Recycle?

As part of deciding to let our gardening “start” up north naturalize, I am trying to decide if we should pull the steel raised bed garden frames and use them in the garden at the new (to us) house.

There is currently no garden or landscaping at all at the new house.  It is unusual for me to consider a no garden yard, but I’m excited at the possibilities.  There are both sunny and shade covered areas so my current style of sticking mostly to hostas, daylilies and sedum is the plan.  Some grading will be needed, as there are gutters but no downspouts – another unusual idea for me – but I have read that some folks think it is better to even forego any gutters and just grade and rock away from the house.  For us, the gutters will stay, but whether or not downspouts will be part of the long-term plan is not certain.

During this interesting year, it is very hard to find contractors who are not swamped.  People are apparently keeping quite busy with home projects.  The earliest we can get a contractor out to grade and rock is mid-October.  That means … no landscaping up by the house this year.  What to do?

I have already ordered 9 distinctly different daylilies for the new house (couldn’t resist, and I want them in the ground this fall …).  They are all ones I don’t have in our current gardens.  My pending decision?  I’m thinking of pulling the raised bed garden frames from the overgrown – ahem “naturalized” – gardens up north in September, and starting a border garden along the back edge of the lawn at the new house.  Last year we also bought recycled tin (from an old barn roof) for projects up north, and I could continue the metal vibe in the new house garden next spring if I still like it.

So, being true to us, potentially reusing the unneeded frames, testing on a smaller scale before going wider, and using the recycled tin if we like the metal look down the road are all wins.  Now we’ll see exactly how much work it is to implement.  Maybe there could even be a “take 2” on the hugelkulture test?

All just on paper right now.  Implementation is a month out.  Lots of time to consider all options.

Meanwhile, here, the Rainforest Sunrise hostas (some of my faves) are starting to get their scapes, a lovely red with purple flowers.  Out front they are overcrowded.  They need to come out of there this fall and be divided.  Maybe go in the corner of the yard at the new house, where it gets afternoon shade?

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Right on the edge of crisp

August is one of those months – the daylilies wrap up, but the hostas are super full.  The days are shortening, but the morning air is right on the edge of crisp – perfect!  The crickets sing and the monarchs start showing up much more, but the robins are scarce again.  The feeling starts to turn the corner into fall, but with plenty of warm days still on the horizon.

I have noticed once again I don’t have a lot of mid to late August blooms in the garden.  I need to do something  about that.  I have also noticed I have plenty of weeding and trimming to do in the garden after a couple very busy past weekends, and I need to do something about that.

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A few weeks ago I accepted a more challenging role at work, and at the same time we started to really think about how we want to downsize again and work on some more bucket list items.  This whole year and all its events have brought priorities into sharper focus.  So my thoughts are turning again to simplifying the things we can so we are able to amplify the things that nurture us.  It is once again a time of both weeding out and filling in.

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Division – of the good kind

The last red daylily of the 2020 season in our garden bloomed yesterday.

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Other daylilies have already wrapped up or are wrapping up.

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Our attention remains on their beauty, both this year and in future years, and also turns to the potential of the gardens around us.  It is time to start planning to “dig and divide” – a good thing.

Friday a fellow gardener and I walked the association with the purpose of planning the plantings for the final projects this year.  In that discussion, the topic came up of what divisions from our garden will go to other gardens.  My friend has a saying,  “We garden for others”.   There is wisdom in that perspective.  Gardening  fills our mind and gives us hundreds of happy hours each year, and part of that is because it gets us thinking of what others may enjoy.

This year we are dividing some of our “Blue Mouse Ears” from the garden here and giving them new homes when we rehab the Welcome Garden.  Another hosta, an “Elegans” is being divided and going into a neighboring homeowner’s garden.  Our garden stays fit and trim, our association’s landscaper does the heavy lifting of digging and dividing 😊, and if I make room, I get the opportunity to consider what new (ahem daylily) additions make sense to introduce next year 😊😊.

 

 

 

Planning moves, and more mid-July daylilies

About this time of year I start to assess fall moves to optimize next year’s garden.  Last fall we moved out two large Aureomarginata hostas from our garden.  They found new homes around the association where they weren’t crowded and could really shine, and did really well this year in their new locations (yeay!).   My repurpose for that newly empty space in our garden, unfortunately, did not go as planned.  The tulips did “meh” and the asian lilies gifted to me did not do well at all.  Reason?  Mr. and Mrs. Squirrel and friends thought they were their food.  I have since purchased repellent, and that seems to be working.  There is still, however, a large empty space in two areas of the garden.

Meanwhile, in another area of the garden, a delightful Ivory Queen hosta gets overexposure to the sun each year.

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Time to give it a new home, in the more shaded area where one of the Aureomarginata hostas was.  It will fit that space well, and look nice amongst the other “blue” hostas.

Maybe I should move this Patriot hosta too – to the more shaded spot where the other Aureomarginata hosta was.

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It will fit in well and brighten up an area that gets pretty unremarkable after the asian lilies bloom.

With two hostas moved out of sunnier areas, does that mean that I now have spots for two new sunshine loving daylilies?  Possibly …  Hard to say …

And now for a few last pics of the mid-July daylily blooms.

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We interrupt mid-July …

We interrupt mid-July pictures for a few “today” pictures.

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If you look closely, in the last picture you can see that the Purple D’Oro daylilies are starting to form seed pods.  The Purple D’Oros will live on in the existing plants, the pictures, and, hopefully, in seedlings next year.  We’ll see 3-4 years from now what we got with a little help from our friends the butterflies, the bees, and maybe the hummingbirds.

And now back to mid-July

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Full of color

The gardens have been absolutely full of color for the past few weeks.  Almost everything was blooming at once – all the daylilies except the Marque Moon –  and all the early blooming hostas, plus some late clematis and the hibiscus.  I spent all the free time I could spare just enjoying it.  Words don’t fully describe the beauty so here’s a few pictures.  More to come over the next few days.

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