butterfly

butterfly
summer 2013
Showing posts with label violets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label violets. Show all posts

Friday, March 30, 2012

COLD SNAP AND SPRING PERENNIALS

















Wow, so many new countries have signed on!  Up to 47.  Welcome to Jordan, Bahrain, Mauritius, Pakistan, New Zealand, Chile, Qatar, Jamaica, France, Slovakia,  South Africa, and Gabon (Western Africa - I had to look it up.)





















pieris - Japanese Andromeda
















We were teased terribly by an early spring heat wave.  People wearing shorts and sandals, air conditioners turned on and plants and trees forced into early bloom.  Heaven!!!!





zinnias




I have been burned in the past and I have learned from my mistakes.  I have to restrain myself.  I waited to start seeds indoors.  How many years have I had a jungle growing in my basement because I couldn't wait to start my tomato plants?  Most gardeners know that tomatoes grow like weeds when the temperature soars.






The stores already have tomato plants for sale.  You know some poor soul is going to put that in the ground and lose it to frost. Last night and tonight we have frost and freeze warnings.  I will wait til Mother's day to set my summer plants and seeds out.





 I have planted some perennials.  Siberian Iris, Liatris - blazing star, and bugle weed.




home to new perennials (and a few weeds still)  Just wait a few months 




Ready to go into the ground is Chelone lyonii - false turtlehead and Culver's root Veronicastrum virginicum.     Culver's root is a native beneficial to butterflies and other pollinators.   Chelone glabra is the host plant for the Baltimore Checkerspot butterfly.  I will add this as well when I can find it (cheap and on sale.)





The critters have not been kind to the small shrubs I planted last fall.  No deer.  Bunnies.  Saw it with my own eyes or I wouldn't have believed it.  If they survive, great.  If not, I may replant and protect them in the fall with wire.  My dogwoods and paw paw look great, but they were larger plants and could tolerate more trauma.





My little dogwood - rabbit food


I haven't been to the farm garden recently.  I know I have root crops and greens I can harvest.  Got sidetracked by a trip to Florida for a birthday party, (Happy Birthday Aunt Shirley 100!!!) and the UMD Extension service Demonstration Garden.  And last but not least - the flu.


I did take a walk around the yard to see what is happening:




Mountain Mint

bearberry and fall blooming anemones

bearberry - a native ground cover that has red berries in winter

painted fern

black eyed susan

broken boxwood (thanks, Bear) cut all but one limb

native columbine

dicentra - bleeding heart  will die back and disappear then come back next spring

hostas and violets

hostas

naked ladies in front

pachysandra in bloom

phlox

photinia fraserii - new foliage is red

photinia


virginia bluebells - mertensia virginica with pieris


My next plan is to get to the farm garden to get it in shape for all the seeds I have started.  I still have about 5 weeks.
 


No rush  :)


Tuesday, June 7, 2011

WEEDS AND OTHER GARDEN PESTS

Oh my!  Welcome to Australia and Ukraine .  That makes 18 countries.


These last couple of weeks have really brought on the weeds.  I hand pull or mow most of the weeds.  Poison ivy -  I will use Roundup for poison ivy.  We react terribly to this weed.




bindweed
I have taken pictures from around my yard the last several weeks to help you identify the most common ones.  When I have more time at the farm,  I'll photograph some more interesting ones.

wild stawberry

red sorrel



poison ivy


garlic mustard
canada thistle
pokeweed




violets


purslane
mallow

ground ivy

buttercup

lambs quarter


Also at the farm, the sugar snap peas are almost ready to harvest.  I have already started cooking chard and beet greens with what is left of the spinach.  Weeded the strawberry bed, and am looking closely for caterpillars on the broccoli. Tied up the tomato plants with twine.





weeded strawberries

sugar snap peas and broccoli

volunteer marigold from last year



The hay is incredible this year.  My husband tells me they got 200 round bales.  You cannot imagine how wonderful the fields smell right now.  Very Sweet,  nothing else like it.




The mountain laurel is blooming in the Catoctin Mountains.  Just beautiful.

















Mr Bear




Biggest pest of all.  Digs holes, pees on my boxwood, half of it is dead.  Don't even ask about the dead bunnies and birds in the back yard.  But, we still love him.