Sunday, April 19, 2026

April showers and all that

I love how quickly we go from snow and cold to green and somewhat warmer.  The spring days break the grumpy, cynical nature of the northmen and everyone is just in a good mood.  We've had some much needed rain, and a few days of unseasonably hot weather, both of which have begun to wake the gardens from their winter slumber.

In the pasture, the area that had burned is less of a horror show and more of a quickly fading scar.                

 

The cottage garden plants are forcing their way through the thick layer of soil I dumped on them last autumn.


                            

Yes, that is an outdoor sofa frame.  I'm using that and some wrought iron outdoor tables as plant supports in these gardens, because why not?  Thrifty Yankee.

In the hot beds at the barn, the yellow crocus I planted are in bloom.  I love them, and hope they spread like mad.

   

In the hillside garden, the garlic is chugging away, and the hellebore is in bloom.  She really needs to go into the forest garden.  I've decided that I probably won't be able to get to the entire forest garden this year, but I will try to get at least one small section done.  Hopefully a few of my shade plants will have a new home by the end of summer.

 

 The Katharine Hodgkin dwarf iris have bloomed.  This is a variety I have wanted for many years, and finally found online.  I also purchased some dwarf iris 'Louise', but I haven't seen it emerge yet.  I'm honestly not sure where I planted it.  Both of these will eventually be moved into the alpine garden when that's ready.


The white forsythia I planted a few years ago as bare root stock has about five flowers this year.  I can't wait until it's a fully grown, bushy shrub covered in these delicate white blooms.

In the back yard I've been working to get the cement block borders in place around the bank I mulched last year.  I can't believe how much grass has pushed through the cardboard and bark mulch already!  I'll have to mulch again this spring, after pulling the grass.

And finally, an update on my winter sowing experiment.  I have germination!  Not in every jug, but I'm happy with what's going on so far.  The teasel, flax, valerian, ammi majus, and most excitedly, the white penstemon seed gathered from my own plant have all germinated.  So far the verbena bonariensis and great burnet are not cooperating, but the pimpinella has about three tiny seedling, so maybe these just need a little more time or some warmer weather.  I'm pretty stoked with the results.



Not-so-pro-tip - when you tape the containers together, don't use Gorilla tape.  That stuff just does not want to peel off!  I may have to cut some jugs open.

For the next week we're returning to more typical spring weather.  Rainy, raw, and temperatures overnight below freezing.   The winter sown seedlings will come into the garage for protection to be on the safe side.  I'd hate to lose them at this point.  I've started clearing the sumac behind the bitch barn so I can get the rest of the snow fence put up, and hopefully get the hillside garden secured.  The doe and her twins survived the winter and they've already been walking through the cottage and hillside gardens.  I'm not losing veg to these marauders this year if I can help it.


I have pasture edges to cut, rocks and soil to move to the alpine garden, mule fence to get done, cat fence to erect, a squash mound to prepare, and hundreds of seedlings to pot on until it's safe for them to go out.  Sometimes there's so much to do, it feels incredibly daunting.  I keep saying to myself "Just get this project done, and next year you'll have more time to enjoy yourself" but it seems the big projects just drag on and never get completed.  I sometimes find myself frustrated because I'm physically and financially hindered, but then I think about the alternative.  I could be living in an apartment, without the means to have my mules, my gardens, and all these things that keep me so busy.  I really am a lucky gal.

Sunday, April 12, 2026

This tractor's on fiyaaaaaaaahhhhhhh

 I need to retitle this blog "The Idiot Yankee - Learn From My Mistakes".

So on a beautiful spring day I decided to get my tractors out of my mother's lean-to and make sure they were ready for the season.  Li'l Red fired right up and I drove her around the yard and pasture to be sure everything was working.  Then I went back for Reputa and she also fired right up and I headed to the pasture to run the cobwebs out.  And here's where I made a terrible, terrible mistake.  After the last mowing of 2025, I neglected to clean off the top of the mower deck, where grass and leaves had packed between the deck and the bottom of the tractor.  I'm sure some enterprising mice probably nested in that warm and cozy litter, adding to the tinderbox.  As I drove around the pasture I decided to engage the mower deck to be sure it was working.  I went around the pasture twice and suddenly realized there was smoke coming out from under the tractor, and assumed a belt was stuck.  I shut the deck off and headed toward the house to take a look, but within seconds I saw flames shooting out from under the tractor.  I immediately shut it off and lumbered toward the garage to find a hose.  As I was hooking up the hose to the spigot, I looked up and saw smoke and flames in the pasture.  This was the beginning of about a three hour panic attack - I called my mother, screaming, hung up and dialed 911, screaming.  Mom couldn't understand what I was saying, so she came down and I was screaming at her to go get more hoses.  At this point my neighbors across the street came running over to see what was happening and immediately jumped in to help.  My other neighbor had heard the screaming and was walking down her driveway to figure out what was going on, and through the woods she saw the smoke.  She came racing over to help, too.  Within what seemed like only five minutes there were police, ambulance, and fire vehicles swarming the yard.  The fire department had a forestry truck that they were able to drive right into the pasture and begin hosing everything down.  I was zero help as all I could do was sob hysterically and attempt to beat any flames out with a shovel.  The fire chief told me this was their second call that day - conditions are still extremely dry in our area and it doesn't take much to go from a spark to a full on fire.  I am so lucky they were able to contain it to the pasture, and I am forever thankful to my amazing neighbors, and the police, fire, and ambulance crews that got here so quickly.  I'm not sure if Reputa will run again, but if not it's a small price to pay.  I keep thinking of what could have happened if the fire had spread more quickly - I could have burned down my neighbor's homes, not to mention hundreds of acres of forest.  I wouldn't be able to live with myself if that happened.  I have learned one more valuable lesson in my life.