Sunday, March 25, 2012

pictures from my garden

Pictures from my garden, on a sunny day in MARCH!


I know it's really crazy, but here they are, flowers in full bloom on March 24, in Indiana!  We have had some spectacular weather here, and everything has been coming up early, and blooming! I even have lilac blooming, started yesterday, I'll have to add them in later!
These are the cerise colored primroses, they grow abundantly in English woods, they grow in my shade garden in Indiana, and can be a bit picky about their microclimate.


These are some white wildflowers from the woods,  I think I have named them incorrectly, as woodpoppies, so I'll have to go back and find them in a book, they open up as beautiful white, single-petal wide flowers.

 And who doesn't love redbud?  the ubiquitous Indiana spring flowering tree!
Oh, and so lovely, and usually the first to show it's lovely blossoms, I introduce you to Bleeding Heart. I just bought some Dutchmen's Britches in white yesterday, they are cousins to this plant.  This tiny plant will grow up about a foot tall and two feet across and be covered in blooms.  The first plant I dug up and moved from the other house.

 OH, and another spring beauty around here, my daughter, Alice-Ann, turns 16 today.  She had "glam" photos taken at dance, so we kept the make-up on for another shot.  She's prettier without it.
 The Harbinger of spring, the dainty, dancing daffodil!   Who doesn't love these babies?
 The white wildflower, just coming into its own, with a little warmth, and a little sunshine!
Alice-Ann took all the pictures, she's the official photographer of my side of the blog.  She at least gets stuff in focus!

Have a beautiful week, and look towards the glory that is the Resurrection!! 

And Happy Annunciation Day!  This is the day celebrated by the Church to remember when Gabriel came to Mary, and she freely accepted the will of God in becoming His mother. 

Today is the beginning of our salvation and the manifestation of the mystery which is from eternity. The Son of God becomes the Son of the Virgin, and Gabriel announces grace. So with him let us also cry to the Mother of God: Rejoice, thou who art full of grace! The Lord is with thee.

Hallelujah!  Sing to Jesus!



Dianne, unworthy sinner

Sunday, March 18, 2012

It's spring in March, Tra, La, La!!!-- Dianne

Wow!! I don't care if it's global warming, or climate change, or diddly,  we gots us some warm weather here in Indiana, and I stayed out in it all afternoon.  (by the way, California broke snow records this weekend, don't care how it works, just as long as they get it, and we don't).
THIS is what I have going on in my garden at the moment!! Primroses, dainty little primroses.  So many bright colors, and so happy to make your acquaintance!!
This is wood poppy,  mine are white at the moment, or else what I have blooming is not this.  Anyway, I dug them up out of our woods on the family farm,  so I don't feel badly about moving them.
Have you seen any of these lovely ladies blooming?  Magnolias, dahrlin', magnoooolias.  It's the middle of March in Indiana, and these beauties are popping out in splendid color like there's a pageant going on somewhere and they don't want to miss it!!  Weeks early, and just so darned gorgeous. 

I found pansies at Wally World yesterday, and got them into the ground,  here and at church.  I spent some time cleaning up both gardens, and getting them ready for the spring onslaught of blooms. I will have to insert later a picture of our beautiful lenten rose at church.  All the other photos I pulled off the net because it's 10 at night, and I haven't taken pictures yet.  I did some moving of plants, split some iris and daffodils.  They should be fine to bloom soon. 


Today I worked out my deltoids, my triceps, biceps, my quadraceps, my gluteuses, the major, the minor and the median, my ACL, and all those other muscles that are now crying out for attention.  (see how I knew all those muscles' names?  I'm taking Anatomy and Physiology, trying to get into nursing school) .Especially my shovelin' shoulder, the right one.  I hauled quite a few wheelbarrow loads of mulch given to me free from my friendly local stump grinder guy out to some of the flower beds.  And now I hurt.  I ache, I need a massage.

I pulled weeds, raked leaves, and prayed that all this great weather  would stick around. I noticed that the trees are even leafing out early, which could be bad for them if we get hit with a snow storm.  Snow on leaves tends to weigh down limbs, which then break and hit power lines.  I think everyone in Indiana is extremely happy about all this, but we are all wary of the next month's weather.

  I moved some shrubs with Bill's help yesterday.  I dug a hole bigger than the root ball of the plant I was moving,  and loosened up the soil in the hole. I carefully dug around the base of the shrub in a circle, and worked my shovel carefully under the plant around in the circle again, to loosen and trim the roots.  I lifted carefully, and moved the shrub to its new hole.  I made sure to orient the plant in the same direction it had been, so as to not confuse the plant.  No one wants to look out in their garden and have a plant looking like it just got off the bus at the wrong stop.  Seriously, plants grow according to where the light is,  so if you move something, make sure the north side of the plant stays to the north in the new hole. I lightly tamped down the soil around the plant, and watered thoroughly.  Notice I said "carefully" a lot?   Sometimes I put some fertilizer or a shovelful of mulch in the hole, but these are native shrubs, and don't really need it.  Native plants probably never really need fertilizing, they are meant to be here, in this soil, in this climate, so let them grow naturally.   Besides, it won't be really hot for a while, so they should acclimatize well before the summer heat hits.

I told someone again yesterday about that fabulous daylily farm in Darlington.  If you don't have big plans for the summer, and need  just a short road trip to get out of the house, or to avoid mowing,  drive east of Darlington on 47 until you see the Sugar Creek Daylily Farm sign.  Greg Lough is one of the nicest gardeners you'll meet, and he digs big clumps, great deal for your dollar.  Wear some walking shoes, you'll be there a while.  Look back in the blog to last summer to see some pictures of his 1600 VARIETIES, not just plants.  The catalog needs its own zipcode.

So, to plant seeds outside yet or not?   Lettuce, spinach, beets, radishes, potatoes, peas could all be put out now, since the ground is workable, and they aren't scared of a little cold weather, should we get some.
I'll have to haul myself over to ProGreen, my neighbor Steve's nursery on 231 to get some red potato starts.  Maria, my intrepid blogging partner, has already started several packs of seeds, in her rigged up greenhouse inside. I  don't know if any have hit the garden yet.  She's quite ambitious.  I'm still in mourning for the greenhouse I left behind 7 years ago at the old house, and just can't be bothered setting up all the inside stuff like she has.  We put in a big order to Gurney's when they had their "buy $100/ get $100 stuff free", we couldn't pass that up.  I bought some row covers on hoops about 18" high. .  I should get them out so I can start some stuff out in the garden. 

Okay, time for Tylenol.  I hope you all at least got to enjoy the sunshine this weekend.  It's good for your body, your attitude, and your soul.

Yes, the water ran brown in the shower today.  The dirt on my pants may even clog up the washer.   I have officially started the gardening year!

Dianne, dirt and all.





Thursday, March 8, 2012

An Early Spring


Though I feel a bit guilty for not tuning into "You Bet Your Garden" yet this year, I was ready to for the early plantings after receiving the inordinate amount of catalogues I requested. Lucious vegetables and fruits called and like a lusty shopper, I listed.

Big Lots had this 3-tiered 'greenhouse' for $20.
  • Cherry Chocolate Tomatoes
  • Several pasting tomatoes
  • Pineapple Ground Cherries
  • Purple Tomatillos
  • 8 Ball, Patty Pan and Black Zucchini Squash
  • Broccoli
  • Purple and green cabbage
  • brussel sprouts
  • tiny cantelope melons
  • canary melons
  • shallots
  • rainbow mix carrots, 
  • bush beans and peas
  • pickles
  • parsley
  • thyme
  • American Cranberry
  • sweet woodruff
  • Basil, oregano, cilantro
  • Arugula and other lettuce and some edible flowers
  • Sweet potatoes
So many good things to plant in my five 5'x5' raised beds. I had to relinquish the ground cherries and tomatillos for now. Let's see if I buy enough of the market cans to justify putting up my own.

I started out at Mother Earth News Free Trial Garden Planner and in the interim, a kindly neighbor dropped by three boxes of wood slats that I though would hold my pallet gardens. Fill with dirt, put pallets at the angle on top and voila! I stop leaking dirt with each watering and have multidimensional salad and herb beds. A good idea until the early peas, romaine, pickles, and other starts started too well. My problem remains, though. Too many things to plant and not enough space. It is a repeat of decorating my house many years ago. I thought I needed every idea that was lovely in my own home. Turns out, I can cycle plants more justifiably than art or decor, and I can admire and sample new stuff from the farmer's market without committing it all to my ground. I need to focus on what I can put up and not waste in what is allotted in my yard Oh, and share with those neighbors.

My ambitions had been fueled by eight hours of garden arranging with my new Mother Earth News tool, that links a gardener with planting times, places to buy seeds and plants, and species info on some of the popular garden plants.  I needed those boxes for resettling my lettuce at least. Two are 3'x3'x4". They are not deep enough for more than small salad and herbs plants. One is 8" deep. As the March 7th temps soared to near 70 degrees here in Indiana, I wanted those lovely starts to get some face time with the sun. Yesterday I made those boxes a new identity. Cold frames. I also got an email about that free-trial. Times up. I'm not sure if I'll pay for it, though I'd review it the best of the tools I fiddled with. It was patient in emailing me, not pushy about fees, a good-one stop off-my-hard-drive place to research, model and plan. I just don't know if I'm too lazy to use it and justify the cause. I do recommend it, though.

I've already bought a 20 dollar 3-tiered 'greenhouse' from Big Lots. It's in my window, see the picture. I'm too lazy to haul it in and out of doors in these bi-weathered days of 25 degree nights and 60 degree days. It's holding more plants than I can start. Broccoli is on hold for the moment.

So here we go. A new season, already.

After Dianne admonished me to stop starting melons and pickles and squash I found this affirmation from NPR's The Salt Blog and the director of the National Arboretum.

Happy Spring, everyone. Don't forget to spring forward!