Wednesday, April 20, 2011

I thought they were dead but they live!


Surprise!  Rue Anemone popping up among the oak leaves. 
 Sigh...Another yucky day. My frustration is building as day after day goes by and I cannot weed...Sigh again. Yet even now my yard still holds surprises.

Last year a bunch of plants I had planted in the spring had disappeared by fall. Did the wildlife get them despite my spraying Deer Off on them every month or so? Did they not like my soil? Did I not water enough or too much?

I had forgotten that many native woodland plants rise up like Lazarus in the spring and then go dormant to avoid all that drought and heavy shade found in a woods in summer.

So, I was practically giddy when I took a stroll between icy rain showers and found that my virginia bluebells (thanks Tana!), blue cohosh, rue anemone, "gold heart" bleeding heart, columbine and wild geraniums have started making their appearance. Yay! (The blue cohosh and rue anemone in particular were surprises; I was sure they bit the dust last summer. )

Still no sign of some plants that struggled last year due to my neglect but I may yet be surprised. I had bought a clay-tolerant butterflyweed (the regular dry soil butterflyweed is one of my all-time favorite plants; in my previous garden I had both the native orange and the cultivated yellow type). I wanted to see if it could survive in my heavy clay front yard and I chalked it up for dead as I didn't see any activity until one day in mid-September when I started weeding the area that is hopefully going to be my itty-bitty prairie garden and found it alive and well. I have no idea when it started to grow but it had to have been mid June at least. Same thing with one of its relatives, a woodland plant called Purple Milkweed (no, not the kind that is considered a noxious weed). It also took forever for that one to getting going.


Look who's peeking up through the snow?  It's a blue cohosh plant
 I came back in chastened by these little plantlings' desire to live and have resolved not to go nuts at the Flower Factory in Stoughton this year but concentrate on the plants already here. (Of course, last year my husband almost fainted when he saw the receipt for FF when I got a little crazy. There's another reason to keep my head this year.)

Friday, April 15, 2011

And with Spring Comes Joy



Hellebore-I'm in love!
Ugh, it's a cold and windy day here. I should be out working in the yard but it's just too miserable. My neighbor's daffodils are already in full bloom but mine aren't quite there yet.

Still, there are a couple of other plants that are putting on a show, like bright blue squill. There are many yards in our town that basically have bright blue lawns due to so much squill. Before we moved here, I had only seen "bulberized" lawns in garden mags. For the short period of time squill are in bloom it looks amazing. I just hope these little buggers aren't invasive. It looks like they have the potential to be and there are already enough garden meanies in my yard as it is.

Speaking of pretty blooms, I just saw my first live hellebore bloom and I am awed at how pretty this plant is when other plants are just starting to wake up. I put in three 'Ivory Prince' last spring and am now thinking of adding more.

'Sem' false spirea is very colorful in the spring-
too bad I didn't get a better shot of how bright it actually is
 I like their leaves, their flowers, their light fragrance and the wildlife didn't touch them all year, probably because they are poisonous. I guess there's a native hellebore, false hellebore/indian poke (veratrum viride), that is also highly toxic and causes problems with livestock. If we didn't have neighbors with horses, I'd be tempted to try it; the leaves are very nice-looking.

There are other signs of welcome plant life in my flower beds: my robust male ferns are greening up and I see fresh pulmonaria leaves and flower buds. One of my favorite plants, 'Heaven Scent' jacob's ladder is looking good and I see my old-fashioned bleeding hearts pushing their ferny red shoots up a bit more each day. Lots of green or red shoots everywhere I look-very exciting!

'Eroica' bergenia in March after the snow melted
Others like bergenia, lamium, epimedium and thyme stayed kind of green all winter (well, purple in the case of the bergenia), which I would glimpse once in a while when the snow melted enough. Yep, we had plenty of snow; now we need rain. Last year was a really dry spring and I'm hoping it's not the same story this year. Please, please, please rain!

Lastly, my Sem false spirea is putting on its fiery spring show. It's leaves were so bright I just had to take a picture. So, with a happy heart after seeing all these signs of spring, I'll use the yucky weather to do some chores around the house and rest up for my next big weeding event.


Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Vinca, Loosestrife and Bishop's Weed-Oh My!




Here's the part of the foundation bed that I worked on today. 
It was horribly overgrown and weedy-a real mess. 
It'll be interesting to see what it looks like in a couple of months.
I have been so focused on my garlic mustard and buckthorn invasion that I haven't done anything with the front foundation, which was a big mess. The previous owners had planted variegated vinca along the foundation with some shrubs and perennials. The vinca is everywhere; it's in the lawn, tripping people on the sidewalk, climbing over and through the shrubs, and eating up the other perennials like a kid sucking down candy. That's one side of the bed.

The other side has gooseneck loosestrife which is also busy swallowing its neighbors. In another bed that's just across a gravel path, there's a third garden thug rampaging: bishop's weed. Although I don't have anything against these bullies when sited properly, they just can't get along with others in a mixed bed, so I started digging them out today.

I don't plan on keeping any of the vinca or bishop's weed 'cuz I don't have a good spot for them and they aren't particularly pretty or usefull. However, I do plan to keep one patch of gooseneck loosestrife 'cuz I do like how it looks in bloom and the leaves have pretty color in the fall.
This is what the foundation bed looked like
the summer before we bought the place-not very attractive.
All the plants in this bed are pretty basic: daylilies, heuchera, geranium, columbine, rudbeckia and tickseed. Nothing particularly exciting. It took me all day but I re-edged the bed, fertilized with High Country Garden's Yum Yum Mix, weeded and mulched, and transplanted some of the plants to new locations. (After all that effort, I'll be using a heating pad tonight for sure.)

I've never grown heuchera before and so was shocked to find how straggly these were. Instead of nice neat clumps of leaves, I found long woody stems with new growth sticking several inches out of the ground and not much for roots either. I replanted most of these so that the new growth was ground level. Not sure that's what I was supposed to do; I guess we'll find out. I had to do the same thing with a patch of 'Biokovo' geranium I transplanted. Like the heuchera, it had big woody stems with the new growth at the end of the stem.
Since this particular flower bed hasn't been touched for almost two full years, I figure I'll see what it looks like this summer and then next year-well, I hate waiting so maybe this fall-I'll figure out how to add some pizzazz to it. I'm feeling a bit conflicted, however. I like how the previous owners limited their plant palette and used big swaths of the same plant in large sections of their beds but I also don't want to waste one of the only full sun areas of my whole yard.

Of course, although overall I was happy with the results of today's labor, there were some screw-ups too. I'm pretty sure I killed some columbine plants. I also think I remember seeing some astilbe in this bed last year. I didn't see any today and may have pulled them up when I was getting all apocalyptic on the vinca. I also accidentally broke the shoots off some lilies as I was grappling with some gooseneck loosestrife.


These are where the spore on the yews came from-
weird looking, aren't they?
 Oh, and my yews tricked me today. I was raking out leaves from under them and saw intermittent wisps of thick smoke. What could possibly be burning? I searched the whole bed and didn't smell any smoke smell but I could see it. It took me several minutes to figure it out; the yews were releasing their spores whenever I bumped their branches.

The pollen irritated my nose a bit and left a tinny taste in my mouth. I was a bit concerned; pretty much all parts of a yew are poisonous. Could the spore be too? I told my kids that if I collapsed to tell the 911 folk that I had inhaled a bunch of yew spore. "You what?" they asked. "YEW SPORE" I said slowly and evenly. "You score?" was their reply. "Forget it" I mumbled and went back to my gardening.

Monday, April 11, 2011

Another Tree Bites the Dust


Perfect placement of the downed mulberry
earned my hubby fishing time on Sunday
Hi all! I am pretty upbeat today which is a nice change from Friday when everything went wrong. Not only was I informed our gutters are rotted and so is our cupola, I managed to lose my car/house keys in our woods. My spouse and I searched in the dark with flashlights but couldn't find them.

Luckily it didn't rain like it was supposed to and after I unsuccessfully searched again the next morning, I offered a $5 reward to whichever of my children found them. 10 minutes later, I had my keys back.

Turns out while I was hauling brush, the key chain, which was in my jacket pocket at the time, managed to get snagged by one of the branches (probably when I tripped on a virginia creeper vine and the wheelbarrow with the brush tipped over on top of me).

Why was I hauling brush in the dark? Well, because my peach and cherry trees had arrived and so it was time to take down the big mulberry by our driveway. And because we didn't know what the weather was supposed to be like, we figured we'd better hit the ground running Saturday morning which meant taking down smaller branches the prior evening.

I always get queasy to my stomach when we take down trees, especially the bigger ones. I didn't feel bad about this one though. It was a three-strikes-you're-out scenario. In 2009 it had been struck by lightning and we had to remove one of its main forks, leaving it misshapen and ugly. It also had leaf spot disease and some other issue that left dark smears on its trunk and branches. Thirdly, it was one of the invasive morus alba, not our native morus rubra.

We should have hired an arborist to take it down 'cuz it was quite large and if we didn't drop it right, it'd crush either our neighbor's car and newly-planted shrubs, or our spruces. Luckily, after one large dropped branch took my husband off the ladder (he says he jumped) he gained some respect for the tree, slowed down, and with our neighbor's help, managed to drop the rest of the tree into perfect position, saving car, shrubs and spruces, not to mention all of us would-be lumberjacks.

What a mess!
Dropping the tree, cutting it into manageable bits and then carting away the branches took us all day. However, I still had some time to get my Reliance peach tree and North Star cherry tree (both from Stark Bros) planted, all the garlic mustard and dandelions pulled from my future berry garden, and two virginia creeper vines trimmed in the same section of yard.

The only sad part of the whole deal was that I also ended up taking out two small trees that turned out to be Nannyberry. The small one was badly infected with cottony maple leaf scale. The bigger one was just too big to transplant and had to be removed because it was too near the house.

Nannyberry buds
Our arborist had told me they were viburnums and I didn't know there are native viburnums, so when another arborist told me they were scrub trees, I didn't research them as carefully as I should have. Of course, after I had removed them, I found a photo of a Nannyberry (viburnum lentago) on the 'net. (The buds are very distinctive and look a bit like a lily-flowering tulip before it opens).

According to the 'net, nannyberries have edible fruit and are decent wildlife shrubs/small trees. Dang it! Luckily I still have others on the other side of the property so I'll take good care of those and now I'll know how to identify their saplings.

Friday, April 8, 2011

Eternal Battle Against Woodland Invaders


Yep, all that green stuff is garlic mustard
(this is a photo taken summer 2009, 
when we moved in to our house )
 Yes, the mighty warrior is hurting mightily today.  Every muscle and joint in my body is sore...I can hardly move. Yesterday I decided I'd engage the enemy and renew my seemingly eternal struggle for woodlot supremacy against that infernal invasive, garlic mustard.  After two summers and one spring of fighting a rampant garlic mustard invasion in my backyard, I feel like I'm finally starting to win.

It was relatively warm and the ground was soft due to a recent rain...a perfect time to weed.  I like early spring weeding because the bugs and spiders aren't out in full force yet.  (Nothing creepier than sticking your hand in the crevice of some rotting wood to get a stray weed.  You just KNOW your fingers aren't alone in there.)  Also the mosquitoes aren't out yet so it's actually pleasant to be outside.

Despite reducing the garlic mustard's overall numbers and managing to retake some of the yard, it's still pretty ugly out there.  So, after an initial rush of gut-wrenching panic,  I calmed down and decided to just pick a spot and start pulling.  (I don't want to use herbicide because the garlic mustard is intermingled with native plants I want to keep.)   

This is what Motherwort looks like in April-
when the DNR said it's invasive, they meant it. 
I let one plant go to seed last year
because I thought it was Common Mallow 
and now its EVERYWHERE!
I worked all day (not even stopping for lunch) and was thrilled to see that I only filled one garbage bag of mature plants.  (I also pulled any motherwort and brambles I found but those went into the compost pile) Last spring it was five bags for the same section of yard.  (I'm a big believer in composting, but in the case of garlic mustard I burn it or put it out for the landfill even if it hasn't flowered.  GM is allelopathic and affects soil microorganisms, which wrecks the soil. One study found its negative effects lasted for at least 2 years after it was removed.)



Here is a medium-sized garlic mustard plant (leavs and root). 
They can get MUCH bigger and can flower with only a couple of leaves on them. 
If you look hard you can see all the garlic mustard seedlings around it.
  Unfortunately, I also saw thousands of healthy green sprouts with purple stems everywhere.  EVERYWHERE!  Garlic Mustard seeds can stay alive and dormant in the soil for several years.  So even though I worked tirelessly last year to make sure no GM seeded, there are still plenty of existing seeds in the seed bank.  I plan to hoe down those little guys tomorrow when I'm not so sore.  I was also thinking of trying some GM sprouts in my salad; after all they were originally a food crop.

I also had to stop and think for a moment; GM is a biennial and dies after its second year, so how did I have so many fully mature plants this spring?  Did I really miss that many during my GM-pulling campaigns?  If you don't pull them at the right time (just before they flower) and don't get all the roots, they regrow.  I'm wondering if they are like a biennial salvia I used to grow.  As long as you didn't let it flower and set seed, it acted like a perennial and I had the same plants come back year after year.  Maybe this explains the very fat and healthy GM I found yesterday.  Either that or I'm a sloppy weeder.

Can't wait to see this Hellebore flower
So, anyhow, the battle against GM has started anew and I'm hoping I have the physical prowess to finish the fight.  I'll take this rainy day as a rest day and plan my attack for tomorrow.  Besides, I have some other things to think about.  Like, why were there two wood ducks sitting in a tree in our back yard this morning?  We aren't that close to water. 

How did I manage to plant most of my shrubs in the front yard right on the utility line?  Why didn't I call Digger's Hotline before I planted them?

Also, one of the hellebores I planted last year has some flower buds on it.  When will it flower? I'm pretty excited; I've never seen a hellebore in flower before (except in magazines). 

And, there's new activity in a burrow that we found in our yard last year.  I saw something big out of the corner of my eyes zip into it the other day.  I was pretty sure it was a groundhog (I saw some cream-colored fur) but yesterday I smelled skunk near it.  I hope it's a skunk.  Woodchucks are bad business when it comes to gardening.