was in a small hinged "greenhouse":

    alt text

    Some of the healthiest specimens I've seen. I unpacked the plants when they came a few days ago, so they've already grown. I set up this photo so you could see how cozily they were packaged:

    alt text

    Hopefully the universe will forgive me for all that packaging. But I'll be eating the tastiest tomatoes in the 'hood later this summer!

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  • Bloomscrolling--what's in bloom where you are?
    wtgW wtg

    Summer is here (basically zero chance of frost moving forward) so I'll be spending the next few days catching up in the garden. I have already purchased veggie plants and have bean seeds and seed potatoes. Time to get to work getting everything in the ground!

    Looks like this year's crop of gooseberries and currants (both red and black) isn't going to be as good as last year. 😞

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  • Ultra stainless steel
    wtgW wtg

    @Big_Al said:

    Having been involved with technical services to the steel industry earlier in my engineering career

    One of my neighbors worked as an engineer in the steel industry. When we bought our house in 1980, he and the family were living in Turkey while he was working on a project there. We finally met them, close to a year after we moved into our house, when they returned to the US.

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  • Ultra stainless steel
    wtgW wtg

    @Big_Al

    Not your grandmother's aluminum:

    https://news.mit.edu/2025/printable-aluminum-alloy-sets-strength-records-may-enable-lighter-aircraft-parts-1007

    Off Key - General Discussion

  • Happy belated birthday, Steve Miller!! (except it's not belated, it's today)
    wtgW wtg

    Ha! So I fat fingered the list I typed up a while back. Apparently my memory is better than my typing skills...

    Off Key - General Discussion

  • Happy belated birthday, Steve Miller!! (except it's not belated, it's today)
    wtgW wtg

    One of the other consequences of aging...the memory goes...I was convinced that I remembered Steve's May 16th birthday. Except his birthday was two days ago!!

    See @steve-miller 's post below. It's today!!

    In any event -- hope you've recovered from the festivities! But if you need more cake, here is a Baumkuchen, complete with recipe:

    alt text

    https://foodiegoodvibes.com/baumkuchen-german-tree-cake/

    Off Key - General Discussion

  • One of the consequences of aging...
    wtgW wtg

    Thanks to all for the condolences.

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  • One of the consequences of aging...
    wtgW wtg

    @Big_Al I suspect you and Wasi would have hit it off immediately!

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  • Today was the last day of class
    wtgW wtg

    So does this mean @shirokuro will be house hunting near @bernard soon?

    😁 😁 😁

    Off Key - General Discussion

  • One of the consequences of aging...
    wtgW wtg

    ...is that you keep losing lifelong friends.

    We got word a few days ago from the daughter of one of our good friends that he passed away. Wasi and I commuted on the same train every day starting back in the 1980s when Mr wtg and I moved here. We got to know each other because I used to kibitz the bridge game on the train. We would walk several blocks heading home; my car was parked not too far from Peg's and his house. The four of us went out for dinner a few times and we hit it off very well, becoming close friends.

    Peg was a phenomenal cook and gardener, and Wasi's barbecued spare ribs were to die for. We explored the cuisines of many cultures together, at their home and ours and at restaurants, eating and drinking and laughing a lot. We lived through Peg's rheumatoid arthritis and knee replacements and Wasi's kidney dialysis, then transplant, and his later in life back problems.

    They decided to sell their house in 2014 and move to Madison, WI to be close to their daughter. I actually found the house they ended up buying by looking at listings online! We kept in touch and managed to visit them a few times. When Peggy died some four or five years ago, Monya and Wasi put together a a "book" about her. It was a PDF that chronicled her life in text and photos.

    Wasi sold their home and moved to a condo after Peggy died. We talked on the phone but between COVID and Mr wtg's health problems in recent years, we never got to see him again.

    Their daughter Monya sent us a card a few days ago announcing his October 2025 passing and inviting us to a celebration of life later this summer. Monya put together a Google Earth slideshow, a link to which was on the card that she sent. It uses maps and Wasi's own photos and remembrances as the basis for walking you through Wasi's life. He was born in Assam to a Muslim family, was orphaned at a young age, moved to East Pakistan (later Bangladesh) as a child after the Partition, went to school in British Columbia, and Madison, WI...and on and on. I knew he was Bangladeshi but had never heard the details of his life story.

    I don't know if anyone is interested, but I thought I'd share the link to the slideshow. @big_al , you might be interested in the wanderings of a fellow engineer. He had a PhD in mechanical engineering, was a PE, and worked on nuclear reactors when he was at Sargent and Lundy.

    I had a bit of trouble navigating the slideshow on my iPad; it was much better on my laptop. After Google Earth loads, just click on Wasi's Story and start the slideshow.

    https://earth.google.com/web/@7.45103866,-2.20258877,-10010.48268536a,17577568.38405848d,30.00000264y,0h,0t,0r/data=CgRCAggBMikKJwolCiExZENvdGI3WmJLWjBRM0dfd3VJQWl5MDFRSjJQREx2bkQgAUICCABKCAjw9vutARAB?authuser=0

    Wasi loved his martinis:

    alt text

    Here they are sitting on the patio in their backyard.

    alt text

    Goodbye to our friends Wasi and Peg. You will live on in our memories.

    Off Key - General Discussion

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