4/30/10

Plants On The Ground ....

OK, i couldn't resist! Actually, i guess the correct title should be "Plants IN The Ground", but, whatever!



i had a small revelation yesterday - i realized i hardly ever plant plants the "normal" way anymore; that is, planting the seeds directly in the ground, keeping them watered, and having them sprout right where they need to be! i have started plants from seed for years, but indoors, to transplant at the proper time. OR (file this under "lazy") - i just buy plants!



So i never get the fun little thrill anymore of seeing those first few seedlings breaking out of the ground, which actually was one of my favorite memories at the very beginning of my gardening life. i had almost forgotten that feeling....so this year, i planted a row of early spring veggies - 2 kinds of spinach, 4 types of lettuce, white, purple, and black radishes, as well as carrots that are supposed to be a mix of 4 colors! That was two days ago, and i am impatiently looking at that patch every day, and watering it (using a watering can, the old fashioned way, so i can feel more connected with the earth).


i have lost touch with my garden somewhat in the past few years, partly because of a job change, which gives me much less vacation time than i used to have, along with my garden sculpture business that takes up most of the REST of my time! i'm not complaining about either situation, but still i'm not giving my treasured plants the attention they need!


The tomato plants, which used to reach 3-4 feet tall, have ended up in the past two years as scrawny,weed choked, foot tall things that had a half dozen small fruits on them at the most! i just lose track - BUT i am now making a middle of the year resolution to give the veggie garden some TLC this year - i'll update you about this later!

4/28/10

Free Comic Book Day 2010

***Shameless Promotion Warning***

...of spouse's business!

How many times do you hear "free" nowadays for real, without a catch? Well, this Saturday, May first, Monarch Comics in Toledo http://www.monarchcardsandcomics.com/
(4400 Heatherdowns) will actually have FREE comic books available to everyone! Comic shops across the country will be participating in Free Comic Book Day http://www.freecomicbookday.com/, but it is up to the individual dealers to add any exceptions/stipulations, like "free with $_.00 purchase", but there's none of that at Monarch! There are many FREE comics available, many different titles, and not 3 page pamphlets - these are real comics (and i think they even throw into the mix some of their extra backstock issues, but don't hold me to that), and FREE to anyone who stops in!

Where will I be? At an annual plant and perennial swap far from there! lol After 28 years, i know better than to get in the way!!!
Stop in May 1 and tell 'em I sent you!

4/27/10

RANT ~ Hardy, My A**!

Went to a well known, local department/general store yesterday. It's a family run business that started out as a general store catering primarily to farmers. It's much bigger now, and despite my impending rant, i still feel that it's a well run, upstanding company, therefore i'm not naming names! i'm sure if you live in my area, you'll figure out where i mean.

Anyway, they have a fairly large plant/garden area, and is always one of the stops in my "Spring Hunt For Plants I Don't Have Yet" trek. Now, this isn't the only place i have seen this happen, but was a little disappointed that this store, the one i have known most of my life, is now carrying perennials that are NOT hardy in my area! *(A perennial is a plant that should live thru the winter - outdoors - and continue to grow for many seasons)* Not just borderline - a full 2 or 3 zones off from ours! Now, i live and breathe plants, so i know to check the tags before i fall in love with a particular cultivar, but most folks just want a nice plant, and will assume that if a local store is carrying this plant that says "Perennial", that of course, it would mean it's a perennial HERE, in zone 5, not (as the tag reads) in zone 7 (which is GEORGIA, not Ohio!).They do have a 1 year guarantee on perennials, but i don't know if they would honor that or just say, "Well, it's not hardy here, so the guarantee doesn't apply". i have a feeling they WOULD honor it, so then what? - then they lose money, guaranteeing plants that had no chance to begin with!
And it may not be the store's fault at all - are the buyers for the store given the correct information, or are they just told the plants are "perennials"? As i said, this is not the only place i've seen this happen, but i'd like to know where the fault lies....


***Oh, i have tried many plants not considered to be hardy here to try and stretch my luck, but that is MY decision, backed with the knowledge that it very well could die! As Tony Avent of Plant Delights Nursery likes to say, " I consider every plant hardy until I have killed it myself...at least three times!" (by the way, Tony, I'm still waiting for my Tetrapanax "Steroidal Giant" to try to kill!). By the way, i would love to work there - after reading their catalog, i'm convinced everyone there is mentally unbalanced (i'd fit right in)! Here's their website ***



But i digress... no, the plant tags attached to these plants i refer to do NOT lie - they ARE perennial - almost ALL plants are perennial somewhere, if the situation is right. i get tired of watching "House Hunters" when the hunt is in the tropics, and my tiny houseplants (here) are 20 foot outdoor giants THERE! Saw one home and garden show a while back, the homeowners had a problem with a 25 ft. Bird of Paradise plant (no..colony)(no.. TREE!) that was taking over their front yard - they actually had to bring in heavy equipment to dig it out! LOL - that's what they get for living in Paradise - serves 'em right!


But, please, if you're new to gardening or not, pay attention to those plant tags - know what hardiness zone you're in and match it up to the plant tag info (note: if you're in zone 5, plants hardy to zone 3 or 2, etc. are fine - that just means the plant is good in even colder areas than yours, and should do great).


This is a fairly simple map, but you can Google for more detailed ones online.

4/22/10

True Blue, Baby, I Love You....

  
i think i speak for the great majority of gardeners when i say that we are constantly looking for blue flowers. Real clear blue - not purple, not bluish purple, not violet - BLUE. Unfortunately, there aren't many fitting that classification!

                    Grape Hyacinths(Muscari "Valerie Finnis ")
When you read many plant catalogs, they will describe ALL the Grape Hyacinths as a "Clear Blue!" color, but i don't understand it - they are very definitely PURPLE! Just like in the photo below (and even looking all over the 'net for this picture, almost all varieties were shown - as blue). Valerie Finnis is the only one i've found that REALLY is blue.

There are two blue flowered plants i have not yet succeeded with - one is the Himalayan Blue Poppy (Meconopsis), which really wants the cool, moist summers of the Pacific Northwest, and the Corydalis 'Blue Panda', also another one that doesn't like our hot summers - but I'll keep trying!



Glory of The Snow (Chionodoxa )
The first blue of the year (actually, the Scilla {below} blooms when the Crocus bloom, but the flowers are so tiny and delicate that it's easy to nearly overlook them) 

 
The tiny stripes on the above blossoms are a subdued baby blue
 


Pulmonaria (I think it's "Blue Ensign" - unfortunately, i lost the tag) blooming right now - even though the buds are pink, the open flowers are EXTREMELY blue!


...And one more.... the pretty blue forget me not-like flowers of the Brunneras....

Happy Earth Day!


i'm sure this is not big news to you all - it's all over the place! - but today is the 40th celebration of Earth Day!

 Here's my Earth Day message: You don't have to recycle, and compost, and drive a hybrid, and garden organic, and use rechargeable batteries, and reuse 'gray' water, and use flourescent lightbulbs,and plant a tree, and conserve energy and gasolene usage all at the same time - just do SOME of those things! That's the problem. Some of us are really trying, but many more don't do ANYTHING! And the scariest part is, a lot of people don't care! Well, they should- especially if they've had children - they may not care, but their descendants might, don't you think?! If every one of us would just do whatever they could towards conservation, it could really make a difference. And if you're reading my blog, it's more likely than not that you already feel the same way, so today, i think we should all find one or more of those "uncaring" folks and try (tactfully) to convince them a little that, like it or not, we're in this together!
Peace!

4/20/10

*Collectable Plants* ~ Heuchera

When i like a genus of plants, i usually want every cultivar there is of that particular plant. One of my favorites is the Heuchera (Coral Bell) family. When i started gardening (way back in the ancient times), there were just Coral Bells - a reliable small perennial with nicely shaped green leaves that bloomed in summer with tiny, delicate lily of the valley shaped pink (or coral) flowers up and down long stems.



 Then came "Palace Purple", with large dark purple leaves that glowed when the sun shone thru them! One drawback - the flowers were a sickly greenish cream color instead of the coral!

                                            Palace Purple

That happens often in the plant breeding world - new foliage shape / color results in loss of flower interest or new flower color or disease resistance results in loss of fragrance, as in our modern roses.



But we gardeners fell for the pretty new leaves (and the blossoms themselves never really were that interesting to me), and wanted more!

The breeders got going, and these days, i swear they come out with at least a dozen new leaf colors every year!
i just walked around my yard last night, and this is a list of the Heucheras (HEW-KER-AHS) I currently own:

Cappuchino
Peach Melba

Creme Brulee

Amber Waves

Midnight Rose

Mocha Mint

Velvet Night

Autumn Bride

Green Spice

Lemon Lime

Citronelle

Caramel

Cherries Jubilee

Crimson Curls

Palace Purple

Lime Rickey



And Sunspot
 (Actually she's a Heucherella - a cross between a Heuchera and Tiarella, looks very similar to a Heuchera, but the flowers are a little "foofier".)
                                                      Sunspot
...On top of that, Heucheras are long lived, well behaved, hardy, and evergreen (or whatever color they happen to be), and the flowers (pink or not) attract hummingbirds! Can't go wrong!

4/16/10

Spring Thoughts..

I love Spring! LOVEIT LOVEITLOVEITLOVEITLOVEITLOVEITLOVEIT!!!!
My little heart is overflowing with it! If this feeling could be bottled or made into a drug, i'd be an addict! There are many people i know who really don't notice the seasons....how can they ignore the smell of new growing plants and flowers, and the chorus of birds and toads early in the morning at sunrise? How do they not see the sun, the blue sky, the trees in flower, or the new bright green leaves? And who would want to miss it?
Even on a COLD Spring day (and we get plenty of those!), it's still beautiful and a LOT better than a Winter day! My only complaint is that it doesn't last long enough, and, if we do get a really WARM spell, all the blossoms quickly unfurl, but fade just as fast, making everything that much more fleeting.

Yesterday was one of those warm days, though - the air temperature was well over 80 degrees (F), and i even managed to get into the pond for the first time to do some maintenance! The water wasn't 80 degrees though! No problem - once my legs went numb, it didn't feel too bad at all! LOL



i really have to get some of those shoulder high gloves for working in the pond - no other kind would work, and if i'm messing with water lily roots,it takes me days to wear the purple stains off my hands.


WARNING: Lily roots don't LOOK purple, but they definitely dye your skin! Another warning - they stink! They smell rotten - i have had people send lilies to me in swaps and apologised to me because they couldn't wash them well enough to get the smell off!


i usually get in wearing shorts and deck shoes, which work pretty well to keep me from slipping, (If i have to get in there and it's REAL chilly, i do have hip boots) but still, we have a rule at our house - no getting into the watergarden without supervision - yes, it's only 24" deep; but one slip and hit of your head on any of the rocks in and around it, and you'll be one of those "freak accident" deaths in the local newspaper! How embarrassing would THAT headline be?
"WOMAN DROWNS IN 2 FOOT DEEP WATERGARDEN"

4/3/10

A Wish For You All...


Peep Romance by David April

I hope everyone has a wonderful, peaceful, fulfilling day tomorrow, whether you celebrate Easter Sunday or not!
~nanci~

The Watergarden Bug

(Note: This happened in 1999 or 2000, so these are all old film photos from back then. i'm happy that i'm finally putting these "out there" - i kept misplacing the actual hard copies!)
No, not a water strider or mosquito - i mean the thing you get in your MIND that you HAVE to have a body of water in your yard! i got the bug as hubby and i were at the open house the Realtor was having at what WOULD become our current residence. The Realtor was pointing out what a large yard there was and telling us that there was plenty of room for a swimming pool. i thought to myself,***Pool? Heck, no! i want me a POND! With fish and plants and frogs and a waterfall and a stream and snails and stuff!"***


And so, in the spring following our moving in, i started digging. OK, i didn't go REAL crazy - just bought a 60 gallon (227 Liter) hard plastic preformed thing, but it was enough to start. i have heard that you should always go big at first, to prevent having to replace it with a bigger one later ('cause all us "ponders" always do!), but i disagree. i was glad i started - and made my mistakes - with a smaller pond (NOTE: i AM referring to watergardens - 'pond' is just less to type!). This one had no filtration system (except plants and fish ~ the rock "waterfall" was just for looks, too), and it was fine - even had more fish in the Fall than what i started with, if you know what i mean..;o)
.
After a couple of years, we did want to expand, so we went to a local watergarden shop in our area that gave free classes on how to install ponds, and just about got frightened out of the whole idea! This place really went all out (and of course, wanted the class participants to purchase the supplies from THEM), and if we followed all of their advice it would have cost us a small fortune!
So i started researching the whole pond building thing myself and discovered that, while watergardens CAN be a lot of work and expense, they really don't have to be! More about THAT later...back to pond building...
Here's a photo (below) of our initial sod removal in the shape of the new pond - quite a size difference! The only thing i wish we'd done differently was to keep the front of the pond where it was and not dig another foot closer to the sunroom - it's a little tight there now.

...So here it is a couple of days into the digging (below)- note the chairs in the shade - we had, in our usual bad timing, picked the only week that YEAR that was in the mid 90's (F)...ALL week!
More confusing info you'll find is the "to shelf or not to shelf" debate. There are good reasons for both configurations, but i can tell you that i am glad we have shelves - first of all, i would have no idea how to get INTO the pond without a step of some sort - it gets extremely slippery in there within days. Second, the shelves are very convenient for marginal and bog plants - in fact, i wish we had made them shallower than they are.
And last but most important, we got tired of shoveling and trying to find places to put the soil!!! After building up the waterfall area, the whole margin of the pond, AND two planting hills behind it in the yard, we were fed up with the whole digging thing! We finally looked at each other, said "Screw it!", and called it done!
The stick is for checking the level of the sides, and that large bucket is actually the biological filter we had yet to install.
The rubber liner going in. TIPS- don't let this stuff lay on your grass - it'll be killed in a hurry (no, we didn't do that - we were warned ahead of time!). Also, we didn't put any cushion or underlayment underneath - didn't have many roots or rocks around, and it hasn't been an issue - but i would still recommend it, because now, any time we lose water, i immediately worry that it's a stick or root cutting thru the bottom of the liner! So just for your peace of mind, put underlayment if you can. i know there are liners that have the underlayment already attached - wow, i cringe to think about how heavy THAT would be!

This is me in the pond - i was pretty overweight then, so this is all i'm showing you!
(To this day, when someone asks my spousal unit what he dug the pond with, he says, "With my wife!"). Sigh....

While we were lucky and had lots of pretty fieldstone for the taking from hubby's grandparents' farm, it was rounded and not good to use for the first layer. Here was our Big mistake, though  - my idea was to use cheap concrete patio blocks for the perimeter. Found out later that they were soaking in the water and leaching LIME into it, throwing the PH completely off kilter! We had to invest in a load of shale to replace it all, which was NOT fun! But anyway, that's how we started.


Couldn't wait to put plants in, even before it was finished!

Here's my guy, working on the patio blocks and waterfall. We did not mortar any rocks together, still not sure if that was a good thing or not. They do shift during the winter, but they were much easier to move when we had to get to the back of the filter when we had a leak. So,  there's good points and bad points to not mortaring, too.

Plants going around the outside. Once again, i saved a lot of money because i had so many plants in the gardens. i just divided or transplanted them and only purchased a couple of "special" plants.

From the other side

Before mulch...
...And after mulch!

And here ~ A year later...!
The End  LOL



4/2/10

Me, Continued

For those of you who may have caught the post about my health scare and were wondering, life goes on for me, thankfully! i had my "procedure" yesterday and everything looked just fine (according to the doctor). i had even been putting a few things off, because i was almost certain there was something wrong, and if i had to go thru treatments, i was waiting before making future plans. That's not a great way to be, but, having been sucker punched by unforeseen health issues before, i would rather expect the worst and just be relieved if i'm wrong!  But, it seems our (DH's and mine) boring and uneventful lives will not drastically change, and that's just the way we like it!
 :o) :o) :o) :o) :o) :o) :o) :o) :o) :o) :o)

4/1/10

Off Topic Tangent Day


Well, here i am, "prepping" for my "procedure" (colonoscopy) tomorrow. I ate at 11:00 AM and can't have anything but clear liquids until afterwards (which will be at least late afternoon tomorrow!). i have had minor surgery before, so this isn't completely new to me, but i have never had much experience with medical procedures. Never been admitted to a hospital (never had kids, either, so not even then). And compared to many others my age (52 - don't tell anyone), i'm very healthy (unless i find out differently tomorrow! :p), and i don't take any drugs except vitamins and painkillers (when necessary). So i don't want to get too involved with this stuff.



The worst part will be the "pre-procedure" stuff. As i said, no food till mid tomorrow, then, about 5:00 PM today, i start to drink this liquid that will begin to "clear the pipes", putting it nicely! Of course, my spousal unit will be eating regardless (i will not cook tonight, though - it's fast food for him)! My plans are a little different - I gotta have clear liquids - Tequila's a clear liquid, right?



Just kidding! - it's supposed to be warm and beautiful for the next 3 days - i'll just stay out and work in the garden until dark - DH always has to chase me into the house to eat, anyway - i don't love many things more than food, but gardening just may be one of them! By that time i should be pretty tired, don't you think?



*It's actually kind of freeing to not think about eating at all. I think some people's customs of occasional fasting is an interesting and good thing. We Americans eat so much, even compared to people in other countries (who are financially able to eat whatever they want) - it's almost obscene at times!*
Time for a picture that is totally unrelated to the subject (thank goodness!) ~ this is a wall in my office at work.
 
Well, i'm adding more on "The Day Of".. Not too bad so far, definitely  can't get away from the bathroom for very long, though! The worst part is this solution i have to drink - it really doesn't taste that bad, but after SIX glasses of it, it's pretty disgusting! I'm all for preventative measures, and everyone SHOULD have one of these after they pass 50, but this is a lot to go through! Still in the process of trying to get the rest of it down (and out!) - wish me luck!