April 24, 2022 0 comments By: m

Bulb bed photo dump



'Guinevere'


'Mistress Mystic'


Lilacs, 'Guinevere' emperor tulip, 'Purple Dream' lily-flowered tulip



'Cynthia' species tulip

'Peppermint Stick' species tulip


'Slawa' triumph tulip


'Slawa'

'Slawa'



April 21, 2022 0 comments By: m

Could it be that winter is over?

 Here's hoping we've seen the last of the freezing nights.


The tulilps and daffodils didn't seem to care.



'Guinevere' and 'Red Matador' Darwin hybrid tulips

The amazing cantaloupe that survived all winter long made a tasty treat for some critter recently - either rabbit or deer.  I guess it stuck out like a sore thumb.  Or is that a green thumb?


It finally felt safe to sow some seeds of 'Calima' green beans and 'Jung Orange' okra.

'Calima' green bean seeds in a furrow

The kale and other early greens I planted on March 2 are starting to actually be visible in the scattered straw I used for mulch.

'Russian red' kale

And the garlic I planted last fall made it through the winter just fine, if a little pale.


The onions I planted earlier this spring are up about an inch, but they are so crowded I decided that thinning them would be harder than replanting.  I'll leave them growing to pull for green onions and plant some more for the bulbs, being careful to space them well.  I used old seed (which I keep in the freezer) and didn't expect to get so much germination.  I'll know better next time.

The peas have made it to a couple inches high and have avoided being eaten.  I've helped by spraying Liquid Fence on them every three or four days.

'Premium' peas

I planted 'Premium', a large-seeded variety, again this year along a fence where moles gobbled the seeds I planted the past two years.  This year, I flooded the tunnel they had been using before planting the seeds, and apparently that did the trick.  

I've also planted 'Lincoln' peas, which were a sweet and prolific variety last year,  along with 'Lilian's Caseload', a variety I haven't tried before.  

The carpetweed, chickweed and henbit have gone crazy this year, and I don't have the energy to get it all out.  I'm going at it a little at a time, and I expect the flowers and vegetables will just have to compete.

Looking forward to some sunny days...


April 12, 2022 0 comments By: m

Spring has arrived!

The wind lately has been awful, but hopefully, we're done with freezing weather this year.  The forecast has a few more near-freezing nights in it, and a few nights ago we had a below-freezing spell that left frost on low-growth plants and frozen surface soil, but luckily, and surprisingly, no plants suffered any damage.  

Today I planted potatoes.  I decided to try the straw method this year.  I hope it provides good results, because I didn't plant any in the soil just in case.


I also planted dozens of little poppy seedlings which should be okay even in the cold nights yet to come.  I had grown two flats worth of annual, perennial, Spanish and Shirley poppies.  (Do you get the idea I like poppies?)  



Last year there was too much rain for poppies, and I didn't get many blooms at all.  It was very disappointing, and I'm crossing my fingers for no flooding this year.

Although I cut way back on the number of seedlings I'm growing this year, the ones I do have are looking very good.

Marigolds and tomatoes

I've got a make-shift cold frame instead of my usual portable greenhouse, since I haven't got a lot of seedlings.  Well, not as many anyway.  It's just three-sides made from hay bales over which I lay an old window.  The poppies were in first, and now that they're planted, there's room for two more flats of whatever comes next.



I'm really disappointed about the alliums this year.  The early winter was so mild that many of them decided it was okay to grow, only to be damaged by the subsequent freezing temps.  This is what's left of my 'Jade Eyes' white alliums.
And my giant 'Ambassador' alliums didn't even come up at all.  They were in one of the lowest spots last year, and it could be they rotted in the flooding.  So disappointing.

One thing that I would have never in a million years imagined would make it through the winter was a lone cantaloupe plant from a seed that was very late in sprouting last summer.  Who could have imagined?  It came up in the late summer and stayed rather small.  And, amazingly, green all winter.  Go figger.
My peas are actually up and doing great.  That is, they weren't eaten as seeds in the ground by moles, and haven't been attacked by rabbits now that they're up.  I did pre-flood the root area under the ones I'm growing on a fence before I planted them to discourage the use of that as a mole run like it was the past two years.  And I've sprayed them periodically with Liquid Fence to discourage deer and rabbit.  Hopefully I don't forget to keep them sprayed until they're larger than a bunny likes.

But the main things going now are the spring flower bulbs, including tulips and narcissus (daffodils).


This very large yellow trumpet-style daffodil is new this year.

'Arkle'

'Cassata' is the earliest to bloom.  It ends its life as a cream-colored blossom.


But it begins as a two-toned yellow and cream blossom.
It's almost indistinguishable in its early stage from 'Orangery', which I had hopes (from the pictures in the catalog) would be orange, but is actually a dark yellow-gold and cream flower.  It doesn't fade out like 'Cassata', and it blooms a little later.

This dainty little white narcissus is 'Thalia', and it smells heavenly.


I don't know the name of this orange and white flowered daffodil, as it was on the property when I moved here.  It's certainly lovely.


The tulips are always a little later than the daffodils, and they're just now opening up.

'Purple Prince' tulip with 'Arkle' daffodil 
('Pink Charm' daffodil in back)

'Purple Prince' tulips

I think the 'Purple Prince' tulips look nice with the 'Black Olive' heuchera (coral bells), and I believe the tulips that are with 'Purple Prince' but haven't opened yet (new to me this year) are 'Purple Dream'.  I say "believe" because I didn't mark them when I planted. You can see by the shape of their buds that they're a different type of tulip, which 'Purple Dream' is, so I'm pretty sure that's what they are.  I'll know soon, and I'm eager to see how they combine.  


Sadly, not all tulips are good repeaters, and I'm afraid I've lost one of my favorites from the past couple of years: 'Mistress Mystic' - a pale lavender colored one.

Also new this year is 'Crown of Dynasty', which has an interesting form for a tulip and a soft shell pink and cream color.



The roses are just beginning to leaf out, and unfortunately, it looks like I've lost a couple of them over winter.  Fortunately, not my favorites.

The rose garden coming out of winter
While I don't appreciate the late freezes, I do appreciate that we actually get spring.  Recent years until the last one seemed to go directly from winter to summer.  At the risk of flooding, I prefer getting a spring.

Enjoy the rest of April.