Showing posts with label Sguirrels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sguirrels. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Garden remodel continues

Tis the season, you know, for reinventing the wheel, garden-wise.  It has happened every year so far in my garden.  I guess I’ve given up vowing that it won’t.  What the heck.  We move furniture around. Why not roses and other plants?  Today after work I spent the most productive two and a half hours moving plants.  Don’t you feel thrilled with yourself when things go well and smoothly??  That was me when I came in at dark.

Working in the front garden – as everywhere – certain things must happen before certain other things can happen.  How many times have I walked past certain roses and certain empty spaces in total frustration with the status quo?  Don’t answer that.  Well, today things were moving! 

Mary Guthrie’ has been jammed between two ‘Red Ruffles’ azaleas and the Tea rose, ‘Duquesa’, literally buried under these other plants.  The damp ground made the move easy.  She was up and out in seconds and in her new home next to ‘Louis Philippe’ in minutes.  I was amazed by her large size since I’d never been able to see her where she was.  Now those big, bright pink single flowers will be much more visible.

Capitaine Dyel de Graville’ and ‘Mystic Beauty’ were in an even more awful situation.  I had planted them very close to each other (two feet apart) as babies, knowing it was probably unwise, er, definitely unwise.  The double whammy was a lack of sun, so they were looking pretty scrawny – if you could see what you were looking at.  When ‘Pink Perpetue’ moved away to Rose Petals Nursery, she left a prime space on the front circle.  The move of ‘Mary Guthrie’ left an opposing space across the path, so these were the destinations of CDdG and MB, both being kin to ‘Souvenir de la Malmaison’.  After some bed preparation of MG’s former spot (lots of sand astonishingly close to the surface) I slipped the Capitaine out of the ground. Wow! He was bigger than he looked. Now he’s settled in next to ‘Duquesa’ with room in front for daylilies.

‘Mystic Beauty’ was a bit more reluctant but did submit, and on the way to the new spot, it dawned on me (palm to the forehead!) that I had planned to put MB next to ‘Duquesa’ and CDdG next to SDLM since MB is basically SDLM’s twin – just the opposite of what I had actually done.  Oh, well, move on, right?  So as I dug MB’s hole, it occurred to me that what I will have is a bank of ‘Souv de la Malmaison’ – three bushes next to each other! This could be quite a sight in full bloom!!  And MB will be surrounded by echinacea plants, because seeds have sprouted all over that area, and so many seedlings are growing there that I transplanted several over to CDdG.  This is a prime example of how a garden evolves and grows.

The azaleas got planted elsewhere, and a displaced Ilex crenata ‘Compacta Holly’ was placed in CDdG’s old spot.  And a good time was had by all!

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My January hardscaping efforts finished off the edging on this corner and made a place for seven daylilies, using the last of my topsoil pile.  The bare shrub behind the daylilies is ‘Pinky Winky’ hydrangea, and behind that is ‘Mrs B. R. Cant’.  On the right is my new camellia that was potted on to a large pot since my ground is inhospitable to camellias.

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The old plastic edging was allowing soil to spill out of this bed, and with more composted horse manure to be added soon I had to make a change in the edging, so I chose the same scalloped concrete blocks that I used in the new bed under the ‘Francois Juranville’ arbor.  It really wasn’t as difficult as you’d think. It took about half an hour. Those invisible bushes behind the newly planted daylilies are ‘Red Ruffles’ azaleas, looking much the worse for having been through the freeze.

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As a way to hide new basal shoots from marauding squirrels, I planted snapdragons at the base of ‘Leonie Lamesch’ (above) and ‘Arcadia Louisiana Tea’ (below).  When they get bigger and bushy, I think they will offer some protection to the new cane breaks.  Speaking of squirrels, my plan to rid the garden of them was peanut butter and plaster of paris bonbons.  I read a report that hypercalcemia would result in a heart attack for the squirrel.  Alas, after I made 20 of them and put them out last Saturday I was doing more research and found an actual experiment where someone tested the lethality of these bonbons.  A squirrel was fed nothing but the bonbons for four days and didn’t die. Drat!!  Anyone need a big bucket of plaster of paris?

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Lovely new growth on ‘Maman Cochet’ (above).

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This is my ‘Quietness’.  Admittedly, at only one year old she has been in a less than total-sun position, so I moved her to a possibly less beneficial position on the west side of the house.  That means no sun until one o’clock in the afternoon.  Have I doomed her?  Well, possibly, but I made room for daylilies, so what’s done is done. Go for it, ‘Quietness’!!  I think it will take me all of one minute to prune her.

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A Mophead (Hydrangea Macrophylla) making a break from winter.  Yay!!

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‘Foxy’ Foxglove, having survived our summer, is blooming beautifully.

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One of the snapdragons that I planted last winter along the front sidewalk next to the garage lasted through the summer and has become quite large this winter, and now it’s blooming beautifully, too.  I’ll have to be more lavish with my care of the new ones I have to plant, so they’ll live long and bloom again.

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Remember last summer when I was dropping coneheads around the garden?  Here is one of the results.  I’m still dropping seeds around.  I really think echinacea is my favorite plant and flower.

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Volunteers.  A weed at the top of the photo and ‘Victoria Blue’ Salvia seedlings.

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Another Echinacea ‘Purple Coneflower’ seedling.

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And a sweet viola volunteer.  Teensy, teensy blue flowers.  Love them!

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David Austin’s ‘Lilian Austin’, a gift from Carol, is now in a big pot.  Hopefully, the clay pot won’t dry out too much in the heat of summer.

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Newly planted daylilies. These are ‘Chinese Scholar’.  My planting plan was to keep plants of the same cultivar grouped together rather than scattering them around willy-nilly, figuring they would have a bigger impact that way.  There’s another cluster like this one nearby.

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I also tried to plant the daylilies with roses of a similar color. These Dianthus chinensis (my other most favorite flower) will go under ‘Polonaise’ and some other red roses.

I’m really loving the cut in my job hours though I felt differently when it happened.  One extra hour a day is wonderful for getting a lot done in the garden before dark sets in.

Oh, in case you’re wondering, the rain gauge registered .90 inches.  Happiness is almost an inch of rain!!  

Friday, March 11, 2011

&%#$$% Squirrels! ARRGGHH!

"Why the heck is part of this bed dry?", I wondered, "and why is the wet area only 6' in diameter instead of 12'."  Doubting that I can figure out the problem, I turned on the system to manual to watch it run and try to find the reason for less water pressure. Then... Whoa! Three geysers right next to me, and I saw THIS.

He chewed everywhere and broke through in three places. I wish the first hole had taken his head off, but I guess it didn't. I cut out the damaged tee-joint and installed a new joint this evening, buried it and put a dirt-filled pot on it. The plant died a while back - too much water, oddly enough.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Here's why I intensely dislike squirrels

No, this isn't why I hate squirrels. You'll see why at the end of this post. Before I started shoveling compost today I took some photos. The garden is changing moment by moment, and I have to start paying attention. This is Maman Cochet, Climbing. Her flower is much smaller now due to the cool temps, and the color is deeper than in summer, but she still has lots of petals!
Another flower and more buds. The squirrels did a job on her, chewing off a few inches from 4 new canes that were 6" to 12" long. @#$%#@%!!
This is Reve d'Or. Can you tell I didn't prune her yet? That fact is mostly due to not knowing how, but today I needed to put some compost under her and figured it was either learn to prune her or come out from under her in shreds, so... My method is called "trimming the bangs". I walked along and cut under a new shoot at about head-high, and boing! Up into the air went the suddenly lighter canes. It worked, and I think she'll be fine. It was near dark so no "after" shot. You know, even a good haircut isn't good the same day.
I don't know if this is a good photo, but when I turned around and saw 'Aloha' all covered in shiny new leaves and a few buds, I was stunned. This rose has never been a climber for me - just a tall, thin freestanding bush. And I didn't prune her either. (Apparently, I only got two thirds of the way around the house.) So I'm excited that 'Aloha' is progressing well on her own.
Here's 'Louis Philippe' down to about 5.5' tall and leafing out pretty well.
'E. Veyrat Hermanos' was another non-pruning, but this evening just as it was getting dark I trimmed up his bangs, too, but he wasn't as cooperative as 'Reve d'Or' in that he already has big buds all the way down his long arching canes. I was sentimental about those buds, so he didn't get as short a trim as RdO, and I swung some of the long canes upwards and sideways. He's not a hazard to life and limb anymore.
'Mrs B R Cant is being beautiful now. This flower is 3" across.
This is last spring's snapdragon that lasted through the summer and winter and is now back blooming again. Pretty cool!
I just love 'Leonie Lamesch'.
A China aster grown from seeds sowed in September. The color should be a bit bluer.
'Gruss an Aachen', planted in the ground last fall after languishing in a pot for way too long, has leafed out really well and is showing her stuff. Her coloration is a little unusual. Oh, man, I forgot to smell her.

Now would you risk a blood-letting for this beauty? This is 'Le Vesuve', first bloom of 2011.
The second bloom.
And there are eight more buds in less than half a square foot. He is a bloom machine, that's why I couldn't care less that he is not fragrant.
Two and a half weeks after pruning. Handsome, isn't he?
A China aster in the center and cheerful pansies.
This part of the garden is my pride and joy. That's 'Bermuda's Anna Olivier' on the left and 'Enchantress' on the right next to the daylilies. I only had to cut out the dead stuff on these two. 'Enchantress' never lost her leaves, and BAO was leafing out very early and is now full of red new growth. In the middle is a clump of  'Summer Carnival' hollyhocks, one of my seedlings from last year. It's already got a bloom started, and it looks like it will have several stalks. I'm very excited about it. Notice the beautiful compost?
This is clematis 'Westerplatte', a big bloom on a little post-pruning, second-year plant. Photo color should be a little more like wine.
Now you know why I hate squirrels. If they ate the flowers, I would be slightly less unhappy, but they just chew them off and run, leaving the precious bloom face down in the compost. #%$$@!