Golden Currant - May 23, 2020 |
As faithful readers know, I even started a garden journal last year (see June 9, 2019, July 21, 2019, and September 8, 2019), to document my learning and for other reasons. Sigh. But not all is doomed - I have good news as well, and some of it even derived from my knowledge gained last year.
And how can I be downcast when I am IN MY GARDEN? It is a joy that vibrates through my whole being, and hard to explain to any but other gardeners. If I am ever somewhat morose, it is when I think of my Dad, and how I would thrill to give him a garden tour, as he was wont to do with all family, and anyone else that he could swindle into it! So, you will be patient with me in this post, as I act out a garden exploration with my Dad.
May 7, 2020 |
I'm talking about flowers, and I can envision my Dad sizing up
trees, hands on hips, shrewdly observing that two of our
larch transplants don't look healthy.
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Rocky Mountain Bee Plant - May 23, 2020 |
Transplanted lupine - May 20, 2020 |
Columbine volunteers: May 23, 2020 |
Goldenrod nursery - April 26 - May 23, 2020 |
Pots on May 10 - and no, I am not going to show you how they look now |
Columbine
Left: May 21, 2019 (flowers forming) Right: May 23, 2020
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Goodland Apple
Left: May 21, 2019 Right: May 23, 2020
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Norway Maple
Left: May 21, 2019 Right: May 23, 2020
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In its "final" stages, I hope for a prairie, awash with a variety of plants and bushes, growing together in a riot. This means a few things: 1) I have to be patient, and let a plant grow for a while in order to determine if it belongs, 2) it is harder to decide if something has been nibbled, and 3) since I have more plants, I don't freak out as much if ONE is nibbled!
Oil Beetle is distinguished from other Blister Beetles by its short wings |
Dad had an arsenal of bug-fighting tools at his disposal, and the one that stands out in my memory was a knee-high metal canister with an attached tube and nozzle. It had a pump handle, and its main use was to spray the fruit trees. I also remember Sevin being applied liberally to chase off aphids, and it was easy to turn to that last year when I had an infestation. But sometimes, no tool or product was necessary. Give him a cutworm on a prize tomato plant, and he would grab it and PINCH, it would be oozing green caterpillar juice on his fingers. I surmise that's why I reacted without thinking when I saw that beetle munching its way through my plant!
As we pass around the side of the house, and take the stone steps down to the "back yard", I am sure my Dad would be looking at the grass and wondering when we will get out the mower. In the fall of 2018, we sowed 50 pounds of wild grass seed, combined with wildflower seed. Last fall, we added top soil to the remaining barren areas, and I scattered grass seed that I had painstakingly gathered by hand. As you can see in the comparison pictures, we have progressed from construction zone to "I am thinking about being a prairie." Spousal Unit has suggested that we buy more grass seed this fall to save my collecting it, and I am on board for that!
Top: area near fire pit - May 21, 2019
Bottom: same location - May 22, 2020
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May 23, 2020 - Penstemon and Coreopsis |
I took care to guard the strawberries, since they were some of the
first plants to be nibbled last year. They are thriving.
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Top - yellow penstemon original plant
Bottom right and left: "volunteers" - amazing when you consider the mama plant was afflicted with aphids!
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Welcome to Mosaic Monday, a weekly meme
where we get together to share our photo mosaics and collages.
Please include at least one photo mosaic/collage in your post.
The link will be open from 1 p.m. Sunday until 11 p.m. Monday (U.S. Mountain time).
Remember to add the link to your Mosaic Monday post and not the one to your blog.
Please link back to this post so that your readers will be able to visit and enjoy more wonderful mosaics; taking the MM blog button from my sidebar is an easy way to link back.
As host I will visit every participant and leave a comment so that you know I stopped by.
Please try and visit as many other blogs as you can, especially those that join in later, so that everyone's creativity can be appreciated fully.
Thank you for joining in today and sharing your mosaics with us.
Please include at least one photo mosaic/collage in your post.
The link will be open from 1 p.m. Sunday until 11 p.m. Monday (U.S. Mountain time).
Remember to add the link to your Mosaic Monday post and not the one to your blog.
Please link back to this post so that your readers will be able to visit and enjoy more wonderful mosaics; taking the MM blog button from my sidebar is an easy way to link back.
As host I will visit every participant and leave a comment so that you know I stopped by.
Please try and visit as many other blogs as you can, especially those that join in later, so that everyone's creativity can be appreciated fully.
Thank you for joining in today and sharing your mosaics with us.
Such wonderful photos, we love gardening season but it's too bad we don't have a garden. We have hard red clay and not much grows in it, at least nothing we'd want to grow. Have a most wonderful week.
ReplyDeleteGardening after frost... that's always important - we have here the so called "Eisheiligen" in May - I must search for translation, dear Angie.
ReplyDeleteSo I wait for warmer days, to plant my tomatoes for example.
...and gardening is the best medicine against Corona depression ever. I enjoyed reading, seeing the lovely blooms. Know the variegated nettles, they we have in the house on the window sill.
Stay healthy and well.
Happy MosaicMonday
Heidrun xxx
Good start to lovely flowers in your garden. I did something similar for a strip of flowers along the side of my floating garden. My first try was using several layers of ground cover cloths nailed in place. It lasted two years before it rotted out and mice chewed their way through it. The next try was using what we call mill felt. It is a porous fiberglass cloth they use in the paper mill. The good part it allows rain water to pass through. That's essential for most of the year. The down side is it doesn't hold enough water during the hot summer. I've found growing alyssum. After two years their root structure has helped hold moisture. Each fall I only cut the tops down and it reseeds itself for the spring. Well, I hope so. I have no way of knowing what it is doing right now. - Margy
ReplyDelete...gardening in your neck of the woods is all about proper plants selection and wire fencing! Thanks Angie for hosting.
ReplyDeleteWishing you a wonderful summer garden, especially strawberries! I know ours are doing very well! Have a grand week!
ReplyDeleteMy goodness...we've had a bad run with flowers as well. Our weather was "hot" in Feb. then it took a nose dive. So much rain, so so much rain, then days and days of 60-70 degree weather with an occasional 80s, right back down in the 60-70s again. NOW...today almost 90. My flowers have not fared well.
ReplyDeleteyour spring seem to be pretty much at the same level as ours in Sweden. On my balcony I will soon have Columbine flowers. I think mine are red that will open any day. We also have wild strawberry flowers. As I don´t have a garden I don´t have much to share about that. It is bedtime for me, so, Good night :)
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed the tour with you and your dad (mine also loved his flowers, especially his roses which were amazing). I remember reading about your Goodland apples before ... it’s lovely the way you incorporate family and memories into your home . And I really like the fact that you welcome the wildflowers! Thanks for sharing and, as always, for hosting.
ReplyDeleteMaking a natural garden with perennials is certainly a process. We have many critters here that enjoy eating many of our plants so it can also be frustrating. Also, our nightly temperatures are too cool for many warm loving pants. I'm always happy to see something thriving!
ReplyDeleteI always try to look up last expected frost dates here in Colorado for our area, as they change year to year, but even then we have been surprised with snow. Today we happily had rain but the mountains had heavy snow!
Glad to hear that your garden/prairie is coming along despite all the setbacks, it is difficult to hold back from planting too soon when all we want to do is get out there and grow stuff! God luck at keeping those beetles at bay they sound horrendous. Happy MM.
ReplyDeleteHello,I enjoyed the tour and photos of your garden. I just love the flower baskets you made, what a great use of materials. The strawberries will be great, yum! Our temps are below normal and we can usually have a late frost. So we are waiting to plant annuals in our deck pots. Good luck with the battle of the beetle. Thanks for hosting MM! Enjoy your day, wishing you a happy new week!
ReplyDeleteIt takes time to find out what grows well in your climate and soil. And it's nice to welcome some wildflowers...they are more beautiful than anything you can find in a store. I know they can be invasive though and can take over areas. Have a good day!
ReplyDeleteYour Dad would have been proud of you for lovely garden. My mother loved gardening..She had a gorgeous garden of beautiful flowers..So I felt like I was going down memory lane with you, too,
ReplyDeleteAs a gardener who had the love of gardening instilled into him by his mother, I can understand so well the sentiments of your post this week, Angie. And as Mum often says, "no pain, no gain..." But does it have to hurt sooooooo much? :-)
ReplyDeleteIsn't it wonderful to be inspired by family?
ReplyDeleteYour post is inspiring. It's such a beautiful time of year.
PS: Thank you for hosting!
ReplyDeleteIt’s great you’ve got your dad’s gardening gene and probably so much more. I’ve found that in my garden, plants refuse to be rooted in some places. They tell me where they want to go and where they are willing thrive in the growing seasons that follow.
ReplyDeleteI wish I had room for strawberries. I'm seriously considering extra container gardens. We'll see if I can get my husband interested too. I just read an article about hydroponic indoor gardens.
ReplyDeleteMy Colorado boy went camping with friends this weekend but had to leave the mountain when snow started and on his drive home, he said there was snow and hail to contend with, three accidents along the way and someone even flipped their car off the side of the road. Scary! I'm a fan of wild spaces so am especially fond of volunteer plants. Nature certainly knows best where it fits in.
ReplyDeleteLooking good my friend! Sorry some of your plants got bit by the frost. I have made it a rule, to plant the first week of June. I have a friend who always plants on Mother's Day, and then she wonders why they die or just sit there and do nothing. I keep telling her, it's too cold! I went to my Nursery the other day and had a nice chat with the owner. We discussed putting seeds in. She was saying how the soil hasn't even warmed up, so I could still put in some morning glories. It is a lovely day here in the south. The lilacs are going crazy and have just started to bloom. May you have a wonderful Memorial Day! Take care, kit
ReplyDeleteI am so grateful to have garden space this year. I put 4 strawberry plants in this week in their 'own' bed'. Flowers in the front planters are doing well, their colour makes the day brighter. Thank you for sharing your wonderful 81st Mosaic Monday - what a wonderful and HUGE garden/growing area you shared today.
ReplyDeleteJoy
Angie, For sure spring is a bit late this year. Loved the garden tour! Have a great week. Sylvia D.
ReplyDeleteYou are ambitious. I am a lazy gardener. Blister Beetles sound unpleasant, although they could be a metal band.
ReplyDeleteLovely signs of spring.
ReplyDeleteIt's nice to have stories of experiences and memories your father taught how to do good gardening. To some extent remind my deceased father who always taught to love the environment and participate in preserving nature. Thank you your size is very good and inspires many people to do the same thing.
ReplyDeleteGreetings from Indonesia
Thank you for the lovely tour of your garden, it takes time to get established and work out which plants are happy where, nice to see self seeders coming up. That black beetle sounds a bit ordinary, I would be squashing it too!! I hope you have a great spring garden once the weather settles.
ReplyDeleteI am not a gardener and can always benefit from the advice of gardeners. I so appreciate those who can thrive in a garden and make a garden thrive. I am the benefactor of gardeners who went before me on this piece of land. Thankfully some plants keep coming back regardless of my neglect. Such sweet memories of your dear dad.
ReplyDeletethank you for the tour of your garden. Sadly I missed the link up this week. enjoy the rest of your week and happy gardening.
ReplyDeleteOnce again I am amazed by your comprehensive knowledge of plants Angie. Your yard/garden is looking as though it will be one big nature reserve. I am a little disappointed you squished the beetle because I am a great believer in everything having its rightful place in the system, but I admit I never heard of Blister beetles. We make an exception for the slugs that eat the young plants and leave those slimy trails everywhere.
ReplyDeletei like that your garden resembles your dads, you will always think of him as you walk around it!! it is beautiful!! i planted my pots too soon also, but i was able to bring them into the garage where they survived fine!! you have a lot of very natural plants around you. those that were there first, spend time nurturing them and it will be bountiful!!! you have a really pretty landscape!!!
ReplyDeleteOh thank you for sharing your garden with me and so glad your Dad's spirit is with you ~ great photos ~
ReplyDeleteBe Safe, Be Well,
A ShutterBug Explores,
aka (A Creative Harbor)
I love your tour. I am not gardener but I made lots of money in high school helping gardeners do their thing and my wife is a gardener. What I love is that you have a wide variety of plants from a wide variety of sources and some work, some don't, some do great, some not so great. You made some mistakes, you had a lot of success. You are fighting off the bugs. You are a tinkerer and will change a few things and see how it does. I love all that about gardening. I just don't like doing it myself.
ReplyDeleteI used to have a lot in the community garden a few years ago but the one here is not being worked i=on because of the virus. Hopefully next year. Wishing you a wonderful garden season with lots of everyhting.:)
ReplyDeleteAs one who is never happier than in a garden, I totally understand your passion and love for yours. I too adore any plant that blooms. I find here the columbines take seed wherever they will and flower in the gazillions....and we have winds that can uproot one's house from it's foundations. Your garden is a joy, Angie and in a couple of seasons you will not believe how much it has thrived. As for the seasons, they will not be controlled; they just come whenever they decide to. Thank you for the beautiful stroll through your garden. Your dad would be very proud of his daughter and 'her' garden.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed your photographs.
ReplyDeleteIt's very nice that your garden resembles your dads.
Flowers and plants can hold special memories of loved ones.
All the best Jan