Monday, October 28, 2013
Bittersweet Autumn Blooms: The Loquat Tree
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
An Aging Process
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Be sure to use a matte poly clear coat once the painting is done. |
I came across a tutorial at Imparting Grace for using a paint technique to instantly patina terra cotta garden pots. Of course, I don't tend to enjoy following directions to the letter, so I ended up playing around with the process a bit.
Once the faux stone paint was applied and sanded, I went back in with watered down acrylics and a small paint brush to mimic the natural exposure of the pot to dirt and mossy growth from the garden. I kept the colors soft and neutral--earthy browns, dark greens, charcoals. In the end, each pot was a little different.
The process was pure soul therapy.
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
The Deck Garden Experiment
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The deck garden in early June. |
Sunday, March 30, 2008
The Eastern Tent Caterpillar
Populations fluctuate from year to year, with outbreaks occurring every several years. Defoliation of trees, building of unsightly silken nests in trees, and wandering caterpillars crawling over plants, walkways, and roads cause this insect to be a pest in the late spring and early summer.
Eastern tent caterpillar nests are commonly found on wild cherry, apple, and crabapple, but may be found on hawthorn, maple, cherry, peach, pear and plum as well.
And they're back this spring--this time in a crotch on the Yoshino cherry tree. The eastern tent caterpillar overwinters as an egg within an egg mass of 150 to 400 eggs. These masses are covered with a shiny, black varnish-like material and encircle branches that are about pencil-size or smaller in diameter.
The caterpillars hatch about the time the buds begin to open, usually in early March. These insects are social; caterpillars from one egg mass stay together and spin a silken tent in a crotch of a tree. Caterpillars from two or more egg masses may unite to form one large colony. During the heat of the day or rainy weather, the caterpillars remain within the tent. They emerge to feed on leaves in the early morning, evening, or at night when it is not too cold.
The larvae are hairy caterpillars, black with a white stripe down the back, brown and yellow lines along the sides, and a row of oval blue spots on the sides. As the larvae feed on the foliage, they increase the size of the web until it is a foot or more in length. In 4 to 6 weeks, the caterpillars are full grown and 2 to 2-1/2 inches long. At this time, they begin to wander away individually from the nest in search of protected areas in which to spin a cocoon. The cocoon is about 1 inch long and made of closely woven white or yellowish silk and is attached to other objects by a few coarser threads. The adult moth emerges from the cocoon about 3 weeks later.
My ususal organic strategy for dealing with these pesky pests is to apply Bt (Bacillus thuringiensis) after I've disturbed the nest with a long bamboo cane. The Bt spray must come into direct contact with the larvae in order to work. Unlike typical nerve-poison insecticides, Bt acts by producing proteins (delta-endotoxin, the "toxic crystal") that reacts with the cells of the gut lining of susceptible insects. These Bt proteins paralyze the digestive system, and the infected insect stops feeding within hours. Bt-affected insects generally die from starvation, which can take several days. I've never had an in-season return of the caterpillars after applying Bt. A couple of suggestions: (1) if you spray up into the tree, watch out for residual mist coming back down onto your face, and (2) beware of falling caterpillars! I'd recommend a hat, goggles, and a face mask. Gross!
Good Afternoon, Lady Banks!
The Lady Banks Rose is a species rose--generally defined as those roses found in nature. Most species roses tend to be very vigorous and are extremely disease resistant. They are a good choice for naturalizing and will often grow well without attention if planted properly and given minimal care during the first year or so of their establishment.
Although many are climbers, with a minimum of pruning and training they can be grown as hefty shrubs. This old garden rose was introduced into European commerce prior to 1796, but was grown for centuries in China.
I am growing my Lady Banks Rose along our picket fence that faces the street. I have had to prune it three times since it was planted because it grows so quickly.
The Loquat Tree


The Yoshino Cherry Tree

To see the tree--now about 30 feet wide and about as tall--burst into full bloom is like nothing else! Standing under it, you feel as if you have been transported to a fantasy land...the delicately sweet fragrance of the five-petaled cherry blossoms wafts through the air, and the buzzing of hundreds of pollinating honey bees overhead is frighteningly pleasant. I just adore the round shape of this tree, which we've pruned carefully so that is has an open center.

The Yoshino cherry, known as Somei-yoshino in Japan, is a hybrid of unknown origin that was first introduced in Tokyo in 1872 and is now one of the most popular cultivated flowering cherries.
The Japanese flowering cherry is an important source of food for many small birds and mammals including robins, cardinals, and waxwings.
Saturday, March 29, 2008
One Little Big Pollinator
Worker bees do all the different tasks needed to maintain and operate the hive. They make up the vast majority of the hive's occupants and they are all sterile females. When young, they are called house bees, and they work in the hive doing comb construction, brood rearing, tending the queen and drones, cleaning, regulating temperature, and defending the hive. Older workers are called field bees. They forage outside the hive to gather nectar, pollen, water and certain sticky plant resins used in hive construction. Workers born early in the season will live about 6 weeks while those born in the fall will live until the following spring. Workers are about 12 mm long and highly specialized for what they do, having a structure called a pollen basket (or corbiculum) on each hind leg, an extra stomach for storing and transporting nectar or honey and four pairs of special glands that secrete beeswax on the underside of their abdomen. They have a straight, barbed stinger which can only be used once. It rips out of their abdomen after use, killing the bee.
As the field bees forage for nectar, pollen sticks to the fuzzy hairs which cover their bodies. Some of this pollen rubs off on the next flower they visit, fertilizing the flower and resulting in better fruit production. Some plants will not produce fruit at all without the help of honeybees. In the United States alone, it is estimated that honeybees accomplish 1/4 of the pollination needed for all fruit produced for human consumption - an estimated $10 billion worth of work each year!
The field bees stop periodically to groom themselves and collect the pollen onto their pollen baskets. They remove this load from their legs when they return to the hive and the house bees store it in a special part of the comb. The pollen provides protein and other essential nutrients for the bees.
Pheasant's Eye Daffodil or Poet's Narcissus

This variety has been known to naturalize easily and has been found to live in gardens for hundred of years. I purchased this batch from Johnny's Selected Seeds four years ago, and they are just beautiful here in the late spring. Their new growth emerged the first week of March. This variety of daffodil has not been hybridized.
From A Modern Herbal, Mrs. M. Grieve writes, "The bulbs of N. poeticus (Linn.), the POET'S NARCISSUS, are more dangerous than those of the Daffodil, being powerfully emetic and irritant. The scent of the flowers is deleterious, if they are present in any quantity in a closed room, producing in some persons headache and even vomiting."
The Simple Beauty of Grape Hyacinths

These hyacinth cousins naturalize easily. The leaves last a long time after the flowers are gone, so carefully choose their position in the garden. Once the bulbs are established, it is hard to completely eradicate them from the garden, but not impossible.
The name Muscari comes from the Latin muscus, so named for the scent of some of the species, and botryoides because the inflorescence resembles a miniature cluster of grapes.
I planted about 3 bags of these little guys around my mailbox several years ago. As you may be able to see in this photo, I really need to dig and divide them because they have become so dense that it is difficult to interplant pansies or summer annuals within the foliage. The blue flowers from my bulbs are two-toned. The foliage lasts all season here in zone 7B.
Peachy Pinks

The peach, Prunus persica (L.) Batsch, is native to China. From China, peaches were introduced to Persia, Greece, and temperate European countries including Italy, Spain, and France. Peaches were introduced to the southeastern United States more than 300 years ago when the Spanish visited the Florida region in the 1500s. It is believed that in the northeastern United States the early English and French settlers brought peach seeds with them.
Our peach tree was already planted when we bought the house, so I have no idea what variety it is. We don't maintain the tree for its fruit, but we do appreciate its ornamental value.
Sunday, March 2, 2008
The Promise of Spring
Sunday, July 22, 2007
Sweet Alyssum
Tomatoes in the Sunshine
Baby Fall Cucumbers
Perennial Chamomile
Chamomile is one of the most cheerful companion plants I've found. Not only are the delicate blossoms a nice contrast to larger-leafed veggetables in the garden, but they also emit a honey-apple fragrance that is terrific! I bought two of these plants last month and put them in the bed on each side of my bamboo trellis (originally for green beans...but now maybe for cucumbers). I hope these guys will come back next spring. The beneficial insects love them.
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Garden Compost
The wire compost bins I purchased two years ago from Gardener's Supply Company have worked out really well. They have held up to the elements and have done a good job of cooking up my organic leftovers. What's neat about these bins is that they lift up easily around a block of compost so you can plop them down right next to where they used to be and toss the compost back into it the bin as you aearate. I bought two bins, and I have made three spaces--so I always have a place to put the newly aerated pile. I made a compost sifter last spring that fits over my wheelbarrow. My daughter and I love to sift compost in the spring. The white grubs at the bottom of the pile make for a veritable feast for the ducks. They hang out right next to the compost pile waiting for treats. It's so funny!
Tomato Plants and The Wicked Wilt
Southernwood: A New Garden Companion
Beauty and the Bolt

The Darling Thymes
Summer's Southern Perfume
Monday, June 11, 2007
Red Rubin Basil
I interplanted my tomato bed with Red Rubin basil plants (Ocimum basilicum"Purpurascens'). The deep red-purple of the leaves is often edged in neon green, and this dark color provides quite a colorful contrast to the tomato plants. Basil and tomato friends are always faithful to one another in the garden.
Red Rubin Basil is an improved Dark Opal Basil, a 1992 All America Selections winner. Red Rubin is much more uniform in color than other purple basils. The leaves have a clove-like flavor which is a little too strong for pesto but great for almost any basil dish.