.....even if it just for a few days. The sun felt really good on my damp planks this afternoon. And finally I got some attention again. My FH and her older small human removed a lot of weed from the pond. About time, too. I could hardly see the fish, and the pond skaters kept constantly tripping over the duckweed.
There are lots of little froglets hopping around everywhere now. And there is a young jay stalking them. It's a lovely bird, and still got some of its baby fluff. I don't like my froglets to be harmed, but I know they can't all survive and become big fat frogs, otherwise the pond would overflow.
I haven't seen any toads recently, I wonder where they are all hiding. My FH calls them all Trevor for some reason. They like to sit on the wall and suck up ants. And there is no lack of ants this year, they are absolutely everywhere. They tickle my planks, and laugh at me if I complain. Nasty little things. Come back and help me, Trevors!
So now they've forecast a mini heatwave for the next 2 days or so. Which may never happen, of course. But I wouldn't mind, as it would wake up the daylilies and make them open their lovely yellow flowers. But it would also cause more pollen and make my FH sneeze a lot. That's not so nice.
Saturday, 25 June 2011
Monday, 20 June 2011
Remaining unsettled....
Nothing new here regarding the weather. I had a few sunny moments, but didn't see much of my humans. The youngest of my humans seems to have partied too much over the weekend, so now he's in bed with a fever and general blah feeling. He gets to stay home from school tomorrow and gets nursed back to health by my FH. Which means she won't have time for me. Again. Sometimes I feel invisible and useless. Can they treat depression in a bench? Maybe with some wood oil? Or by putting a container with pretty flowers in that gap just to my left?
The parrakeets have been unbearable all afternoon. Their screaching and constant bickering over apples and other food is giving me a plank ache. They destroy the lovely birch tree in my garden by plucking off the seeds and whole pieces of twig, which are then all thrown on the ground. What a waste! And those fat wood pigeons are dropping poo all over the lawn, and then my humans step into it. Even worse, yesterday I watched a blackbird dump its poo into the bird bath, and then it had a bath in it afterwards!! How gross is that? Is poo good for the feathers? Does it scare off free radicals? Well, bird poo certainly doesn't do my planks any good.
My FH has been neglecting not only me, but also the garden. I can understand that she prefers to be inside the sheds with the bunnies or in the house when it rains, but the weeds are slowly taking over. I am proud of my garden and don't want it to look like a mess. And the young plants in the mini greenhouse are crying for bigger pots. She won't harvest any courgettes and kohlrabi if she doesn't give the roots more space. She should know that, as she's some kind of plant person. And the pond could do with a bit of a cleanup, too. I don't want it to get smelly. I have to be next to it all day.
The parrakeets have been unbearable all afternoon. Their screaching and constant bickering over apples and other food is giving me a plank ache. They destroy the lovely birch tree in my garden by plucking off the seeds and whole pieces of twig, which are then all thrown on the ground. What a waste! And those fat wood pigeons are dropping poo all over the lawn, and then my humans step into it. Even worse, yesterday I watched a blackbird dump its poo into the bird bath, and then it had a bath in it afterwards!! How gross is that? Is poo good for the feathers? Does it scare off free radicals? Well, bird poo certainly doesn't do my planks any good.
My FH has been neglecting not only me, but also the garden. I can understand that she prefers to be inside the sheds with the bunnies or in the house when it rains, but the weeds are slowly taking over. I am proud of my garden and don't want it to look like a mess. And the young plants in the mini greenhouse are crying for bigger pots. She won't harvest any courgettes and kohlrabi if she doesn't give the roots more space. She should know that, as she's some kind of plant person. And the pond could do with a bit of a cleanup, too. I don't want it to get smelly. I have to be next to it all day.
Saturday, 18 June 2011
A short visit....
More bad weather today, and I was really bored. My FH's small human had his birthday today, so they were all busy looking at LEGO sets being built and eating cake. I had a few good moments, like when my FH and her small human sat on me and looked at LEGO Ninja cards. And then, when my FH caught a few baby froglets. A little while ago I had a "mild peril" moment, because a fox was sniffing its way through the garden and the rabbits started thumping. And I was watching a magpie with a leg injury for a while this afternoon.
But it wasn't the best day for me, and tomorrow won't be all that great, either, as my humans will all go away to have a party in Kew Gardens, that wonderful place that every bench dreams of as the ideal retirement home. And my FH also told me that they are going away on holiday in a few weeks time, and I can't come along. And as if that wasn't bad enough, they are going to France! People eat frogs there! And snails! Actually they eat almost every animal they can get their hands on, even tiny songbirds. There is a bench in the garden of the house they will be staying at, and it is painted blue. How posh! I bet it isn't as comfortable as me, though.
But it wasn't the best day for me, and tomorrow won't be all that great, either, as my humans will all go away to have a party in Kew Gardens, that wonderful place that every bench dreams of as the ideal retirement home. And my FH also told me that they are going away on holiday in a few weeks time, and I can't come along. And as if that wasn't bad enough, they are going to France! People eat frogs there! And snails! Actually they eat almost every animal they can get their hands on, even tiny songbirds. There is a bench in the garden of the house they will be staying at, and it is painted blue. How posh! I bet it isn't as comfortable as me, though.
Friday, 17 June 2011
The weather
As an English bench, I can't help but mention the weather once in a while. Especially right now. I mean, it is June, right? So why am I having more showers than my humans? All that moisture really isn't good for my planks. The only good thing about it is that the bird poo (free radicals and all that...) gets washed off me. But that's not worth much, when I am lonely all the time. My humans are not going to sit and talk to me in bad weather like that. :(
The frogs are quite happy, and so are the thirsty plants. Mushrooms are starting to grow in the lawn. I just hope I won't have any fungus growing on me any time soon. I really don't like mould, evil stuff. Eats itself into wood and makes it soft and weak. Hard to believe that some humans actually eat mould. It grows on horrible stuff called "cheese", on the outside of salami and it gets grown in huge tanks, harvested and then squeezed into different shapes and flavoured, so that it looks and tastes like meat. How odd is that? My FH is allergic to some mould and can't eat the fake stuff. But she prefers real meat anyway. I wonder how many people are allergic to meat? My FH is allergic to quite a lot of things. Me, I am only allergic to one thing: squirrels!! Also known as tree rats.
Anyway, back to the weather. On the news they said that the Queen's birthday parade is in June, because the weather is better than in April, when her real birthday is. Hmmmm, I don't think so. Not during the few years that I can remember. Summer happens in April and May, and then the rainy season begins. I wish I could go on holiday during the rainy season. Somewhere sunny and warm , that would feel good on my planks. But only if my humans came along, otherwise I'd be scared and lonely.
Here are some weather related photos:
The frogs are quite happy, and so are the thirsty plants. Mushrooms are starting to grow in the lawn. I just hope I won't have any fungus growing on me any time soon. I really don't like mould, evil stuff. Eats itself into wood and makes it soft and weak. Hard to believe that some humans actually eat mould. It grows on horrible stuff called "cheese", on the outside of salami and it gets grown in huge tanks, harvested and then squeezed into different shapes and flavoured, so that it looks and tastes like meat. How odd is that? My FH is allergic to some mould and can't eat the fake stuff. But she prefers real meat anyway. I wonder how many people are allergic to meat? My FH is allergic to quite a lot of things. Me, I am only allergic to one thing: squirrels!! Also known as tree rats.
Anyway, back to the weather. On the news they said that the Queen's birthday parade is in June, because the weather is better than in April, when her real birthday is. Hmmmm, I don't think so. Not during the few years that I can remember. Summer happens in April and May, and then the rainy season begins. I wish I could go on holiday during the rainy season. Somewhere sunny and warm , that would feel good on my planks. But only if my humans came along, otherwise I'd be scared and lonely.
Here are some weather related photos:
Wednesday, 15 June 2011
Frogs and other amphibians
As I mentioned before, I like frogs and consider them my friends. They hop around my legs at night and keep scary insects away from me. In spring they hum a song for me. And they entertain my humans, too. The other day I watched my FH tease some frogs with a grass flower. They thought it was food and jumped really high. Luckily she stopped the teasing before the poor froggies had wasted all their energy on some vegetarian stuff. They really prefer their flies and other juicy insects.
During spring the froggies always produce a lot of spawn. Last year it all got either frozen or eaten by the fish. So this year my FH decided to remove some of the spawn and let it hatch in a tub. Once the tadpoles were big enough (i.e. bigger than the mouths of the fish and newts...), she released them back into the pond. This morning I could see quite a few tiny froglets hopping through the plant jungle around the pond. Success!! Now hopefully those big magpie birds won't eat them all.
When it rains, it's party time for the frogs. During the night they wander all over the garden and my FH has to carry a torch so that she won't step on any of them. They do their job as biological pest controllers in the garden. They have to be careful when foxes or cats come to visit, as they don't say no to a frog, even if they just use it as a toy for a while. Did you know that frogs can scream when they are in danger?
Last year my humans cleaned out the pond in early spring, and this is what they found at the bottom of it. Normally I see about 20 frogs in and around the pond, but they managed to find more than 60!! I am surprised that the fish survived that mess.
Frog school:
There are also several toads in my garden. My humans call them all Trevor. They like to hide under flower pots and compost bags. I haven't seen any toadlets so far, but maybe they hatch somewhere else. I did see some newtlets a few years ago. They are very difficult to spot, and the newt parents are quite shy, too. Unlike the big frogs who allow my FH to rub their chins and take closeup photos.
The pond a few years ago, you can see some of the fishies:
During spring the froggies always produce a lot of spawn. Last year it all got either frozen or eaten by the fish. So this year my FH decided to remove some of the spawn and let it hatch in a tub. Once the tadpoles were big enough (i.e. bigger than the mouths of the fish and newts...), she released them back into the pond. This morning I could see quite a few tiny froglets hopping through the plant jungle around the pond. Success!! Now hopefully those big magpie birds won't eat them all.
When it rains, it's party time for the frogs. During the night they wander all over the garden and my FH has to carry a torch so that she won't step on any of them. They do their job as biological pest controllers in the garden. They have to be careful when foxes or cats come to visit, as they don't say no to a frog, even if they just use it as a toy for a while. Did you know that frogs can scream when they are in danger?
Last year my humans cleaned out the pond in early spring, and this is what they found at the bottom of it. Normally I see about 20 frogs in and around the pond, but they managed to find more than 60!! I am surprised that the fish survived that mess.
Frog school:
There are also several toads in my garden. My humans call them all Trevor. They like to hide under flower pots and compost bags. I haven't seen any toadlets so far, but maybe they hatch somewhere else. I did see some newtlets a few years ago. They are very difficult to spot, and the newt parents are quite shy, too. Unlike the big frogs who allow my FH to rub their chins and take closeup photos.
The pond a few years ago, you can see some of the fishies:
Tuesday, 14 June 2011
The rabbits
Of course I need to talk about the rabbits. Those cute fluffy creatures that get all the attention, while I have to watch and listen to all the "awwws" and "how cute"s. It's sickening sometimes. Humans treat me as a thing made of planks. I am not considered cute. But I am at least practical! Humans can sit on me, they can put up their feet and relax and I am a lot cheaper than those furry creatures, too.
If people had pet benches instead of real animals, the world would be a better place. We don't make smelly turds, we don't bark, we don't cause the waste of tons of metal and meat for food and packaging and we don't need to see a doctor. We bond easily with other benches (unless they are from ASDA or really ugly and rusty, like those overprized ones they sell at the local garden shop......fresh from a French skip....) and we can stay outside in any weather. If you want cute and fluffy, put a fleece blanket over us and ...voila!
Ok, now let me introduce the rabbits that I am watching every day. First of all there is Snoopy. He's 5 years old and a bit of a grump, especially when he's hungry. But some of my humans seem to have the same problem. Snoopy came from "up north", that place where they can't speak proper English.
Then there is Penny, Snoopy's best friend. She's also 5 years old and a real Essex girl. She looks all sweet and innocent (ok, not real Essex girl there....), but boy does she have a mood sometimes. She lets Luna feel who's Queen of the shed. And then goes back to looking cute.
Luna shares the shed with Snoopy and Penny. She is 4 years old and came from across the river, where she grew up with Mrs Sherlock Bond. She is not the brightest spark, but always hungry and eating. No surprise that she is the biggest and heaviest rabbit in my garden. She also seems to have an endless supply of white fur which fills the shed and gets blown into every corner of the garden.
The other shed is shared by Sunnie and Cloud. They are both 4 years old. Sunnie came from the middle of the country somewhere, from someone on a rabbit forum that my humans talk about a lot. She's the biggest wood nibbler, and she has a bad hair day almost every day. That's mainly due to the fact that her friend Cloud doesn't groom her, the lazy sod. Here you can see Sunnie grooming him instead.
Cloud seems to be everyone's favourite. He gets the most "oooohs" and "awwwws". He's a bit dim, but loves humans and follows them around as much as he can. He jumps up inside the lawn cage and hits his head against the lid, when he gets excited about a human coming to see him. He also steps into the water bowl on many occasions. He really makes me snigger. He came from some evil website called Gumtree. He had been a child's birthday present, but the child got bored quickly.
There have been many other rabbits in my garden, as my favourite human (I shall call her FH from now on) sometimes looks after rabbits for an animal rescue. Not at the moment, though, as her knee is a bit poorly and she has too much other work to do, too.
If people had pet benches instead of real animals, the world would be a better place. We don't make smelly turds, we don't bark, we don't cause the waste of tons of metal and meat for food and packaging and we don't need to see a doctor. We bond easily with other benches (unless they are from ASDA or really ugly and rusty, like those overprized ones they sell at the local garden shop......fresh from a French skip....) and we can stay outside in any weather. If you want cute and fluffy, put a fleece blanket over us and ...voila!
Ok, now let me introduce the rabbits that I am watching every day. First of all there is Snoopy. He's 5 years old and a bit of a grump, especially when he's hungry. But some of my humans seem to have the same problem. Snoopy came from "up north", that place where they can't speak proper English.
Then there is Penny, Snoopy's best friend. She's also 5 years old and a real Essex girl. She looks all sweet and innocent (ok, not real Essex girl there....), but boy does she have a mood sometimes. She lets Luna feel who's Queen of the shed. And then goes back to looking cute.
Luna shares the shed with Snoopy and Penny. She is 4 years old and came from across the river, where she grew up with Mrs Sherlock Bond. She is not the brightest spark, but always hungry and eating. No surprise that she is the biggest and heaviest rabbit in my garden. She also seems to have an endless supply of white fur which fills the shed and gets blown into every corner of the garden.
The other shed is shared by Sunnie and Cloud. They are both 4 years old. Sunnie came from the middle of the country somewhere, from someone on a rabbit forum that my humans talk about a lot. She's the biggest wood nibbler, and she has a bad hair day almost every day. That's mainly due to the fact that her friend Cloud doesn't groom her, the lazy sod. Here you can see Sunnie grooming him instead.
Cloud seems to be everyone's favourite. He gets the most "oooohs" and "awwwws". He's a bit dim, but loves humans and follows them around as much as he can. He jumps up inside the lawn cage and hits his head against the lid, when he gets excited about a human coming to see him. He also steps into the water bowl on many occasions. He really makes me snigger. He came from some evil website called Gumtree. He had been a child's birthday present, but the child got bored quickly.
There have been many other rabbits in my garden, as my favourite human (I shall call her FH from now on) sometimes looks after rabbits for an animal rescue. Not at the moment, though, as her knee is a bit poorly and she has too much other work to do, too.
The Neighbours
My little garden is quite private, or secluded, as the property people like to call it. There is a block of garages behind me, another garage to the right of me, three sheds and some trees and shrubs opposite me, and the house to the left of me. The house is a small bungalow, in "need of cosmetic updating", but the owner (not my humans, they just pay to live there) doesn't want to spend any money on updating. But at least the house blocks out the traffic noise from the sometimes very busy road.
Behind the rabbit sheds is a lovely garden which belongs to an elderly lady, who is very sweet and sometimes helps my humans to look after their garden when they are on holiday. To the right of me there are new neighbours. They bought the house last year, and have been doing the "updating" bit ever since. They extended the old garage into a new garden office, so that I am now looking at cedar wood panels instead of the conifer tree which used to be in that place. They gave the whole construction a grass roof with some wildlfowers in it. Looks quite pretty actually, but it suffered during the dry weeks earlier this year.
The new neighbours also have a thing for slightly hideous sculptures. First there was only a griffin and some plastic bird, but now they have added polystyrene sheep onto the grass roof and a big owl on the roof of the main house. And then there's that shiny trailer that looks like some kind of spaceship, and which really scared the rabbits when it was delivered. The humans are nice, though, and they often have BBQs and torture my humans with the lovely smell of grilled meat.
Here are some photos to show you what I am talking about. That metal cage you can see in the first photo, kind of ruins my view, but of course it is for the rabbits, and they are having a lot of fun in it, so I just try to ignore it.
Behind the rabbit sheds is a lovely garden which belongs to an elderly lady, who is very sweet and sometimes helps my humans to look after their garden when they are on holiday. To the right of me there are new neighbours. They bought the house last year, and have been doing the "updating" bit ever since. They extended the old garage into a new garden office, so that I am now looking at cedar wood panels instead of the conifer tree which used to be in that place. They gave the whole construction a grass roof with some wildlfowers in it. Looks quite pretty actually, but it suffered during the dry weeks earlier this year.
The new neighbours also have a thing for slightly hideous sculptures. First there was only a griffin and some plastic bird, but now they have added polystyrene sheep onto the grass roof and a big owl on the roof of the main house. And then there's that shiny trailer that looks like some kind of spaceship, and which really scared the rabbits when it was delivered. The humans are nice, though, and they often have BBQs and torture my humans with the lovely smell of grilled meat.
Here are some photos to show you what I am talking about. That metal cage you can see in the first photo, kind of ruins my view, but of course it is for the rabbits, and they are having a lot of fun in it, so I just try to ignore it.
Monday, 13 June 2011
Prologue, part 3 (I am getting there....)
So I have been in "my space" for a good 4 years now, and have seen and heard many interesting things. I have suffered from the noise of parrakeets, and got bird poo abuse, I got rained upon and was covered in snow a few times, as well. I had all sorts of bottoms sitting on me, some bigger than others (I am happy that my favourite human's bottom is getting smaller now; I was beginning to feel the pain in my planks...).
Here are just a few highlights from the last 4 years:
There will be froggies in this blog, like it or not. They are my best friends, apart from my humans.
Here are some humans looking at a strange cardboard construction. Apparently it's for rabbits. But hey, don't I look good in that picture??
August 2008, looking good:
February 2009 came as a bit of a shock:
In September 2009 my humans built a shed. For the rabbits, of course. Those furry things are getting spoilt, I tell ya. Luckily they are staying well away from me. I can hear them nibble the wood of the sheds (yes, there are two rabbit sheds now...). I wouldn't want to be abused like that. It's bad enough that I get "eaten" by wasps.
In spring of 2010 I was removed from my usual spot for refurbishment. I got a proper sanding down and then got some lovely oil rubbed into my planks. I felt a lot younger after that. But you have to admit, there is something missing when I am not next to the pond:
Later that year I even got my own bench cushion. Very decorative and it helps to protect my planks from the weight of the humans. Not sure why there was that litter box beneath me, but my humans always come up with some strange ideas.
One of my many friends:
Here are just a few highlights from the last 4 years:
There will be froggies in this blog, like it or not. They are my best friends, apart from my humans.
Here are some humans looking at a strange cardboard construction. Apparently it's for rabbits. But hey, don't I look good in that picture??
August 2008, looking good:
February 2009 came as a bit of a shock:
In September 2009 my humans built a shed. For the rabbits, of course. Those furry things are getting spoilt, I tell ya. Luckily they are staying well away from me. I can hear them nibble the wood of the sheds (yes, there are two rabbit sheds now...). I wouldn't want to be abused like that. It's bad enough that I get "eaten" by wasps.
In spring of 2010 I was removed from my usual spot for refurbishment. I got a proper sanding down and then got some lovely oil rubbed into my planks. I felt a lot younger after that. But you have to admit, there is something missing when I am not next to the pond:
Later that year I even got my own bench cushion. Very decorative and it helps to protect my planks from the weight of the humans. Not sure why there was that litter box beneath me, but my humans always come up with some strange ideas.
One of my many friends:
Prologue, part 2
The summer of 2006 saw a significant improvement to "my space", but it was just a step towards better things to come the following year. My humans enjoyed growing massive sunflowers (that was before "The Hoe" had joined the household.....), and there were even some potato plants in one corner.
Later that year, two rabbits named Snoopy and Penny began to live in my garden. They are just some of the 5 rabbits that I can now watch all day.
During the following winter, my humans decided to create a small pond and to hide the ugly brick wall of the garage behind me with trellis and climbing plants. They are very wise humans, and they knew that every garden needs a bench. Especially when there's a pond. So that's when they decided to adopt me. In March 2007 I arrived and was placed in "my space". Just look at me, all new and looking gorgeous:
Just one month later the plants around me had started to grow and make my space greener by the day:
And another month later, May 2007:
July 2007, and I felt like living in a jungle:
Anyway, you get the idea. I felt like I had arrived in a good place. The pond eventually got some fish the same year, and most of them are still living in there today. Only two got nicked by a heron. I tried my best to scare it off, but it just couldn't hear me hissing and shooing. It even had the nerve to hop all over me to get to the pond.
After a while the first frogs anf toads made their homes in the pond, and my humans adopted some newts from another human (they call her Mrs Sherlock Bond or something like that, she has visited my garden a few times...). There are damselflies and pondskaters, and the rest of the garden is full of wildlife, too. It never gets boring for me.
Later that year, two rabbits named Snoopy and Penny began to live in my garden. They are just some of the 5 rabbits that I can now watch all day.
During the following winter, my humans decided to create a small pond and to hide the ugly brick wall of the garage behind me with trellis and climbing plants. They are very wise humans, and they knew that every garden needs a bench. Especially when there's a pond. So that's when they decided to adopt me. In March 2007 I arrived and was placed in "my space". Just look at me, all new and looking gorgeous:
Just one month later the plants around me had started to grow and make my space greener by the day:
And another month later, May 2007:
July 2007, and I felt like living in a jungle:
Anyway, you get the idea. I felt like I had arrived in a good place. The pond eventually got some fish the same year, and most of them are still living in there today. Only two got nicked by a heron. I tried my best to scare it off, but it just couldn't hear me hissing and shooing. It even had the nerve to hop all over me to get to the pond.
After a while the first frogs anf toads made their homes in the pond, and my humans adopted some newts from another human (they call her Mrs Sherlock Bond or something like that, she has visited my garden a few times...). There are damselflies and pondskaters, and the rest of the garden is full of wildlife, too. It never gets boring for me.
Prologue (or how I ended up where I am today)
Ummm....errr....*cough*.......how do I start this? They don't teach you blogging in bench school.......anyway.....Hello everyone! My name is Bench, and I am a garden bench. As my name suggests, I live in a garden. It's a small garden, in a small suburb, but I always knew I wouldn't become a celebrity. I wasn't made for that kind of life. But hey ho, my humans are treating me well, and they put me in a nice spot from where I can watch the whole garden and some of the neighbours, too.
After I had finished my time at bench school, I went on to look for a new home. I was listed on ebay. Not very glamorous, I agree, but at least I wasn't sold in ASDA or some other embarassing place. That was back in 2007. My humans had moved into their current house in 2006, and started to give the very neglected garden a new life. This is what "my space" looked like when they had just moved in:
After I had finished my time at bench school, I went on to look for a new home. I was listed on ebay. Not very glamorous, I agree, but at least I wasn't sold in ASDA or some other embarassing place. That was back in 2007. My humans had moved into their current house in 2006, and started to give the very neglected garden a new life. This is what "my space" looked like when they had just moved in:
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