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Saturday, February 23, 2013

More rain, yay


 
Winter 2011
Things certainly were a lot greener in 2011. A lot of perennials  stayed green all winter.. It was a disconcerting winter.


winter 2013
 

I had plans this morning to dig in more compost and get things ready for planting, but delayed by blessed rain.  It is in the 40's and I love to be out in the garden when it is like this. Maybe I can do a bit this afternoon. It has been looking like a repeat of 2011 when Texas had extreme heat and drought and grass fires all over.

This will be a good day to check out just what I want to plant.  The nurseries are not carrying a lot as of yet. I hope to make use of the time and plan what and where things will go.  Almost all of the plants I salvaged and put into pots are doing well.  I may have too much of a good thing if they all survive and make good plants.  If so, I will try to find someone to share with.


most of these are mums and to the left are lavenders
a few surviving lavender





Monday, February 11, 2013

Just a little rain







Sunday morning and woke up to lightening and thunder.  I'm not sure how much we got but it is sure welcome.
I had worked on the cone flower bed and dug in a whole bag of compost. Just in time to get soaked and settle down..
I am anxious to see what I can do to resurrect the garden.
Part of the process is to decide what anti rabbit plants I can use.  Some plants get too large and would defeat the cone flower plan.  It would be so wonderful to be able to take the fence down!!  I can take it down now since nothing is green.
That is my task for today. Take the wire part down and maybe leave the posts. Hope it is not too wet to work.

This picture was taken early October. The landscape cloth wrapped around the fence is a bit more tattered now.


Found this photo from spring 2010.  California poppies among the cone flowers. This looks like as good as it gets. Unfortunately, the poppies (not these California but the corn poppy) hadn't really gotten going yet and I blew it big time by letting them get the upper hand.




























I did get one other task done.  Something I love to do even though the plants may not be as healthy as new ones, it gives me no end of satisfaction to plant something I salvaged and watch it grow.

A few sprigs of lavender and one tall one, the rest are Country girl mum.  I am reworking the mum bed with compost and additives








Saturday, February 9, 2013

Productive morning

I haven't worked on my bunny repellant plants but did spend a productive morning.

The temperature is about 46 degrees and good chance for rain.  We need it.  I took this opportunity to finish cutting back 2 of my landscape grasses.  What a messy chore and a little too windy.  I will be cleaning up grass cuttings all summer.

I am concerned that I should probably replace this ravenna  grass.

I whacked off the taller grass blades with a hedge trimmer.  It was certainly a lot faster than trying to cut with a pair of scissors. More than likely, the hole in the middle of this clump is due to not cutting back short enough.


This is a second grass that I cut back.  The weeds? Poppies. They were hiding under the grass growth from last year. 




Thursday, February 7, 2013

Plans for spring








My mind never stops gardening. When I was working, I could spend an entire day (at least 8 hours) in the garden and yard. This was usually on the weekends. Now, I manage 3 hours and try to husband my energy by having a plan on what to work on and attempt to stay focused on just that (heh,heh)

It is hard to stay focused when there are so many tasks needing to be gotten to. I realized this morning that the biggest task is the RABBITS. The critters have been around all winter. The trashy looking fenced in area left over from last summer is a wreck. It needs a lot of work. I spent an hour yesterday cleaning only one side of the little area. Muttering and fussing about how had I let things get so out of hand. The day was perfect, overcast and in the low 60's.

Later that afternoon, I spotted the long eared pests and resolved then and there that first on the agenda is selecting plants that (might) repel them or at least be distasteful enough to go elsewhere for goodies,from my lists I made last fall. That being said, next is to clean out the mulch, weeds and trash and add compost. No small chore.
We have a pickup now and I am going to see about getting a load of compost instead of bags. Bags are always easier to handle but cost wise, it is cheaper when you need at least 10 bags. Getting the compost from the truck to the garden area may be a problem since the moles have completely undermined my sandy yard and the truck may bog down................. Also on the agenda?? Getting back to the fitness center and getting in shape.

So, time to find the list and make plans for what and how many of each plant I need.  I haven't had much luck over the years with seeds and don't plan to start now.



These stones came from New Mexico they are so interesting to look at when it rains

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Poppy story



Early days of loving this flower


      


This is the story of a love hate relationship with one flower.

This is the wildflower not the oriental.  Officially named Corn Poppy, Flanders Poppy and several others.

When I started my south side of the house gardens, I was still in the wildflower mode.  We have half an acre that used to be filled with flowers in the spring, summer and fall. There were blue periods,yellow periods and then lavender.

They are not so plentiful now. Weather, critters and over spray from a lawn (no weeds) fanatic neighbor have all seriously affected the flowers.  At one time we were blessed with a field of more than a dozen types of wildflowers.

I still love these bright red clusters of flowers in spring. I had the mistaken idea I could incorporate the clusters in my new gardens.  They are very easy to transplant. They bloom like mad for over a month. This is usually around the time the bluebonnets are blooming. They also have tiny seeds that blow all over and reseed quite prolifically.
 


Beginnings of garden

Corn poppy, California poppy
In my mind I could see the gardens layout.
 I had a "shape" of the future layout in my head for a long time.  So, I laid a path, planted a Ravenna Grass and started moving flowers around from other parts of the yard.
The lavender plant is a very aggressive wild verbena






I accumulated plants and kept them going in pots of all kinds for future transplanting.


























The grassy area behind the flowers is where the wildflowers were.  Now, the pervasive grass has taken over and gets taller than most of the poor wildflowers.












Taken April 2011 before everything is in full flower













April 2011, this is the same area as the earlier photos




























As you can see, the poppies are scattered all over.  They are so pretty that I do try to keep a few blooming and then pull them out before they go to seed.  It is hard to yank out a lovely flower, but the tiny seeds seem to germinate from previous years anyway.


This was a hard lesson to learn.  I am not proud of this picture. After pulling out all the beautiful poppies, this is what was left. The poppies grew so large they shaded the cone flower seeds and no new cone flowers is the result.  I am still struggling to have a garden full of cone flowers.


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I took these just a bit past daylight. The sun was in "just the right place".  My little Canon camera does surprising stuff sometimes