Showing posts with label gardens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gardens. Show all posts

Sunday, September 7, 2025

What is this water falling from the skies?

 RAIN!!!  Glorious, wonderful, beautiful rain!

After a quick round of thunderstorms last night, the clouds decided to have mercy upon us and have been releasing a steady, slow rain since the wee hours of the morning. I took advantage and planted the asters that were dug up to make room for the arbor earlier this summer.  Despite the already half inch or more of rain, only the very crust of the ground is damp; an inch below it is still dry as a bone.  Still, this will help some.  I split the Alma Potschke (vivid pink) and soft purple asters and dotted them throughout the wildflower meadow.  The shorter lilac colored asters have taken seat in the cottage gardens.  I was able to dig up some self seeded rose campions from the hillside beds and move them into the cottage gardens, as well. Before the day is over, I'll hopefully sow a few rows of carrots where the onions were, too.  Hope springs eternal and all that.

Speaking of hope...I was hoping I'd hauled the last of the mulch this weekend, but it looks like I'll need another truck load before I call it good.   I've got 98% of the bank covered at this point; all that's left is one little spot around the backside.


 The bulk of this load went toward a path I decided to make at the top of the bank, leaving space between what's left of the miscanthus grasses and the edge of the wildflower meadow.


 Not only does it give me enough room to access the meadow from the back, but it's wide enough for the wheelbarrow.  I honestly never intended to mulch quite this much, but I'm happy that I did.  I like the look of it, and it's a little bit of order among my ever growing chaos.  




 At the bottom of the slope I've decided to continue with my cinder blocks and caps to define the edges of the bank.  I should have enough block left to do that, but the block pile is most likely harboring - you guessed it! - more hornets.  I'll have to carefully pick away at that.  

In the meantime I can continue adjusting and fussing with the rope fence.  I've decided I really like it, and by next year the stakes will have begun to turn grey, matching the big fence and the arbor.  I'm also going to do the same type of rope fence along the raspberry patch, which has not been supported and is going in all different directions.  I did get some fruit this year, but the birds and wasps have eaten most of the berries before I could harvest.  I'll know better for next year!

In hydroponic news, my mesclun is growing like crazy.


 There's almost enough for one salad.  Next time I sow seeds, I should sow some in dirt and do a comparison of which grows faster.  Or maybe just eat what I have and move on.

Thursday, August 21, 2025

life in a dry, brown place

 Still no rain.  Well...a five minute spattering of water doesn't count, does it?  The ground is so dry that it may take a month of rain at this point to saturate it again, and most of New Hampshire is now in a moderate drought per the US Drought Monitor.  The cottage gardens are horrid to look at.  Other plants around the property are beginning a slow death, as well.  The little water feature is going dry, and even the bog garden is starved for moisture. Now that the weather has at least taken a turn for the cooler, I need to get out there and deadhead and cut back as much as possible, which will stop the plants from trying to grow or flower, and send more energy to the roots, where it's needed. 









I've been forced to harvest the onions, shallots, garlic, and some of the potatoes.  It's a mixed bag of NICE! and ....what the heck happened here?  (Imagine my surprise when I dumped out a bag of potatoes and found...yellowjackets.  Will the hornet invasion never end?!?!)  But there's still enough of a harvest to share and some to store for winter.  I won't be doing any fall sowing, except maybe carrots.

garlic, cherry tomatoes, Hungarian Hot Wax and Shishito peppers

And it's not just the gardens that are suffering.  Our lawns are crispy crunchy, leaves have begun to drop from trees, and even non-garden spieces of plants are showing signs of distress.  Well, except for weeds, that is.  Grrrrr!


All is not lost, though.  Our generous neighbors have given us access to their water, so we've been putting tubs and tanks on our trucks and hauling water in to save what we can.  I've been concentrating on the beans, cucumbers, what's left of the tomatoes and peppers, and the squash.  Some plants continue to flourish, so I've begun to note which still thrive despite the heat and drought.  Coreopsis, gaillardia, tall garden phlox, black eyed Susans, and yellow toadflax are glorious.  The tall prairie coneflowers are drooping, but I can't tell if that's from being top heavy in an area without support, or from thirst.




 In the hot beds, the blackberry lily that survived bloomed, and it's so beautiful!  I definitely need more of these, because like daylilies, the bloom only lasts one day, then shrivels up.


 Even in the toughest of times, there is beauty if you look for it.

Monday, August 4, 2025

The August Slump

 My life is like hearing the song Sunshine Lollipops and Rainbows as it slowly grinds down to a halt and the world goes dark.  Well, that might be an exaggeration...but it sure feels bleak.  It's the time of the year when heat sets in, water runs low, my energy wanes, and a tiny bit of depression settles in.

The heat has spurred the weeds to grow at an accelerated rate and keeping up with them is exhausting.  How is it the weeds grow so well, yet my beautiful plants begin a slow, painful death?  My mission this winter is to pour through plant books and websites to find plants that thrive in dry conditions and bloom during the July through September heat.  Sounds like I need more echinacea.  Twist my arm.

But not all is doom and gloom; late July into early August is when the daylilies shine in all their glory.

 











 











Breathtaking.  I need to start begging my mother for some of her specimens, since she has easily ten times more varieties than I do.

Meanwhile, I've decided my energies need to be focused on the hillside garden.  I spent portions of two days on the right side, deadheading and pulling errant weeds and grasses.  I've managed to wrangle it into some semblance of order, and took away two and a half 72 gallon garden bags full of debris.




 For my next trick, I'll work on the other side.


 What a mess.  

 Speaking of messes, I've been picking away at the bank in the backyard.  Although I love the Green Mountain mulch that I was buying by the bag, it soon proved to be a costly venture.  I ended up going to our local landscape supplier and was able to get a truckload of mulch at a much better price.  


 It's coming along nicely, and the squash plants have really taken off.  I've had to cut the surrounding grass a few times; if only it grew where I wanted it as lush and thick!

July 18th
 

August 4th

July 18th

August 4th

A few more truckloads should finish this project, and once the squash are all tucked safely into their mulch beds, I should be able to spread the rest with Li'l Red and save my back.  Won't that be nice?  

Although it's still bloody hot out there, the nighttime temperatures are - when it's not a heatwave - dipping into the mid fifties.  There is a distinct feel of autumn in those nights, and it's a signal to sow cool temperature crops for a fall harvest.  Once I've tackled the left hand mess of the hillside garden, I'll try again for peas, radish, and salad crops, all of which did horribly this spring.  I'll do a second sowing of carrots and beans, as well.  I regret not growing corn again this year; I have so much to learn about that particular crop.  And hopefully if the bank area is completed, next year I can grow a wider variety of squashes and pumpkins.  I guess gardening, whether vegetables or ornamental plants, is an exercise in always looking forward.