Successes of Summer 2010

19 09 2010

On Thursday, I wound up the garden hoses, dragging bunches of pesky pine needles and cones with them.

On Friday, I had to turn on my car lights as I drove to work at 8:00am.

On Saturday, comforting -if polluting- wood smoke escaped from a neighborhood stove and swooped into the garden as I indulged in more gardening exploits.

It’s clear: Summer 2010 is departing and Fall is making its arrival.

The rain is back, thankfully, and it’s a matter of weeks before my Japanese Maples color the otherwise misty gray landscape that is my garden in Fall.

Before I get too excited about Fall colors and activities, I’d like to devote this post to the successes of Summer 2010. I won’t be talking about the weather, needless to say, but I will share five successes or “a-ha” moments I experienced over the last few months.

Success #1: Fresh, rich potting soil really makes a difference for annuals in containers.

Back in May, with the help of the Garden Hero, we emptied the soil from the large deck and garden containers one by one into a wheelbarrow, mixed in fresh compost and potting soil and then refilled the containers. What a difference this made! This year’s crop of containerized annuals is the best ever. They’ve already provided 4+ months of ample color, and are likely to keep going until the first frost in October/November. The wheelbarrow will definitely be called into action again next year!

Success #2: Planting a selection of smaller tomato varieties such as Grape, Cherries, and small Romas was a wise move.

I won’t mention that 7-letter “w” word; because of it though, large growing tomato varieties across the Portland  area, by many accounts, are reluctant to ripen.  I don’t mean to be boastful but my itsy-bitsy ones have ripened. I’ve harvested baskets full of mostly flavorful tiny tomatoes when colleagues tell me their beefsteaks, Early Girl (hah!) and Better Boy (double hah!) languish on the vines, green as shamrocks on St. Patrick’s Day. I’ve known there’s a greater chance of success ripening smaller variety tomatoes earlier. This year, I’ve confirmed it.

Success #3: Going “au naturel” is the way to go. With the lawn, that is.

The lawns received no fertilizer of any kind, got a 1/4″ of water on Summer Sundays (7 in total) , and were mowed precisely 6 times this year, with a push mower. That’s pretty low maintenance in my estimation; I didn’t even have to go get gas! Now that the back lawn has been downsized, and the mud patch converted into a new bed, it’s looking pretty good. A lawn aficionado would cringe hearing me call it a lawn, but for me it’s a pleasant, low-maintenance green patch that fits in nicely with my sustainable gardening efforts.

Success #4: The square folding tomato cages are the ultimate supports for the Annabelle Hydrangeas.

Love, love, love these supports. Why didn’t I think of these years ago? Place them early before the Annabelles leaf out, train in any wayward branches that escape the cage, and “flopitis” is a thing of the past.

Success #5: It’s hard to beat masses of cheerful annuals for bursts of color and months of interest.

I hate to admit this because I’ve usually passed on buying annuals in favor of  perennials, around for years. But the impatiens and trailing potato vines, planted back in May are still growing strong, brightening up the shadows under the trees, contrasting pleasingly against all the green foliage. And white, even if you don’t consider it a color, shows well in the shade.





The New Lawn Bed: Final Installment

12 09 2010

Contemplated

Dug

Amended

Planted

Finished.

Here are the plants that “made the cut”:

Acer palmatum “Fascination” (x 1)

Hydrangea paniculata “Quick Fire” (x 3)

Polystichum x dycei (Dyce Holly Fern)

Dryoperis  erythrosora (Autumn Fern)

Adiantum venustum (Himalayan Maidenhair Fern)

Polystichum  setiferum (Alaska Fern)

Polystichum acrostichoides (Christmas Fern)

Polystichum setiferum “Rotundatum” (Ram’s Head Soft Shield Fern)

Carex morrowii “Variegata”  (Japanese Variegated Sedge) —divisions from the garden

For Spring time color (or as squirrel entrees), I also planted purple, white, and yellow Crocus verna and then sprinkled a mixture of chili powder and cayenne pepper from a dollar store, on top of the soil to ward off critters. It’s working so far with the dogs.

While I’m always glad when a project reaches completion,  this one has just whetted my appetite. There’s another part of the lawn which begs to be converted into something. I just don’t know what yet.  I’ll have plenty of time to day dream about the possibilities in the rainy months to come.





The New Lawn Bed: Part I

5 09 2010

Last Spring, you may recall that dear Hubby suggested a brand new gardening project for me to take on. Convert the shadiest side of the lawn, (the muck patch in Winter) into a new garden bed for even more plants.

Once I got over the shock of hubby suggesting any gardening project, I came to realize it was a project whose time had come. Grass does not grow there, moss isn’t very happy either, but Bracken Ferns pop up and grow effortlessly, if I don’t pluck them out when they make their presence known.

During the heat of Summer is not the ideal time to begin digging up a lawn/ clay mud patch. Think of digging a baked  clay pot with a dessert fork and you’ll get the idea. So I put the project on the proverbial “long finger” until a few weekends ago, when I dragged out some blue rope to reshape the lawn and identify the new bed. I marked out the areas to be converted like this:

(To help see the outline, I spray painted along the rope in a bright fluorescent yellow. I later removed the rope.)

Yes, the project has expanded from just converting the shadiest area of the lawn to include slicing off one of the “fingers” of the lawn to make a slightly wider pathway into the garden.

As luck would have it, cool weather enveloped the Portland area last weekend so I could hold off no longer. Out came the rototiller, a present from hubby for our first Christmas. Amazingly, the machine,  repeatedly abused by clods of viscious, extra long pine needles over the years and last used four years ago, started on the first pull.

I might as well have tried to dig up the asphalt driveway as to make any progress on the rock solid lawn. I quickly realized my foolishness and set an overhead sprinkler on the area, giving it a few good soakings. After three rounds of tilling, I had teased out 1-2 inches of soil from the clay pot. Progress, but only just.

More soakings (including some rain!!) and then I took a fork (garden) to the pot. The fork action, the best workout in a long time, disturbed another 4 inches of soil. More soaking and this is what I had:

(I have built muscles where I’ve never had them before.)

And now there’s this to deal with:

Two yards of a Gardener’s Blend soil, composed of 20% pumice with compost, sand, and other good stuff.  Over this long weekend, I’ll  spend some time trundling this around to the back garden to mix into the new garden bed.

Definitely a work in progress, with more calorie burning activity and fun to come!





Reigning in Garden Projects?

1 05 2010

Between a gardener and non-gardener such as my hubby and I, the wise non-gardener (W) should provide the reality check for highly ambitious schemes cooked up by the gardener (me).

  • I’d like to replace the complete back lawn with a pond and island for the 100 foot plus Ponderosa Pine that sits right in the center.
  • I’d like to enlarge the deck off the master bedroom on the second floor, install a hut tub and spiral wrought iron staircase for early morning access into the garden in my PJs.
  • I’d like a Japanese “Teahouse” in the bottom right hand corner of the back garden. The “Teahouse” would be the perfect writing studio or “woman” cave to escape to when the dogs take complete control of the leather chairs and remote inside.

W has the knack of scoping projects; seeing the construction challenges and long term maintenance obligations. I visualize the finished look, he sees the project for the effort and complexity involved.  He also knows that as the sole weekend gardener of our property, I’m nudging up to the limit of what I can reasonably maintain. I have enough beds and pathways to look after; I really don’t need any more.

Last Sunday though, he stunned me.

Right after I’d finished mowing the back lawn, he made his way onto the deck and started to converse:

“Have you ever thought of replacing the muddy side of the lawn with some flowers and a pathway?” He questioned.

“Say, what?” I replied, stunned to my muddy gardening boots.

“Another bed, with the native plants that you like so much, and a pathway leading to the wetland area of the garden? You could get rid of the muck patch and have more flowers to tend.”

Huh??? My head was spinning.

I rely heavily on W on to keep my gardening exploits in check. He reminds me not to overdo it, and  jokes that I will someday ask him to install floodlights so I can garden into the wee hours. And now he was suggesting a new gardening project.

A project I’d never even contemplated.
A project that would take many hours of work and result in yet another garden bed to maintain.

An unfurled garden hose happened to be snaked across the lawn and before I knew it, we were marking out the contours of a new garden bed.

At it’s widest part it’s 8 feet, curved into a weird half moon shape. The plan would be to add a 2 foot wide path along the current lawn edge to give access to the “wetland” area.

Now, there’s a solid reason why W is suggesting getting rid of that portion of the lawn. It’s not a lawn, it’s not a moss patch. It’s  a mud pit most of the year and a dried cracked clay pot the rest. Nothing wants to grow there because the area needs some serious drainage work. The more I think about it, the more W’s suggestion makes sense.

I could try and fix the drainage problem and replant the lawn, hoping enough filtered light makes it through the tree canopy to keep the grass reasonably happy. More appealing though is W’s idea of removing the lawn in that area and planting a bed of moisture loving “wet feet” plants. Ferns  (of course), Variegated Dogwood, geums, rushes, and grasses.

What do you think?

How would you address the obvious drainage issue, if you wanted to fix it?








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