I'm finding it hard to get excited about the holidays this year given that every news release leaves my head spinning and sends my blood pressure up. Halloween isn't my favorite holiday in any case but I usually invest a little time decorating for it mid-month. This year, I just pulled out a few things yesterday. Our neighborhood isn't teaming with children to begin with but there are more now than there were when we moved in and I didn't want to disappoint those that show up on the 31st.
| My decorations, such as they are, arranged in the front porch area | 
Last year, the neighborhood offered a lot more decorations for kids to enjoy, including one house with a front yard full of blow-up monsters and the like. This year, there's nothing like that going on. I noted only four houses with any kind of decorations and they were all low-key.
| Spiders and ghosts on a front gate | 
| I liked the little bats surrounding this front door. Two other houses sported scarecrows. | 
I wasn't aware that chocolate prices have gone through the roof, which puts its own edge on the holiday. I'd forgotten to pick up candy on my last trip to the market and asked my husband to get two bags while he was out. He mentioned their price to me when he got home. We didn't "need" two bags of candy as we're unlikely to have that many Halloween visitors but I like to leave the leftovers for delivery people during the holidays.
| According to an NBC news report, cocoa prices that had typically ranged from $2K to $3K per metric ton reached $10K earlier this year. Tariffs have impacted the candy production supply chain but crop diseases in West Africa attributed to climate change are a bigger factor as that region of the world produces 70% of the world's cocoa. | 
Meanwhile, my own garden offered me some spine-chilling sights I could've done without.
| I also discovered that the bloom stalk of this Yucca 'Bright Star' has stressed out the plant. I expect I'll end up removing it once the flowers are spent. | 
In spite of news reports and the price of chocolate, I hope you find some reasons to smile this Halloween, be it a piece of candy or a child's smile. In the US, the clocks roll back this weekend and I'm looking forward to that!
All material © 2012-2025 by Kris Peterson for Late to the Garden Party
 
A skunk? Well, that's scary... sheesh. I hope it's not planning on regular visits to your garden; that sounds like an unpleasant predicament.
ReplyDeleteFrom my experience buying persimmons in the grocery store, after multiple days on the counter they do eventually ripen. This way, you get to them before the critters...
Sorry about your Agave desmetiana... do they pup at all?
Chavli
I've occasionally seen baby skunks but this is the first full-grown one I've witnessed rooting its way through my garden. We usually only smell their tell-tale scent coming through an open window. The raccoons aren't gone either - I spooked a big one picking the last of the 'Fuyu' persimmons last night when I shut our gate.
DeleteI haven't noticed any pups surrounding the 2 Agave desmetiana with bloom stalks but the 2 that produced the now mature plants produced a multitude of them back in 2019. Hopefully, I'll get more this round. At least the desmetiana have attractive blooms, which I can't say for some agaves.
A skunk is not a fun Halloween surprise, I hope no trick-or-treaters cross his path. So sorry about your Agave desmetiana, they look to be beautiful plants that it's a shame to lose. As for the holiday I think the scariest thing of all is the state of our country. I cannot believe it's gotten this bad, this fast.
ReplyDeleteI'm very depressed (and angry) about the state of our union, hence the low level interest in the holidays in general. Forty-two million people set to go hungry in the world's most wealthy country as the president commits $20B to bail out Argentina and spends $300M on a ballroom after destroying the "nation's house."
Delete