I've been neglecting my posting here, so in order to catch up a little, this one will be essentially a picture dump from last month (again - I'm falling into a habit here).
December and January were relatively mild, and a number of plants stayed green, if not growing heartily.
And then came February. The only things that made it through that were weeds (of course), lettuce and, surprising to me, the 'Phenomenal' lavender in the rose garden...
...and the perennial poppies. This is how they looked mid-March:
But then came the rains, and I found another low spot in the garden, next to the tulip beds. Seems like every year I find a spot that needs to be built up.
Spring bulbs (alliums, hyacinths, daffodils, tulips, crocus, bluebells, muscari, mountain lily) all started coming up the first two weeks of March, along with the rhubarb. And now (the first of May) things are looking up.
First, though, here's a picture from Easter when a baby squirrel decided I was at least better company than none.
It followed me around for two days and then disappeared. I hope it found a new home and not a predator.
The new tulips were beautiful during the month of April.
'Guinevere'
'Guinevere' and 'Red Matador' with 'Thalia' narcissus
'Tom Pouce'
'Slawa'
'Shogun'
As were the previous year's daffodils...
'Orangery'
And...guess what? The same exact thing happened this year. I got something called TomCat Mole Killer and plan to pre-flood this area next year before planting anything. Only I tried flooding it this year, and the water never stopped running, so I'm assuming the run is very, very long.
I've never heard of anyone having much luck with mole baits or traps, but I'm desperate. There are acres of yard for them to tunnel - and they do. I just want this little plot of garden. Is that too much to ask?
A decent bit of lettuce overwintered through that frigid February when the ground was frozen, along with walking onion and wild garlic, so I've had salads for weeks.
Amazingly, the only plants to be damaged by the freeze were the potatoes, but they've come up from different "eyes" since.
I also cut a bunch of tulips and daffodils thinking they'd freeze anyway.
The ones I left weren't even fazed, so I could have left them all and enjoyed them outside longer. Oh well, I enjoyed them inside.
I saw a recipe for dandelion jelly a while back, so, having a bumper crop of dandelions (as every year), I thought I'd try it.
It was way too much work for something that tasted only of the lemon zest in it, and sugar.
Lilacs, magnolia blossoms, and dandelion jelly
0 comments:
Post a Comment
Many thanks for your interest and your comments.