Let's Talk about Gardens
Spring is on it's way and many of us are looking forward to some sunshine and warmer weather and being outdoors...and gardens!
Perhaps you look forward to digging in the fresh spring time soil as you prepare for a summer garden? Do you plant flowers? Do you plant vegetables?
Do you garden for enjoyment? Do you garden for health benefits? What do you want to share about your garden?
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Just Want to Talk Support Group.
@jimhd That's always the problem with naturalizing - identifying the garden thugs before they get out of control. My nemesis is Canada Anemone - an innocent looking little leaf with a white flower in the center - it hitchhiked in here with something else 20 years ago and I've been pulling it ever since. There are others that need assertive digging and pulling, but that is my worst.
On a happy note, our Minnesota weather is cooperating now that I'm home and I got one bed cleared out this afternoon. My goal is a bed a day for the next week and a half. Then my "diggers" come in to thin out selected perennials - they get to take half of what is dug, the rest usually goes to our Master Gardener Plant Sale, but this year it was cancelled, so I'll sell them through Nextdoor and donate the proceeds. The diggers became my way to get the job done several years ago when I was ill, now the new gardeners near me look forward to it - lots of nice perennials, mostly natives, in exchange for a bit of labor. And I have become a friend and garden mentor to several of them.
Tomorrow I place a bulk order for veggies and plants for pots and hanging baskets for 5 friends and myself with a local grower whose greenhouse is closed to the public. I will pickup curbside, then do driveway dropoffs of the orders. Just trying to help out a small business in this tough time.
All this helps to distract me from my sadness at not being able to hug my kids and grands right now.
Happy gardening.
Sue
I bet the garden centers want to hire you!
I drove past the local greenhouse display setup yesterday. As I was sitting in my car and "window" shopping before placing an online order, I learned that I could walk thru the display and select what I wanted, which is what I have done in the previous seasons. So tomorrow morning I am on a garden mission before the Mother's Day and the amateur gardiners get there!
I can almost taste the tomatoes already.
@gingerw @sueinmn I thumbed through two books last night Weeds of the West, several authors, and Sagebrush Country, Robert Taylor, and made a list of shrubs and flowers on our place - Greasewood, bunch grass, cheat grass, Tumble mustard, Pigweed, Dock, Bull thistle, Canada thistle, Russian thistle, Puncture vine, and 3 that I didn't find in the books. I collected seeds along the wayside of Highway 97 in California, near the Oregon border, from prickly poppy, and several kinds of cactus from several places. I noticed that bachelor button was listed as a wildflower. Works for me. I like perennials, as long as I can keep them in their places.
Jim
Hello Jim,
I grow Orchid Cactus, they are in large pots on my side retaining wall. My variety is the big yellow flowers that grow on the cactus sides. They come in many colors. They survive the cold weather in winter, and need little water.
Maybe look them Up since you like cactus.
Funcountess
@funcountess Are they hardy to -10? I have a collection indoors, but don't ask me their names. My cactus guide is out in the garage, and I won't get out there until tomorrow. My feet and back are hurting too much to take any non-essential steps.
This week I laid a path from the deck to the cellar, using 12" pavers. Today I trundled dirt with my wheelbarrow from the pile out at the northwest corner of our place to the new path. I needed to put quite a bit of dirt next to the path to make it level with the lawn. Several years ago I made the path, two pavers wide. Over time the shrub and a bunch of blue fescue clumps had grown and nearly covered the path. So I moved the pavers a bit and pruned the shrub (the name of which is buried somewhere in the back of my brain) and made the path three pavers wide. A lot of work down on my knees.
After moving dirt and some rocks to put next to the path, I weeded my Barnabas garden. Barnabas was my service dog for 7 years, and one night he had a stroke or some other brain event and couldn't walk. Having him put down the next morning was a really distressing job. At the vet's office they have a quiet room, and I sat next to him and cried for an hour. One of our neighbors came over with his bobcat and dug a big grave for Barnabas. I planted an orange wild rose, along with several other things, to mark his new home.
I put the Barnabas garden next to the fence, which may not have been the best place. Our neighbors have their field in pasture grass, with 2 or 3 cuttings a year, and their grass makes its way to our side of the fence, so it's an ongoing chore keeping the fence line clean. That accounts for 90% of the weeds in his garden.
Time for supper now.
Jim
Jim, I don’t know exactly where you live. You mentioned the Columbia gorge, so I am guessing Oregon. I don’t know if the orchid cactus live in real, real cold weather. I get frost in the winter, and the orchid cactus do o.k. Right now it is full of giant yellow flowers.the flowers bloom all spring, and summer. It is a easy plant to grow.
Your land sounds big, do you have many acres?
My property is very big, I also have a big hill in the back, and smaller hill on the side.
There is a path up the hill that I sometimes walk up, and can look out at the hills/mountains.
On a clear night you can see all the stars, and a lot of Owls flying around. One time last summer a big white owl came within inches of my head. He must of thought I was pray or something. Now I wear a hat, don’t want an owl that close to me.
I know how you feel about losing a pet dog. They are family. It does leave a void in your life, and heart.
Do you have a SUNSET book? It has all the plants that will live in an area. Mine is for California, but I’m sure they print for other parts of the U.S.
You did a lot of work with pavers. Did you have help?
Take care,
Funcountess
@funcountess Funny you mention Owl,s when I was up at our camp just sat down when this big white owl came out of nowhere scared me and he wasn't expecting to see a human I decked and he took of upwards What a site it was love to see owls . Something you dont forget
@funcountess I live in central Oregon, which is high desert. I think it's around 3000' elevation, and it gets cold and stays cold, quite a bit more than just a frost.
I have a cellar that stays between 40 and 55 year round, and I keep the summer patio plants down there under grow lights when it starts to get close to freezing.
I do everything myself. I have a Sunset garden book, learned a lot from reading a lot of books and websites. Gardening is a challenge here, with deer and coyotes and hungry birds and earwigs.
We have 10 acres, with 7.3 acres irrigated with water rights. When we moved here it didn't take long to see that the previous owner wasn't big on maintenance. The first thing we had to do was replace the old field fence with horse no-climb. That's a lot of fence and fence posts. We met a couple with two young sons who needed a place for their horses and the boys' 4H animals. They used the pasture and barn in exchange for them to put up the fence and take care of the irrigation until a year ago. Then a neighbor asked if they could lease our pasture for cows and horses in exchange for doing the irrigation and upgrading the ground. They put a gate in our fence that makes it really convenient for them to move the animals from my pasture to their corral.
Our house is a little higher than town so we have a good view of the valley and the Cascades. The isolation associated with the corona virus isn't all that different from the way we already live. We enjoy our space, quiet and dark enough to see the milky way. Sounds like you can say the same about your home.
Jim
Yes, i know that feeling! My delivery from my local garden centre arrived last week and I spent a glorious, sunny week-end planting my tomatoes, courgettes, ( zuccini to you folks!) and a few bedding plants. The joy of starting the growing season was wonderful especially as I had feared it would never come. Just to bring me down to earth, I changed my medication this morning from Prograf to Adaport. Despite lots of assurances from my Transplant Team and, just as importantly, information from my friends on Mayo Connect, I should not have any concerns but, it is strange to say goodbye to the drug that has kept me alive for the last few years. We've had our difficult moments but, by and large, it's been a good relationship. Enough worry, back to my garden......