![]() But still, after nearly a year as a resident theater company at Fullerton’s Muckenthaler Cultural Center, and in the midst of preparing their fourth and fifth productions, you’d think The Electric Company Theater would quibble about every new kid-on-the-block.Īccording to Callie Prendiville Johnson, half of The ECT’s brain trust, she and partner Brian Johnson have already put together an entire season of shows, including an artistically satisfying debut production (“The Old Man and the Old Moon”), which was commercially successful children’s show (“Alice: An Immersive Adventure”) and a one-person show set up with a grant from the Israeli Consulate General in Los Angeles (“The Jewish Dog”), which includes performances of “Romeo and Juliet” and ” Shakespeare in Love” mark their official “Coming Out Party”. Here is a link that might be useful: If only sweat were irrigation.There is a learning curve with almost every new venture, and starting a theater company is no different. I really don't think I could bear to add another one. I am thankful that my DH won't jackhammer any of the driveway for me. I'm down to 91 and may soon be under 90 on. You can replace with another rose - or not. Plus it does seem inevitable that a few roses each year have one problem or another and have to go. In February I moved one from the ground into a pot and likewise put some babies in big pots. ![]() In November that many moved out to make room. Of course, I bought 4 or 5 in February and 5 or 6 last November, and there's a tea rose I want pretty bad now. I often peruse the online nursery websites, and I can't really find any that I want - right now. I found that when my garden got officially full I still had that strong yen for more roses, but after a little time passed I got it "under control" - at least by rosaholic standards. This is the time when rose gardening becomes a bit more challenging. Space management is an issue, no matter what size garden you have. so roses are living in pots a lot longer than I want them to, and I have to seriously evaluate any rose that I buy from now on. Even with my seemingly-infinite amount of room here, I have run out of prepared space. You have to remove roses that are underperforming or that don't please you, or you stop adding roses to the collection. The hard reality is this: when you TRULY run out of room, there are hard decisions to be made. have you been to Olga's garden? Same story, even smaller yard. Believe it or not, she has a front lawn (as dictated by the HOA) and there is a small lawn in the backyard for her dog, and there are roses in every other space she can manage.įor another example. Climbers are on the outside, small shrubs on the inside, and everything grows together to make a wonderful garden. Her beds are an undulating mixture of everything from climbers to miniatures. She has 125 roses planted in a 1/4 acre standard subdivision yard. One of my rose mentors had the most creatively designed small rose garden that I have ever encountered. ![]() Shoot, Costco sells them (but I couldn't find a price for that). After researching for you I looked at pictures of TV cabinets and am wondering if I'm up to the challenge of making my own (well, having my husband do the cutting and pasting). Now to fasten it all down and paint the plywood top black, maybe add a trim to the sides to conceal that it's plywood and, poof, for less than $50. ![]() I plopped the plywood top on top of the sewing machine legs and, oh my, I have a beautiful, black dining table. I found a 48" round plywood table top (on top of a broken wicker bottom) and a second small, black table with trestle sewing machine legs. I wanted to try a round table, maybe painting it black but didn't want to make a big investment in my experiment. Drop leaf tables are not for every room I discovered (but my table had served me well for 30 years). We moved in to a new home recently and my old dining room table just didn't make the cut. A few days ago I shopped at our local thrift store and was able to find/make a dining table that I love.
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