gardening

Thursday Challenge: Stonecrop

stonecrop
Stonecrop in my garden April 2010

Stonecrop is showy even before it flowers, with those sculptural, succulent green leaves.

Thursday’s Challenge
is: “GREEN” (Plants, Spring Growth, Gardens, Clothing, Green Things,…)

and next week is FOOD (Meals, Restaurants, Eating, Vegetables, Unusual Foods, Cooking, BBQs,…)

Nature Notes: Compost

compost
Photo of my compost, taken in March 2009

Yesterday I asked who had started working in their garden. One can approach gardening as a chore, a necessity if you are a farmer, or a way to relax. It’s not going to be relaxing if you don’t enjoy it. For some reason, one of my favorite parts of gardening is composting. This past year we even saved compost in the dead of winter; I tried to put it outside right before a snow storm, because at least then it would be covered in snow. In the warmer months I cover the compost with dirt, but as gardeners know, you can’t shovel frozen dirt. I use a composting method that I call Lazy Composting. I like the idea of recycling my kitchen waste back into nature. My other effort toward gardening has been to order peas, inoculant for the peas, and other vegetable and herb seeds.

Do you have a garden? What is your favorite and your least favorite part of gardening?

For more nature notes, visit Rambling Woods:
Nature Notes

Ruby Tuesday with X-Country Skis

cross country skis by hydrant
Last week for the first time in almost ten years I had the opportunity to go cross-country skiing while my daughter and her friends were sledding. The red hydrant behind the skis is what qualifies this photo for Ruby Tuesday, a photo meme where you post any photo with some red. And this was before our bigger storm that dumped over a foot of snow. Strangely, the Boston area, which I visited this past weekend and is over five hours drive north of our area of New Jersey, had very little snow.

I learned a good gardening tip on Saturday night while driving from Newton, MA to Marlboro, MA (we were invited to a laser tag party). If one of your small trees gets a lot of snow on it, brush it off with a long broom as soon as you can. Otherwise, the snow may permanently bend the tree into an unhealthy shape. If that does happen, you may have to trim the tree and wait years until it gets back a normal shape.

For more photos with a little or a lot of red:
Ruby Tuesday

Summer Stock: Echinacea

Echinacea (cone flowers) with Rudbeckia (yellow spots) behind
Echinacea (cone flowers) with Rudbeckia (yellow spots) behind

My block is full of beautiful summer flowers: these echinacea are in the front of my neighbor’s house (two doors down), and the yellow “splotches” you see in the photo are the many rudbeckia (black-eyed susans) blooming in front of my home. I had echinacea growing in my backyard, but they were chewed up, either by deer or by our resident ground hog. Yesterday morning I yelled “get out of here” at the ground hog. I just bought a solar mole chaser. We might buy a love trap. My neighbor down the block caught 11 last year. What can I say, the ground hogs love living in Highland Park.

For more Summer Stock Sunday posts, visit Robin at Around the Island.

Nature Notes: Slow Seed

basil_lawn
Call me impulsive. Or a creative gardener. A risk-taking lawn owner?

I’m sick of grass. I don’t much care for weeds, either. So I pulled up some of my grass in early spring and planted some chamomile seeds on my front lawn. The seeds took a while to germinate, and now I have these pretty, leafy green plants (pictured on right side of photo, under the rudbeckia leaves), but no chamomile flowers yet. While playing with my daughter in the front I pulled up some more weeds. After a while, I had more space to plant in front. My intention was to plant flowers, ideally perennials that would grow back each year. I put in a few, such as creeping phlox, speedwell and Mexican primrose (at left in photo). But there was still room for more. If you recall from an earlier post, I had planted a lot of basil seeds. So I had a lot of basil plants. Since the groundhog or the deer had eaten my dill and chomped at my marigolds and nasturtium in the backyard, I thought my front lawn might be a safer place for my basil. I now have little basil plants in both my backyard and the front yard. And some parsley, too. A few oregano seedlings.

What’s going on naturally where you are? Visit Michelle’s Nature Notes:
nature-note

Today’s Flowers: Gaillardia, Rudbeckia, Lambs Ears & more

gaillardia09
Love this new blanket flower, Gaillardia, that I planted in my garden this spring. Such brilliant red and yellow colors in one flower.

blackeye
Soon I will have many, many of these black-eyed susans or rudbeckia growing all over my garden. Luckily, the animals (ground hog? deer?) don’t seem to eat them. They have already eaten my cone flowers, dill and marigolds. Discouraging.

lambsear
Lambs ears produce these ultra-pink flowers; you either love ’em or you pick them away because they are a bit too brilliant. My snapdragons are beginning to show their colors, white alyssum are happily blooming in the front, and a few petunias reseeded themselves from last summer.

For more flowers, visit:
logo_rose_todays_flowers

Nature Notes

nature-note

Michelle of Rambling Woods started a new meme called “Nature Notes.” I really like the idea. So I decided to divide “nature” into a few parts: flora, fauna, weather, and … everything else natural? water, dirt, air? I think her plan is for us to post on a Thursday. But I’m thinking about this now, so here goes:

  • Few flowers, other than crocus and snowdrops, have bloomed here yet.
  • But lots of green is popping its way out of the ground, such as my columbines and daffodils.
  • I saw a pretty red cardinal last week! I took a photo through the window, but it didn’t come out well, and I erased it.
  • I hope to visit the stream down the street from my home in the next few days to see how it looks.
  • It’s been alternately cold and warmish here. Today I wore my winter coat, and the sky was cloudy.
  • We often have a variety of birds visiting our backyard. A neighbor’s cat seems to like to lie in the corner near the fence.
  • I planted peas and radish on Sunday. The ground was easy to dig; I am optimistic about my spring garden.

I hope you will join in the Nature Notes meme. Even if you live in the city, there are still plants, animals and air! Right?

Thursday Challenge: Broken Egg Shells

eggshells
Today I was able to turn my compost for the first time since fall. During the winter the ground is frozen (and so is my compost) even when there is no blanket of snow covering the compost.

What can you identify in my compost? Why is that item good for the soil?

Thursday Challenge is a place for photographic fun and learning. This week’s theme is BROKEN: (Smashed, Worn Out, In Need of Repair, Ripped, Torn,…)

Today’s Flowers: Marigold


Marigolds look pretty among the fallen leaves of autumn. These yellow and/or orange flowers grow in front and on the side of my house. I sprinkle the seeds in spots I want them to appear next spring.

         

Today’s Flowers is hosted by Luiz Santilli Jr. Thank you, Luiz, for this lovely meme.

Today’s Flowers: Zinnia

zinnia bud
I prefer zinnias before they are at full bloom, like in this opening bud. I planted these zinnias from seed (I started them in little containers outside my kitchen door in late spring). I got the seeds for free at the Highland Park Street Fair.

zinnias in my garden
Here they are in my garden, along with orange marigolds and white mums.

Today’s Flowers is hosted by Luiz Santilli Jr. Thank you, Luiz, for featuring flower followers who share photos in a fun fashion.

Today's Flowers

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