sparrows and loquats
Dec. 15th, 2016 04:40 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
It's cold today; the heater is chugging along, making my living space warm, and I feel so grateful. Outside, in the nearby city, the sparrows by the bus station are fluffed up like little feathered pokéballs. They're very tame; people feed them crumbs and things, either by accident or on purpose.
Around here people say "on accident," to go with "on purpose." How about the other way? By accident or by purpose.
Safe from the cold are these loquat trees I grew from seeds that
88greenthumb sent me. I've never eaten the fruit of the loquat--have any of you?


Their leaves are generously large and a rich green color, and apparently you can make a tea out of them, but I won't, because my trees are up against enough difficulties, growing in pots and kept indoors for half the year, without having their leaves plucked.
In China, and then by extension in Japan, the tree is called pipa (biwa in Japanese), like the instrument--maybe because the fruit look like it?
a pipa (source)

Around here people say "on accident," to go with "on purpose." How about the other way? By accident or by purpose.
Safe from the cold are these loquat trees I grew from seeds that
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)


Their leaves are generously large and a rich green color, and apparently you can make a tea out of them, but I won't, because my trees are up against enough difficulties, growing in pots and kept indoors for half the year, without having their leaves plucked.
In China, and then by extension in Japan, the tree is called pipa (biwa in Japanese), like the instrument--maybe because the fruit look like it?
a pipa (source)
