From the category archives:

Occasions

Lisa’s Saturday chores

by Lisa on June 14, 2003

P6140001.jpgOne of the things I got done this Saturday was planting the stuff from swapping that had come in during the week while I was out of town. I got some Monarda Purple Bea Balm in on the side of the pergola by the chives. I didn’t actually need more bea balm, but since I got it, what the heck, I put it fairly far from my original clump, which seems pretty happy.

P6140019.jpgHolly Hock Anthea Rose supposedly gets very tall, (and looks very lovely from these pictures) so I put it next to the pergola on the back side of the post where the grape is. I was figuring that maybe if it ends up needing to be staked, I can use the post itself to tie it to. Yoda kept me company, and was being such a big, brave kitty today.

Lamium in pink/purple is new to me. Supposedly quite hardy, and I put it in next to the hollyhock.

P6140020.jpgFoxglove Elsie Kelsey [flowers from July to September. Beautiful snow white bells, heavily marked with a deep Raspberry pink inside the throat. Quite stunning when in flower. Fully Hardy. Plant in ordinary soil.] went next to all of my other foxgloves. It was something I specifically requested for swaps, and I think I have six or seven plants of different types now, as well as all of the little seedlings from the one I had last year. I must remember to deadhead these guys religiously, or they will completely take over that bed, if not the garden itself. (Marmalade kept me company, too.)

P6140022.jpgI also weeded quite a bit with Princess supervising, and found it a bit discouraging. I think all of the rain has the weeds as healthy as the plants, if not more. Some of my perennials are looking yellowish and quite waterlogged. I’d worried last week that the compost we’d put out was still too hot and had burned my plants, but instead, I think it’s just that they are almost drowning in all of the rain we’ve had.

P6140021.jpgI also noticed that we have baby ragweed coming up in the compost that we spread around the base of most of the plants. I can’t tell if they are just opportunistic plants that are taking advantage of the compost, or if the seeds are in the compost itself, which would be very bad as I spread it all over the garden. The other weeds that are driving me nuts is the vetch and the horsetail, both quite rampant all over the place. I’m working hard to stay ahead of it.

P6140024.jpgStill, in all, the garden is looking quite lovely. The shady spot near the front of the house is probably at peak right now. The columbine are in full bloom, as is the astilbe. I’m quite impressed with the way that the Japanese maple is filling out, and I cut it’s stake so that it wasn’t as noticeable.

The first water lily bloomed, and it is white and quite lovely. Frank worked on the pond pump, including having to turn it off, and I took advantage of the down time to get some grass out between some of the rocks in the waterfall. The fish have finally learned what the fish food is, but they still scatter and hide when we come to feed them, not having connected the appearance of food to our appearance yet. I saw no sign of the baby turtle that Frank took the picture of earlier in the week, but I’m telling myself that something the size of a quarter can’t go very far, and it was probably just in hiding.

P6140011.jpgOne thing I noticed working out there today is that I might sort of maybe have a few too many purple and blue flowers at this time of the year. Or maybe I have just the right amount, and I should just admit that this is my purple and blue phase. But between the allium, the iris, the lupine, and the columbine, it’s very very purple right now.

in astilbe, Bee Balm, Cats, Columbine, Compost, Fish, Foxglove, Gardening, Hollyhocks, Lamium, Lupine, Marmalade, pergola, Plant Swap, Planting, Princess, Ragweed, water lily, Weeding, Weeds, Yoda

Mack Hill Farm
on Google+

Busy, Gray Saturday

May 31, 2003

Finally, a day when it’s not actually raining. Well, not very hard, anyway. There was light drizzle on and off and the sun didn’t actually come out, but we got quite a bit done out there today. The town had their annual plant swap in the morning. I took down some obedient plant, a couple [...]

Read the full article →

Tulips and more tulips

May 17, 2003

Of course, it didn’t freeze last night. Our weather station says it went down to 37, so everything probably would have been okay even without all the covering up I did. But since there’s another frost warning tonight, it makes sense to just leave them all right where they are and covered them up just [...]

Read the full article →

The Flower Show

March 27, 2003

We went to the Keene Flower Show today, and enjoyed pretending that it was spring. It was pretty crowded for a Friday afternoon, but not so crowded that it wasn’t fun. We took Ginny with us, and she seemed to enjoy it as well. The only thing I bought for the garden were lily bulbs. [...]

Read the full article →

The Marlow Garden Tour

June 29, 2002

We were up very early this morning, getting ready for the Garden Tour, and I made a list of the stuff I thought had to be done. We even finished it all in time to go see the houses on the tour before ours, which was surprising. The pond was in fine form, with water [...]

Read the full article →

Final push before the tour

June 22, 2002

Can you tell we just fertilized the grass? No matter which direction Frank walks with the spreader, we see lines and missed spots. And he tries to be so careful! I’m spent much of this weekend out in the garden, trying to finalize stuff. I’ve got to be in DC next week, and the garden [...]

Read the full article →

More Compost

June 12, 2002

We worked on building some more compost bins today. We’ve filled up the ones we have already, between the weeds, grass clippings and the coffee grounds we get from the coffee shop. An no, I do not want to stop getting those grounds. Our soil is so poor we need all the compost we can [...]

Read the full article →