Monday, September 12, 2011

Over a Month Has Passed!

Wow, that went fast!

The season's turned and we're now having some chilly mornings. Yesterday it supposedly went over 100 degrees (the town marquis said 103) but the mornings and evenings are wonderfully cool.

Tim Morgan and his boys were here mowing Saturday. We asked them to mow down most of the garden beds since the weeds were really getting out of control and we didn't want them to reseed. The yard looks sooo much better now!

I just ordered some Green Manure Cover Crop (1 lb) off of Amazon, which is a mix of different cover crops that can be used as green manure. As soon as it comes, I'm going to sow it into the mowed-down garden beds to smother the weed stumps that are there. I think this is a better approach than tilling, which only turns up more weeds.

This morning I cut down/ weeded the strawberry bed which was also going gangbusters with weeds. Then I sowed 1/4-lb of Austrian Winter Pea (S22197) from Seeds of Change and I have the sprinkler on it now. I'd like to buy some mulch and manure and such from Missouri Organic before winter.

http://www.missouriorganic.com/

The carrots are getting close to ripe, I think, and the leeks are hanging in there, but I'm not sure they'll be ready before winter actually hits us. It's been a slow season for them since it was so hot; I think that stunted them a bit.

It's time and actually past time to plant fall cool-weather crops, such as brussels sprouts, lettuce, spinach, etc. I still may before too long. Mom and Dad leave Wednesday to go to Europe for 3 weeks and hopefully I can work out in the yard, although it'll be busy for me too with Shakespeare Under the Stars and work.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Forecast - Wow!


The 9th of August

This is the time of year that mosquitoes take to heart the commandment of their Creator when He told His creatures to "Increase and multiply!" And indeed they are obedient little critters. I can't tell the number of bites I got while out weeding yesterday and this morning I wore a halo of high-pitched buzzing companions.

The yard is suffering from the only intermittent rainfalls and the drawn-out heat wave we recently passed through. We have at last been given a respite - for example, tomorrow the high is only supposed to be 77 degrees... can it be?

So I've kept watering the bushes and vegetables in the early morning but possibly not as diligently as I ought to've. The weeds are the neighboring camps that are invading from every side. What weapon to call on next? The weather is on their side; the bugs deter them not. My new idea is consistent and persistent attack - every morning before the heat comes to their defense, I shall go out armed with garden glove and de-cultivator and wage battle after battle until the fields are empty of enemy corpses. This, I believe, is the only solution.

And it is high time. August is the prime for selecting short-season Fall crops and garlic, not to mention cover crops, which I also intend to plant.

In the meantime, here are some recent pictures for you:

Friday, August 5, 2011

Arbor Day Foundation

Mom and I are looking at getting memberships with the Arbor Day Foundation. It was advertised in the St. Mary's Star, and when you join, you get ten free baby trees (of your choice). She's going to let me know tomorrow morning whether or not she wants to go ahead and do it. If we each joined, we get twenty trees, shipped to us somewhere between October and December (whenever our area's seasonally best time for transplanting is).


We really have nothing to lose, just need to think where we'd put them. Here are the choices:

  • 10 Flowering Trees
  • 10 Colorado Blue Spruces
  • 10 Trees Mix
  • 10 Wild Bird Garden
  • 10 Oak Trees
  • 10 White Pines
  • 10 Redbuds
  • 10 Autumn Classics
  • 10 White Firs

Cool Days

Cool is a relative term, but the high temperature in the coming 5 days is supposed to be no more than 94 degrees! That's a good 20 degrees cooler than it got this past week... Today the high predicted is a mere 88! It's delightfully cool right now, although humid. The thermometer reads 74F.

We got a nice rainfall overnight - 1/2-inch total precipitation. The earth looks nice and wet, and it's still overcast. The forecast is a chance of thunderstorms off and on through next Wednesday, Aug. 10th. Deo Gratias!

Friday, July 29, 2011

RAIN!!

Thanks be to God for a wonderful rain this past night, and even continuing on into the morning. We've gotten 6 inches so far! I think it's been steadily coming down since about 11 pm last night. There was some serious lightning around then that Mom and I went and watched, and it was still gently raining when I went out at 6:15 this morning.

Day before yesterday was a scorcher - 106F was the high. Here's the month's calendar, which shows how many hot days we've had...

Monday, July 25, 2011

A Bout of Rain!

Monnie and Ania and I went to Grand Prairie for the weekend and as we neared home on the way back, we passed through several bouts of heavy rain. Shortly after we got home, another round of lightning and rain moved in to St. Mary's.

In the end .27 inches fell, to make the monthly total 1.19 inches. A very dry month. The average monthly rainfall to date is 3 inches for July, so we're not even halfway there and the month lacks only one week to its end.

I watered Monday through Thursday this past week, because combined with the lack of rain have been the consistent triple digit temperatures the past week or so.

Here's a calendar of the month's temperature, etc. to date:


You see how we've had 14 days hit over 100F out of the first 24 of this month (today is still in progress), and the past 10 days were consecutively that high. I'm going to keep on watering in the early morning! It's 69F out right now, so I'm going to go water before the sun comes through.

Friday, July 8, 2011

At-Long-Last Update

The last in-depth news of the yard was back on May 22nd. The yard and garden beds look way different now. To begin with, the irises bowed out to make room for the Tiger lilies, which bloomed the second week of June. That week was pretty much their season - they came and went quickly.


We harvested three bunches of spinach on June 4th.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Tomato Seeds Planted

Last Saturday (June 11th) I planted some Double-Rich tomatoes as well as some cherry tomatoes in Beta. I just planted seeds so they will be a later crop but the soils are actually pretty prime for them.

I also planted Tau with the Yellowstone wildflowers, lavender seeds, and some various others, including morning glories along the fence. Then I planted bells of Ireland on the north end of the pea bed. These are all seeds as well so we will have to be patient!

The yard is doing well, overall. The grapevines are really prospering.

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Spinach Harvest

Today we harvested and ate the spinach (3 plants) for dinner. It's 49 days since I planted them. They were huge, and delicious. I could probably plant another round under the peas once those get a little taller. They are blossoming now. The leeks and carrots are 4-5" tall, and the celery is about 3/4".

Friday, June 3, 2011

To Weed

Hi Mom and Dad!

I am thinking that I won't be up yet at the point you want to start gardening, so here's a quick start guide. :)

If you want to weed, please weed:

  1. around the vinca vines (northwest fenceline)
  2. in Alpha (the bed with the mini spruce and lavender)
  3. in Beta (but not the carrots, leeks, marigold, or celery - just the tall weeds)
  4. Delta and Epsilon may be weeded as well (= the two west of the peas)
  5. Iota and Lambda (the beds flanking the strawberry patch) have cover crops - Mom may be able to identity them. Lambda (the eastern one) has more weeds than Iota. The cover crop in Lambda is Spring Triticale; they have twisted tops, so if you want, you could weed whatever isn't Triticale.
  6. of course, the grass in the asparagus beds

If you would still like more, I think we should put that small-grid chicken wire around the strawberries and other berries before the bunny season really hops into gear.

Thanks a lot! Not sure what time I'll be up but see you then. :)

Rose

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Time to Plant Tomatoes!

The ground is wet from a heavy rain last night and the soil temperatures are warmer. Tomorrow or Saturday morning I'll be planting tomatoes! I'll be trying them from seed.

The leeks are doing fabulously, and there are a couple baby-baby celery plants coming up. What I thought was celery before was actually marigold plants springing up (five or six of them!). The carrots are also healthy. The spinach is about ready to harvest. The sweet peas and cover crops are doing well, along with the rose bush, the grape vines, and the berry bushes (although I believe those got a bit of a mowing this last time around).

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Sumer Is Icumen In

Summer is a-comin’ in

Loudly sing cuckoo!
Bloweth seed and groweth mead
And springeth wood anew,
Sing cuckoo
Ewe now bleateth after lamb,
Low’th after calf the cow. 
Bullock starteth, buck now verteth,
Merry sing cuckoo,
Cuckoo, cuckoo,
Oh, loud now sing we cuckoo,
Oh, cease we never now!

Many updates to note!

We had hail twice again last night but it wasn't as long in duration as last time. It took some leaves from the trees but no big branches, so I'm hopeful it didn't damage any plants.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Guest Post - the Future of the Yard

Here is a sketch of IDEAS ("Plans") from over 1996-2011 ~

Area by the WEST GATE:
1  -  To terrace the slope. 
2  -  Eventually to put a swing on the low branch of the nearby tree and possibly a seat in the shade.
3  -  To make a sort of leveled-up, raised bed (including a Hugelkultur experiment) where the new bushes and trees have been planted. This would incorporate the Honey Locust tree in a nice, round pattern, but we would need help with the "retaining wall" and stonework.  Possibly use railroad ties?
4  -  On the front side of the fence, add yew bushes for privacy. (see "Front Yard" below)

Area by the BACK FENCE:
1  -  To let the grapes grow big and strong, and add a pergola or something to that southwest corner.
2  -  I've always pictured a grotto back there somewhere between the corner and the bend in the rock bed.
3  -  Eventually to move all of the wood pile back inside the yard - this would also allow the gate to be fully opened.

Area by the EAST GATE:
1  -  Bundle up the rest of the Austree sticks (and perhaps also some from the piles in the yard). They make fantastic, convenient kindling wood that way!
2  -  Dad is going to find a place to put the bed liner for the truck. We also need to give away the old basketball hoop.
3  -  When the patio is re-done, I want to incorporate a planter somewhere under the stairs next to it. We need to control the soil erosion there (from the drainspout) as well, which may contribute to the design of the planter. Perhaps some concrete steps also?
4  -  I am partial to keeping the area just dirt as it is.  We do need to give the A/C units air.
5  -  Perhaps eventually a hedge of roses along the grassline?  Or some tall, thin junipers that would be a privacy screen from the house next door?  Latticework is also a possibility along the west edge of the deck (leaving air for the A/C).

In GENERAL:
1  -  Use of natural stones in many places.
2  -  To get seats, benches.
3  -  A possible bird-bath
4  -  Possible walk-way with pea-gravel
5  -  Possibly, possibly, possibly ? moving the rock bed or rearranging

In the FRONT YARD:
1  -  A sidewalk or path of stepping-stones to the front door from the curb
2  -  A flowerbed (raised? Might be difficult with the brick?) under the big north window, and nearby some bushes
3  -  Possibly a trellis on the west side of the porch with climbing roses (from Lettie P.?) or vines...
4  -  Possibly a circular planting around the lamp posts with greenery like ornamental grass and flowers?  Or just a bush next to each?
5  -  Some ground cover on the east slope outside the fence, but something that won't spread into the neighbor's yard...
6  -  Vines going up the telephone pole on the corner?
7  -  Possibly Hostas planted under the trees in the shade.

A lot of the ideas in the front are pending any mudjacking that may be done, etc.

On the WEST SIDE OF THE HOUSE (under the maples)
1  -  Vines up the side of the house?
2  -  Hostas under the tree  -- see above about yews

It seems there have been no lack of IDEAS this past 15 years. I don't expect to accomplish them all, but even if we do half of them, I think it will enhance the yard a lot! God bless it!

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Skinner's Nursery 04/28/11

This was the day Mom and I went in to Topeka and scoped out the evergreens at Skinner's Nursery.


Houston, We Have Hedge !

"It was the work of a moment." Well, not quite, but it came together very well in the end. In the course of the morning we got every last evergreen planted - spruce and arborvitae and juniper. Joe's Landscaping came Thursday morning and dug the holes (in about 1 hour).


Monday, May 2, 2011

Spring Cover Crops. . . Planted!

One Morning in May

And a fine morning it was! It was supposed to drop down into the mid-30's last night but I don't think it could've since it was near 50 this morning. It will apparently drop down into the 30's again this evening, but then the lows will be in the 40's and finally 50's by the end of the week. Here is the forecast from Wunderground:


Today is the observed Feast Day of St. Joseph the Worker. He did a lot of manual labor too, so good St. Joseph, please ask God to bless our efforts in the garden! I am sure Our Lady did some gardening as well, and she must have had quite a green thumb. Dear Blessed Mother, please ask God to give us a good and healthy crop this year, Who fed the Israelites with manna from heaven!

The soil is still pretty chilly so it's not yet time to plant the warm-weather crops. Hopefully sometime today I will be able to sow the Spring Cover Crops. The package came a few days ago. Here are the descriptions of the types I have:

Saturday, April 30, 2011

The Eve of May

Yesterday and today have been full-sun days, but also windy! The yard is showing it in the sudden sort of wilty-droopy-droughty look it has taken on. But then tomorrow night is forecast to be mid-30's (!) and thunderstorms middle to end of next week.

Here a few pictures. It looks like with the rain we got shortly after I planted, all the lettuce relocated to the celery corner, and I only see one celery shoot so far.

This is a little delicate celery sprout – with the two little leaves poking out on top. It is barely 1/8" tall.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

More Improvements :-)

It is exciting to work with living creatures such as plants. The ecosystem, in a sense, is a living organism itself. It's kind of analogous to the Mystical Body of Christ. Each member contributes his part to the good of the whole. The rest can limp along with a couple members missing, but they will have to work harder in some respects. So every man belongs to the Spiritual Ecosystem by the existence of his soul but not every man does his part.

Here are some pictures that will tell a million words in my stead (I'm sure I could come up with a million words, but I'll spare you this time). . .

Lovely Tulips!