
A wedding photographer at work last Saturday outside St Andrew's and St George's Church of Scotland, Edinburgh.
Independent traveller - read my latest travel blog and access other travel related information that I have picked up along the way!


Minnie -Moo was bored one day and decided to go to http://www.faceinhole.com/ for fun. Now check out Minnie-Moo's site for your own Face-in-Hole!!! http://theminnieblog.blogspot.com/. Then follow the directions and have a pawsome time!
While we’re waiting for that sense of enclosure to develop, let’s see how tall everything is now.
I bought it at some garden club sale at Zilker Park a couple of years ago, and it's supposed to do well here. At the time it was an unbranched sapling, about 10” tall, growing in a plastic tube for $1. Now it has branched out, and reached the amazing height of 17”. This pine is seen in classic Italian paintings, and is the source for pinenuts. Who could resist an Italian classic for one buck?
'Little Gem' was measured at 56” last February, and it has grown some, but not much, to 60”. But as you can see, there's more than 4" of new wood on the individual branches: Apparently, when the weight of January’s ice fanned the tree branches outward, some of the height was transmuted into breadth.
This loquat was a foot-tall seedling with a few leaves when I got it in ... It’s been in the ground for over a year and has reached 9’6” tall, and can actually cast a little shade on the patio. It's also branching out, so it's starting to look like a real tree, instead of a sapling. 
Do any of you grow Michelia figo, also called Banana shrub? It’s related to Magnolias, and the small flowers really do smell like bananas. I bought a one-foot, one-gallon plant in fall .., so at 38-inches, it’s done well, but will have to do a lot of growing if it's going to reach the fence top. Off to the right there are two unseen evergreen shrubs, a 40" Loropetalum, and a 30" Podocarpus, sometimes called Buddhist Pine.


