
Some days I forget to relish the view. Today I feel double gratitude, for the place that I live and for the partner who likes to sculpt a little surprise and delight.

I’d never noticed that a tomato’s seeds were arranged radially inside the fruit.
Tomato seeds are remarkably resilient, surviving the heat of the compost bin and the acids of the mammalian digestive tract. Every time I spread compost on my garden, tomato seedlings pop up, and I’m happy to let these volunteers grow*. Given the competition from other hungry critters, I usually pick the fruit at first blush and ripen it indoors.
*Squash/pumpkin seedlings, on the other hand, are plucked at first sight. I don’t have room for their sprawl.

Charcoal and graphite. From a class with Maggie Hurley.

Oenothera elata (Tall/Hooker’s/Hairy/Western/Marsh Evening Primrose) is a tall biennial native to much of western and central North America, with one or more upright stems bearing a profusion of large bright yellow flowers, 3 in (7 cm) across. I was intrigued to see a bee burrowing deep into the flower’s throat, rather than gathering pollen from the prominent stamens and pistil.
My sister and I invented Sisters Day a long time ago; we picked a date that was far from any other family commemoration, September 17. Little did we know that both our parents would die in the week prior to our special day, making this time of year a little more somber than celebratory. We considered changing the date, but decided to keep it, in light of the fact that on this day we are extra glad to still have each other.
Happy Sisters Day, Nettie. Can’t wait to see you again in November.

Wild heliotrope (a.k.a. seaside heliotrope, salt heliotrope, monkey tail, quail plant) is native to and widely distributed in North and South America, and has naturalized elsewhere. It is sometimes considered a weed.
In California, this perennial herb usually grows in saline or alkaline soils, often in areas near a permanent or temporary source of water. It is often found in disturbed coastal sites.