Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Super Succulent
Sara just sent this photo of her succulent Hen and Chicks blooming in the container we planted together several years ago. Amazing bloom! It has been an unusual summer...
End of July and Weird Weather Continues
It's July 31st and the weather continues either with downpours or extreme heat. The gardens look weather-beaten with sunburned hostas (if they were not eaten by deer) and hairy mold on the impatiens. The petunias are gone, whether to insects or extreme weather I cannot tell. There is nothing left to investigate. No leaves, no buds--just some stems.
But the wildflowers on the hillside are doing well.
But the wildflowers on the hillside are doing well.
Black-eyed Susans
Grasses
Blue-eyed Grass?
A foxglove? It seems impossible in this weather...
Boneset with yellow or Pale Jewelweed
Coreopsis
Coreopsis
and some blooms too small to capture easily in the wild: hop clover, St. John's Wort, Bird's Foot Trefoil, Smartweed, and
Quite a variety and display despite the weather.
But they are natives!
Sunday, July 15, 2012
DSI = Deer Scene Investigators
daylilies in other locations around the garden, don't look quite the same.
It started with the small Rose of Sharon bush. I noticed sharp, 45 degree angle cuts on the lowest leaves. This indicated rabbits. But at the top, you will notice ragged edges of ripped stems. Deer!
And what the deer didn't get, the insects finished up.
I wonder why the bud was left uneaten?
Along the backyards of four neighbors, the flower borders show deer damage.
The damage in my garden is minimal compared to the daylily border in my neighbor's bed (with the blue tear drop garden ornament) and the daisy and daylily border in the next neighbor's back border which continues the line of the fence along the top of the hillside.
They have no blooms left!
We have left on the rear floodlights, covered the blooms with sheets and plastic, sprayed several deer repellents, and turned over the birdbath when hoof marks were found near the water source.
With some luck and today's rain, the blooms may return. But tomorrow we begin
our 5th heat wave for the summer! A gardener is always an investigator: weather, insects,
disease. There is always some type of invader.
One known fact: the entire hillside of Black-eyed Susans beyond the fence is untouched by the deer.
Thursday, July 5, 2012
July's Full Moon--The Summer Moon
When I went out in the garden this morning with the camera, I startled a sparrow. She and her mate have been busy catching insects in the garden to feed their baby birds. I love the reflection of the bright blue sky and the flower bed in the gazing ball top of the garden ornament.
The garden is lush now that it is truly summer, as proven by the Summer Moon (July's full moon)tonight. And all those blooms and greenery mean the insects are plentiful also.
The butterflies have arrived as the garden's colors attract them. The hollyhocks still have a little rust, but their bloom has not been affected. Everything seems to be in balance in the food cycle of the flora and fauna.
Even the passing rains are balanced with the 90+ degree temperatures. This morning I found the Lady's Mantle covered with drops from last night's rain, just as I had found it earlier in spring.
I'll find some wood to knock on!
I'm glad I went out this morning to discover Nature in sync!
Mystery Bird Revealed
I first heard it and went to the deck to find out what was making all that racket. Then I spied it in the mulched landscape bed across the street.
I thought it might be a turkey hen from behind, but when it turned around
and started coming toward me, I realized I could not identify it.
It had wattles like a turkey but not the fanned tail. It was large and it was noisy.
It started across the street and up the hill. I heard it was in the neighbor's yard across the cul-de-sac from our house. That's when I found out it was a guinea hen. Amazing bird--but where did it come from--and alone? Mystery bird's identity revealed but source still a secret.
Sunday, July 1, 2012
End of June = Summer Bloom
Ahh, the last day of June. Now the really hot weather begins--although we've had a heat wave with 90s the past three days. Still, the flowers are at peak. The daisies lift their heads to the sun with the butterfly bush and the hollyhocks in the background.
The Coreopsis loves the heat but shows a little wear and tear from the rains earlier in the week.
The perennial sunflower Helianthus looks okay now, but I had to tie it upright because it was on the ground. I also had to use Bayer All in One on it because some kind of insect was sucking the life out of it.
Fresh as daisy after its insect bath and posture control...
The daylilies in my neighbors borders planted two to three years ago look refreshed after a watering.
The daylilies put on quite a show and beckon you to walk along the border, but the entrance to my secret garden is almost hidden by the daisies. I put up a sign and shot low to show the stepping stones that lead into the garden bench and a small opening. Once inside the area, the smell of the butterfly bush and the flowers surrounding you is intoxicating. Sorry, no smells available online!
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