Wednesday, April 5, 2017
The Snow Is Gone
Yesterday's heavy rain finished washing the rest of the snow away. The huge pile near the mail box was the last to go. Earlier today it was little more than a dirty shapeless lump. Growing under the snow, the pernicious weed Shepard's Purse is already about to open its flowers. Mature new seeds are about a week away. This early start pretty much guarantees that this plant will always be with us.
Traditional garden soil would be unworkable so soon after a heavy rain and the last of the melting snow. Our planting beds are surrounded by stone paths or sod. We are able to work wet soil from the edge without compacting it. The dominant weed here now is Shepard's Purse. Its early flowers are amazing but pale in comparison to the giant root mass. I remove each plant and its attached soil to make room for the compost that will be added prior to planting. This removed garden soil also serves to cover the accumulated kitchen waste that now covers the top of the compost pile.
We grow lettuce, spinach and beets in this walled bed. Young rabbits pass through the wire cages with ease. The combination of the old trailer skirting walls and the interior wire cages protect the young tender plants. No system is perfect and we had a wood chuck burrow under the wall. I was most distressed by the yellow stony subsoil that it brought to the top of planting bed. Instructions say to plant spinach seeds as soon as the soil can be worked. Early hot rainless days have in the past caused our plants to bolt when they were only about one inch high. We will likely pass on the spinach this year.
These clip clothespins were used to attach the shade cover to the wire cages during the heat of last summer. Becky picked up the tattered scraps of shade cover that remained and discovered that some unknown caterpillar used one as a place to overwinter as a chrysalis. Perhaps we should rotate the pin so that its near vertical orientation is preserved. This was a truly amazing early day spent outside and active.
Sunday, April 2, 2017
Delights Of Early Spring
Oh wow, spring has finally arrived in the garden. There are buds forming everywhere but these coltsfoot buds are right next to two bright cheery yellow flowers. These two flowers are just the beginning. Leaves will follow the flowers. Then seed heads resembling dandelions will form.
This native plant is a tough customer. We also find it growing from the sometimes worked face of the gravel bank. It comes up early, grows in ditches and out of cracks in pavement. These are growing in the stones at the base of the house foundation on the north side. I was so happy to see them!
Blue Siberian Squill buds are a promise of beauty to come. The buds are still tight to the ground. It doesn't take a plant expert to tell the this plant is an alien. That is fine with me! I love this plant's little blue flowers with blue pollen! They are begging to be weeded.
Frequently the first flowers of spring are snow drops. These were up in February and have been waiting under new snow. Most of the snow is now gone. We have had some sun and the buds are opening at last.
Right next door are the winter aconites. I can actually see these from the house providing I use my binoculars. After all the white snow, yellow flowers are a delight!
The blossoms look so delicate, but don't be fooled. Spring ephemerals are tough customers.
Labels:
coltsfoot,
Siberian squill,
snow drops,
winter aconite
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)









