Thursday, August 22, 2013

The Garden in August

I went to group therapy this morning. 

I’ll bet you didn’t know that I do that once in a while - although not often enough lately. 

The others there were pretty quiet, but I had a lot to say.  They did remark, though, that they were feeling crowded, or even run over by others, or were having trouble standing, or just plain tired.  Some were feeling very well and looking it.

I was in the Garden and it needed some work.  I had neglected it for several weeks, now, and most of it was a mess.  I decided to start at the beginning and go to the end, but didn’t make it that far and will have to finish tomorrow or Saturday.

            The ajuga looked good and was thriving, even though it doesn’t get all the water it needs.  We’ve had enough rain to keep it going, but it will need more to spread.  There were no complaints from the ajuga except for wanting an intruding weed or two moved elsewhere.


I planted the ajuga along the broken edge of the patio. It has a lot of shade most of the day.  I’ve wrapped it around two of the porch posts to cover up both the concrete used to set them and that crumbling edge.  I have planted it most places I’ve lived since it is a tough plant, flowers are nice, leaves are attractive, and it’s not aggressive. 

      Next to check out was the little circle of Bethlehem star.  It’s doing fine right now and early next spring I’ll give it a little more room by spreading the rock circle a little.  It only needed a few runners of grass taken out; the grass also thought it was a fine place to be growing.

I pulled a few weeds from the pathway.  I’ve used sawdust and shavings from The Shop and that has really worked out well.  The weeds are slow coming through - in fact, most of what I pull is seedling trees, which blow in from above, or seeds from those marguerite daisies planted under the redbud.  It makes a good layer to kneel on while working the beds, isn’t muddy when it rains (!), and is soft to walk on, but not too soft.  Goldilocks would like it.

I went to the shed to get my weed bucket and found this:


The web was from the top of the opening to the ground and from side to side across the opening.  I took photos first, in case I messed up the web getting the bucket.

What amazed me was the size and color.  Usually we get brown or black spiders, but not colored ones.  I haven’t seen this spider (and this link) before and will have to look it up on the Internet. 

Later, in one of the other beds, I did see a round black spider with bright red spots on the back - kind of like a lady bug, in reverse.  I’ll have to look that one up, too.  I did and can only find a black widow spider shown for red and black.  I'd swear, though, that this one didn't have the hourglass, but spots instead.  

 This artemesia was determined to take over the pathway, the lawn, and had engulfed the small metal table Mom needed to set things on while filling the feeder above. 

I’ve seen several places around town where the homeowner is using Powis Castle almost as a ground cover, it spreads so nicely.  It doesn’t spread by runners, or roots, just by becoming Large.   And nothing seems to grow under it to come up through and need removing.  But that may be that the gardners who are growing it are tending the bed carefully.  I gave it a buzz-cut on the path side.  See - didn’t even move the table, just uncovered it.


On the lawn side I had built a low stone “wall”, more for decoration than anything else.  Now it was time to get serious.  I pulled out most of the rocks and started re-doing the wall, building it quite a bit higher.  I ruthlessly trimmed the artemesia; I wanted to keep it off the grass - where it had previously sprawled - for ease in edging, and to show off the stones.  It took me a while to figure out what I wanted from our stone pile and then to get them balanced.  Most of the rocks are chunks, and it was a trick to get them to stay stable enough they couldn’t be easily knocked over.  Some broken pavers standing between the limbs and the stones will keep them from caving in - I hope.  I finally did manage to get the rocks to fit pretty well, too.  This is the finish from the lawn.


I went to the end of the long, dry bed next.  It was a sad sight.  The creeping thyme had galloped instead; the achillea had fallen over everyone else in the neighborhood, including the stronger, taller sage; the marigolds were being smothered; the Spanish lavender was pushing out it’s neighbors; the Provence lavender was . . . the Provence lavender!  where was it???  Yuck. 



The yard (and thus the garden) slopes just a little.  Barely noticeable unless you’re at the bottom of the slope.  Guess where I planted the likes-high-and-dry lavender. 

A front page newspaper article last week gives this information about rainfall amounts from January 1st to August 12th in the wettest cities in the country . . .

Oklahoma City, normal (not counting drought?) 22.89 inches; received so far 43.77

Miami, normal (does that count hurricanes?) 34.62 inches; received so far 40.09

Seattle, normal (we believe Seattleites have webbed feet) 19.96; received so far 18.22 inches

Houston, normal (I’ll bet most of this does come during hurricane season!) 29.37; received so far 18.02

Portland, normal 19.95; received so far 14.57

What surprises me is that, according to this article, our normal is higher than the West Coast places. 

You can tell that we’ve had excessive, but welcome, rainfall this year.  No wonder the lavender gave up and expired.

There are some green bits still in this mess, so maybe I can rescue one or two.  I’m also going to build a rock wall along this edge of the DRY bed and raise the dirt so the next lavender will have a better chance at keeping the roots in good shape.

On the way to the workroom to get scissors, I noticed this.  Mom picked up a rock somewhere that is roughly shaped like the Oklahoma outline.  It leans against a stump, which leans against the redbud trunk.  That’s a lot of leaning . . .   The ants have decided to hasten along the decay of the stump, and are digging out the inside.  They are Tiny Ants.  So tiny that they don’t show up in this photo.  What workaholics they must be! 


Mom came out to take a look and spotted this in the redbud -  

 Isn't this the loveliest thing you ever saw?  
I wanted to touch the fungi and see if they were as 
velvety as they looked, but restrained myself.
    
When I was ready to stop for the day, this is what I had accomplished.  The chair is full of cuttings from the Spanish lavender waiting for me to spread it on old window screens to dry.  The armloads of artemesia clippings I piled around a decaying tree stump to the east of the garden, along the fence line.  They look  nice there and will take a bit to decompose themselves.  I also hope they will ward off the neighbor’s critter who uses the stump for a stile and makes a mess in the garden.   We’ll see.

The bucket has the thyme I pulled out, roots and all.  I’m taking it home to put in a flower bed there.  What doesn’t still have roots, I’ll dry.

This is the current view from the gate at the bottom of the yard.  

I was glad to see so much wildlife in the garden, in addition to the birds and earthworms.  More to come another day . . .