A year to transplant

I started the gardens at our townhome 17 years ago.  They really transformed 8-9 years ago when I expanded the space, and expanded again.  Back then, the gardens were maintained by the homeowners, and maintain them we did – my husband and I – outside our place.  I went through a massive hosta phase.  Lots of varieties.  Then I started in with daylilies, and got hooked.

The hostas in the gardens here are starting to show their age.  I have divided some and given them to neighbors.  This year I need to divide my favorites – 9 ‘Blue Mouse Ears’ hostas.  They are getting fairy rings.

More decisions – where do the divisions go?  Onto new areas here?  To other gardens in our association?  Up north?  All of the above, I suspect.  But for now they sit undisturbed until after bloom, which is highly anticipated, at least by me, every July.

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Spring again!

It is finally feeling like garden season, and some hope after a tough few months for the whole world.  The pandemic has brought so much fear and sadness, and our hearts go out to all the families who have been affected and all who have lost loved ones.   It is sometimes hard to imagine it has only been a few months.  The heartbreak is incredible, and it seems like much longer.  I just couldn’t get motivated to share garden news amid all of the tough news.  But as sad as this sounds, at some point I decided reading and listening to so much aweful news and fearful projections was not good.  I started to trust it was ok to severely limit partaking in media coverage and updates.  It took a few weeks, but now some joy is starting to overcome the awfulness of this pandemic.  And as the gardening season is fully arriving, it is bringing some positivity, very much needed during this difficult time.

Through the winter I dreamed and planned gardens.  The association board work took form and the garden refreshes for this spring, now being done by an incredible local professional, are underway – 22 gardens at homes, and removing bricks, pavers, plastic trim, and various rock and mulch from around 42 trees and putting in only mulch.  We hear it is healthier for the trees.   A couple larger gardens integrated around trees will remain with rock, to be done in future years.  The garden outside our home is one of those, and our landscaper reports the tree is well established and very healthy.  Mulch may come in future years.

From my personal overwintered plants, the hibiscus is now back outside, as is the green shamrock.  The green shamrock has mostly gone through its spring die off.  I watched as the robins do what they do every year – pluck the dead stems by the beakful, and fly them up to their nest.  It is the annual cycle.  The robins get their materials, and the shamrock gets hardy and fills out again.

Of over 100 daylily  seeds I planted this winter in pods indoors, 13 daylily seedlings came up.  11 daylily seedlings survived.  In previous years I have direct sown our harvested seed in the ground at the townhouse.  A few lilies have grown from that and this year I am anticipating seeing what the pollinators produced three years ago.  For the extra work, this winter’s results were not awesome (I don’t think?) but it was an experiment.  We’ll see if I do a repeat.

The gardens here are popping back like crazy right now, and it looks like everything made it through the winter.  It’s pretty full, so of the daylily seedlings from this winter,  I’ve decided to keep the 2 ‘South Seas’ parentage seedlings here, and 4  of the ‘Purple d’Oro’ parentage seedlings.  5 ‘Purple d’Oro’ seedlings are going to be in the year 2 test garden up north, with chicken wire the first year, to give them a safe start.  I am hoping they eventually naturalize, and am optimistic, as I see entire fields of lilies up north that have made it.  We’ll see.

More to come.

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Happy Leap Year!

Wow!  February 29!  Spring is around the corner, right?  I hope so.

We filled February with a lot of activities, and the month was fun, but I’m so ready for gardening season.

My daylily seeds are in the refrigerator getting prepped for planting in two weeks.  The days are getting longer, but the snow piles remain.  Still, my shamrocks are back in bloom, and, right on cue, my hibiscus bloomed for the first time this year on February 26th.  How does it do that so consistently?  Soon another bloom will brighten a couple days.

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Outside at our townhome, the sedum I left for the birds fed another as well. Can you tell who else liked it?

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Glad to see it go to good use!

Up north we have ample snow as well – ample as in higher than the bottom of the doors the last time we made a day trip.  But soon the wonder of the thawing woods will arrive.  We’ll see how our fall planted bulbs fare, and if the asclepias and coneflowers made it through the weedy hugelkultur garden and the long winter.  Dare we plant daylily seedlings?  Still undecided.

January

It’s January.  I’m missing my gardens.  I’m missing any gardens.  Off to our local gardening center I went today.  This is a thing I do – wander around, maybe buy a watch ’em grow garden, and maybe something additional.  I suspect, no I know, I am not unique in doing this.

Today I got both.  I could not resist.

The watch ’em grow garden

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And a beautiful cyclamen

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So fun!

I also bought a set of seed pods for when I start my daylily seeds.  Now I’m committed to that because I have all the materials.  I had started down the path of saving toilet paper and paper towel rolls to cut up as soil holders, like last year, but then I saw that the pods are ok for daylilies, so I’m going to try them.  This will be my first year of growing only daylily seedlings.  I had a bumper crop of ‘Just Plum Happy’ daylily seeds last fall, so I’m hoping to get something from those.  Plus a few from our other daylilies.   I’m also hoping this is the year I see flowers on the seedlings from the daylily seeds I planted out in the ground the past couple seasons.

And I’m playing again with the idea of trying to find a way to have daylilies up north.  I know!  How many times will I go back and forth on this?  It’s just that I dream of naturalizing them. I know, however, they are deer yummies, and our trailcams have lots of deer on them.  I have the two (failed hugelkulture) raised bed gardens up there from last year.  I may try a seedling or two in there – from the ‘Just Plum Happy’ abundance.  I could recycle some of my chicken wire from last year here to protect them.  I know – ugly!  We’ll see.  Lots of time to decide.

A quiet season

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It was a quiet holiday season again, something we guard very closely.  We remember the years of frantic shopping, endless activities, everyone cranky because they were exhausted.  We don’t do that anymore, thank goodness!

Our big holiday immediate family meal is Thanksgiving.  We have one extended family gathering as well.  Then we have small gatherings with family and friends, just the way we like it – very personable, very relaxing.  My personal favorite is that the closer we get to Dec 24, the more we slow down.  By the eve of Dec 24 we are tucked in at home, spending time reflecting, being thankful for our salvation, thankful for our provisions, thankful for family and friends and meaningful lives.

It was another peaceful holiday season.  And for that, I am thankful!

 

Planting tulips in the snow

The townhouse garden is all cut back and tucked in for the winter.  It was a late finish this year.  Between adding extra activities to our lives (time up north, going on our townhome association board) and fully enjoying all of the garden’s fall color, I finally finished up the cutback Sunday and the bulb planting yesterday.  I was planting tulips and crocus in the snow!

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The two 5′ hostas are now in other people’s gardens, and in each place are 9 yellow tulips and a dozen purple and white crocus bulbs.  In the spring I will layer with daylily seedlings and see how they progress.

The fall color wrapped up about 3 weeks ago up north, and has now wrapped up at the townhouse.  Our beautiful fall colors are no longer our natural decorations, but they were gorgeous and we enjoyed them tremendously!  Soon we will have layers of the white fluffy stuff that stay for a few (5 at least!) months.

Starting our journey with the land up north this year really changed me.  We have spent time up north for 20 years, and camping for many years before that, but something about managing and spend time on our own land changed me.  It was partially the simplicity of hauling in our water, living in the small footprint of a 280 square foot camper, and having an outhouse, but it was more than that.  We’ve done that, even primitive camped.  It was deciding how to manage the slice of woods for which we are now responsible – how much wood to harvest, how much to clear, how much of the land to leave alone, how quickly things grew, how our little garden got overtaken, how the trailcams showed us deer and bear and wolves and coyotes that move through the land, how the area I thought I would develop into a wooded garden became a fern forest with an abundance of toads, and how wildflowers were everywhere.  It made me stand in awe.  Unlike in our townhouse garden, the horseflies bit hard and the wood ticks showed up in groups on the screen tent fly.  But the vast beauty of uncultured, natural “gardens” got ahold of my “simpler” self.  I gave up time in the townhouse garden in favor of time walking the land.  Each now has its place, but they are very, very different.

Back at the townhouse I did not end up harvesting the hosta seeds this fall.  Realistically, I know we have plenty of hostas.  I am giving them away.  Up north, the deer would just eat the seedlings.  My seedling focus will be on daylilies next spring.

I did dig out the irises that never bloomed at the townhouse, and planted them up north to see how they do.  Beyond that, up north we’ll see if the asclepias, the asparagus, the coneflowers, and the malva zebrina hollyhocks we planted make it through the winter.  The hugelkulture gardens in raised bed forms turned into weed patches because we are not up north all the time, so we’ll see what survives.  I will say I wish I had the money back from the raised bed frames and bags and bags of dirt.  I would not do that again.  That little garden area seems really out of place in its surroundings.  Lesson learned.

Our old hibiscus ended up with dozens and dozens of buds in August, and is still blooming profusely indoors.  It was over 5′ wide when we brought it inside, and it barely made it through the door.  As the blooms on a stem fade, I am trimming it.  It is lovely and just keeps on going.

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I also saved the gladiola bulbs that I had in a large pot this year.  They required chicken wire protection, but were beautiful!

For next year, I’m thinking I will continue to simplify, enjoying the established townhouse garden, seeing if I can get new daylily seedlings to grow, and continuing to enjoy the up north natural beauty.

Now energy turns to indoors at the townhouse – getting garden decorations stored, cleaning up the shamrock plants for the winter indoors, and then on to dispersing all kinds of items that we are no longer using in the house, getting them on to new homes.  Our townhome is also small.  We constantly need to work at keeping things cleared and as simple as possible.

Maybe this weekend we will be at a state where I can pull out the candles and put them in the windows.  They are our only “outdoor” “holiday” lights, and I’m looking forward to having them up again.

And over the winter there will be time walking in the snowy woods up north, where the outdoor lights are solar, and probably covered til spring.

 

 

 

 

No work fall decorating

Today as I was returning to the house on our daily dog walk I was once again in awe of the absolutely stunning array of colors on the ground from the fall leaves.  I had this thought – “free fall decorating”.

Now maybe it’s because I am appalled by the amount of waste coming out of disposable decorations.  Maybe it’s because we have worked very hard to simplify.  Maybe it’s because we’ve had an eye opening 9 months of going up north to our undeveloped land and seeing that vast, very different in scale and style, beauty.  But this year I cannot bring myself to put out our little scarecrow picks.  I don’t want to buy pumpkins that we watch rot.  I am enjoying seeing a wave of color pile up in our landscaping and on the lawn – before it gets swept away or cleaned up.  It’s “free fall decorating”.

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Late September Minnesota garden

The shrubs have now been trimmed for the upcoming season, the sedum are in full color,

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and the last blooming hostas are still hanging in there.

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Last weekend I trimmed part of the clematis and a hosta that is first to come up, and first to fade.  Although we’ve had low 80°F temperatures on and off, the mornings are crisp and cool.

The hummingbirds are still coming through, and Tuesday we saw something new – a dragonfly migration.  There were dozens flying around above the lawn.  It was very cool.

BUSY days

Over a week has gone by and we are enjoying beautiful days in the garden.  The hibiscus had over 30 buds about a week ago and day after day we are getting treated to multiple blooms.

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The sedum are really getting beautiful.

Even our butterfly friends cannot resist a visit.

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Not me, though.  Not a lot of resting here.  I went on the association landscaping committee, then volunteered to fill an open spot on the board.  If you’ve never served on a board, give it a try!  You will not be bored – lol!

This coming weekend will be more garden trimming – probably starting to trim back some of the hostas that are starting to turn.