Thursday, June 18, 2009
Clay and I used my car and lots of digging to pull out some old shrubs from in front of our house. As we were getting ready to replant, Clay remembered that he needed to check on the old pipes that drained water from our gutters. Sure enough he found some busted cast iron/terracotta pipes that needed replacing. So that delayed putting in our new flower beds but why dig up the area twice? He took a day off of work and his dad came down to help dig tunnels and put in new PVC pipes. They also extended the distance that the pipes drained, and all of this happen just in time for monsoon season here in Montgomery Co.
I wish we would have taken a picture of the front before we dug up all the plants, but below is an after picture. The grass seed has loved all the rain. Clay did a combination of tall fescue and Kentucky bluegrass, which made it look more natural when it came up. We also planted a Minuet Mountain Laurel, Elsie Lee Azalea, and Russian Sage on each side of the porch with a few other smaller plants.
I did two mixed flower pots. This one turned out to be my favorite. I decided they didn't have to match exactly. I can't remember the names of all the plants off the top of my head for these.
We planted some Nasturtiums in the front bed. They like well drained sandy soil, which is not at all what we have in the front, but so far they seem ok. We can always put some in the garden next year, but they added some nice color to the front.
We found a Cecropia Moth near our potato patch last week. It wasn't living when I found it, so I relocated it to a better spot for a picture. It is the largest moth in North America. Shortly after the moth was found, we saw some strange white eggs attached to one of our potato plants. I didn't make the connection at first, but after IDing this moth I think the eggs may have belonged to this moth. At the time I was only interested in removing the eggs and I didn't try saving them. These moths like to feed on deciduous trees, but they might have enjoyed the potato plants as well??
Random pictures of our neighbor's cat again. He really is a cute cat and he keeps Dave entertained. He is an incredible hunter, so I try to discourage him from our bird areas as much as possible, but you can only do so much.
One of my favorite plants at the house is our black raspberry. It is producing early this year with all the rain and I haven't had a chance to protect it with bird netting. For one it is much taller this year and when I went to get the netting it had a layer of neem oil on it that had spilled from last year. We really need to clean out and take inventory of everything in the smokehouse.
The garden is loaded with weeds even though we have tried all sorts of extra mulch to keep them at bay. We did black mulch paper which helps hold in moisture as well. Then covered that with either straw or grass clippings. I think the weeds come up too easily with the straw and the grass clipping tend to mold easily, but better than nothing. We did not do black weed paper for the walkways this year so they have thicker layers of grass clippings. We put in a second set of corn and you can see here the differences in the two, so hopefully we will have corn for more than just a two week span.
Just a pretty picture of some lavander that we bought from a guy in Asheville last year. I love perennial herbs.
I have this great children's book called "It's an Ant's Life," it is written like a journal from an ants perspective. I wouldn't have realized with out the book that these were the worker ants cleaning the grubs, which is the larva stage for ants.
Our neighbor came by one day a few weeks ago to warn us of a football size swarm of honey bees hanging out in one of our Leyland Cypress trees. We didn't get to see the full mass of bees but we did catch a few still hanging around the next day. I don't know much at all about keeping bees, but I think somewhere in the middle of one of these masses is the queen bee and if you can catch her then you can farm the bees, but that is not on my to do list.
I have mixed feelings about how well plants are doing in the garden. The squash plants were being eaten on pretty bad, squash bugs are so ugly and stinky, and one of my least favorite to try picking off by hand. I did what I could and then I did spray an organic insecticide on the plants and it did seem to help some. I still see several wilted leaves and suspect a warm borer has already done some damage. Cucumbers are doing ok, but the seeds we put out later did rot so I will need to put in some more tomorrow. Potato plants are waist high, but who knows what is going on down below. Our pepper plants haven't grown a lot, but seem to be bug free and happy. The tomato plants have grown a lot, but some of the stems seem to have gotten too much water and appear to be ready to bust, like they are rotting from the inside out, hopefully this is not the case for all of them. I saw some pretty ugly stuff in the garden when I checked on it Wednesday after the last long rainy day. There was a layer of green slimy eggs in one of the cabbage plants, probably hundreds of them. I saw several slugs and threw a few out of the garden today when I could finally get in there to do some weeding. I always wander if all of my other gardening friends have as much trouble with garden pests as we do???
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2 comments:
I've never done large scale gardening the way you and Clay do, and my stuff is always in pots or raised beds which I assume gives me more control, but you all do seem to be really buggy - that really stinks! I've read two books recently that made interesting suggestions for dealing with pests. One was called Companion Planting and was all about mixing all sorts of plants together that give each other defense by what they attract or detract bug-wise. The other was a Micro-Eco Farming and it went into detail about the minerals necessary in soil and how most gardens, especially massive agricultural farms only hit on a few in supplemental feeding via fertilizer (chemical or organic) and that the missing trace minerals make all the difference in healthy plants that thrive and don't attract pests.
No idea if either of these books have genuinely useful ideas, I've not tried either but I thought I'd throw it out there. I will be in Blacksburg July 3-6 and I will bring them to you if you like.
Hey Liz!
The house looks GREAT! I LOVE the new look with no shrubs out front. :o) I'm also glad you guys got those pipes fixed. Whew!
As for my pest-free garden, well, my gardens are small. They're also new, so the pests haven't really had a chance to discover us yet. :oP Seriously, though, I'm not sure why we have been blessed so far and can't help but wonder if it is because of the fact we didn't use the ground/soil and instead put in raised beds. That way, there were no pest eggs in the soil to deal with.
I wish I were more garden savvy like you. :sigh: I'm learning, though. I'm learning. :o)
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