Monday, May 31, 2010

The Infinity Garden in May


The Infinity Garden is where I have many of my medicinal herbs growing.
Lamb's Ear
Bay Tree
Rosemary
Horehound
Pennyroyal
Scented Geraniums
Sweet Laurel
Hyssop
Basil
Bouncing Bet
Mexican Oregano
Lime Balm
Wormwood
Borage
Creeping Marjoram
Fennel
Chicory
Nicotiana
Gotu Kola
French Sorrel
With this list of herbs I can cure most anything that ails you! And I have dozens of other herbs that have medicinal properties. They are growing throughout my gardens.


What's Blooming Now - 'Crazy Daisy' Shasta Daisies 05/31/10


Shasta Daisy 'Crazy Daisy' next to Catmint 'Walkers Low'.

What's Blooming Now - Bartlett's Bee Balm 05/30/10

Each of the petals of Bee Balm is actually tubular and filled with yumminess. The butterflies and hummingbirds are crazy for bee balm. The bees especially love it, hence the name.
Bartlett's Bee Balm and yellow yarrow.

Bee Balm is an herb as well as an ornamental plant. The young leaves and flowers can be dried and made into a tea that will ease respiratory problems, colds, and fevers.
Bee Balm is a deer-resistant plant. It spreads! A lot! Via stolons and seeds.


A Day at the Farm 05/30/10




These are Indian Spring Hollyhocks. Hollyhocks are the quintessential old-fashioned flower. I wish I could find one that was resistant to rust. What a nuisance. I have Powderpuff Hollyhocks growing in the long border. Hollyhocks reseed readily, and next year I hope to have lots of volunteers springing up all over the place.

Hot!

  • Weeded, weeded, weeded.
  • Fertilized around the pool with fish emulsion.
  • Watered the shrubs around the Greenhouse Gardens.
  • Watered the fruit trees.
  • Laid around the pool drinking Bud Lite and listening to rockabilly music on the satellite radio. It was good!
  • Deer damage in the Orchard and the Rose Garden. Bummer.
  • Planted lots of zinnia seeds. Between the armadillos, caterpillars, heat, and deer there are many opportunities for my plants not to make it. So I over-plant. I planted 6 packets of Prince and Princess mix, 2 packets of Peppermint Stick, 2 packets of Persian Carpet, 4 packets of Fruit Smoothie, and 2 packets of Envy zinnia seeds. I planted them in the Long Border, the Rose Garden, and the Star Garden.
  • Turned the soil in a few raised beds in the Vegetable Garden. I'll plant okra next week.
  • Harvested some Celebrity and pear tomatoes. Lots of jalapenos ready to harvest. Lots of ears of corn on my plants, tiny little cucumbers, and beautiful little purple eggplants.
  • Fertilized the corn.



Monday, May 24, 2010

The Vegetable Garden in May

This is cantaloupe growing along the fence outside of the Vegetable Garden. It gets a bit of run-off water from the sprinklers here, but it doesn't get water on the leaves every day (which will cause powdery mildew). Cantaloupe wants to climb up the fence. And that's fine as long as you support the fruit. Placing the fruit inside a woman's stocking will work fine to support the weight of the fruit and still allow sun to shine on the fruit.



Sunday, May 23, 2010

What's Blooming Now - Rudbeckia Maxima 05/23/10




Rudbeckia maxima has wonderful structure, six feet tall with really large blue-grey leaves. Growing it against a fence can help support it. Butterflies love it.

A Weekend at the Farm 05/22-23/10

My corn: as high as an elephant's eye.

I had the family reunion at the farm. We had a good turnout, about 45 people. We had lots of fun. Many, many thanks to my husband for all the work he did mowing, setting up, and cleaning up. On Sunday:


  • I weeded and weeded.

  • I finally finished my Wave Garden of grasses!! I planted three Cassian Fountain Grasses and five Little Bunny Grasses. No more space unless I make more beds!

  • I turned the compost piles.

  • Watered the fruit trees and the shrubs in the Greenhouse Gardens.

  • Fertilized lots of plants that didn't look like they were thriving.

  • Sprayed herbicide around an oak tree where I am going to build a bulb garden: Kill the grass, dig it up, lay down some cedar edging, fill it with soil and compost. Plant bulbs in the fall.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

What's Blooming Now - Spiderwort 05/18/10


A true blue flower. Spiderwort grows tall and has a tendency to flop over. They are good growing up through a rose shrub or something tall so that the tall companion plant can help prop it up. It dies back in the winter. The foliage is grey-blue.

What's Blooming Now - St. John's Wort 05/17/10


St. John's Wort is a beautiful shrub to have in a medicinal garden. It is one of the showiest flowering herbs. My St. John's Wort shrubs are landscape varieties rather than the true medicinal herb. They are about three feet tall. They have a heavy spring flush of blooms and then bloom sporadically after that. They are evergreen.
Medicinally, the flowers can be harvested and stored in oil for up to two weeks. The oil is used as an antiviral, an astringent, and a sedative. It has become a popular substitute for Prozac. Additionally, yellow dye can be made from the flowers.


Sunday, May 16, 2010

Gorgeous Caterpillars

Parsley is one of the larval foods of the Swallowtail butterflies. I have five parsley plants growing in my Long Border so that I can attract these beautiful larvae and the butterflies into which they ultimately grow. I also grow dill - they love that too. And the green tops of carrots are a favorite. Many larvae are particular - they only have a few plants on which they will feast. The Swallowtails are no exception.

Wht's Blooming Now - Blush Noisette 05/16/10

This rose is considered a pillar rose; I do not have mine growing as a pillar, however. Of all the Noisettes, this one has the most "shrub-like" shape. The smell of this rose is considered to be one of the most wonderful smelling roses ever. I find it to be a bit sickly-sweet.

The Noisettes are true southern roses. The first Noisette was raised in Charleston, South Carolina in 1811. It is called Champney's Pink Cluster. I have Champney's growing right next to Blush Noisette. Blush Noisette is the first rose to bear the name 'Noisette'. It was introduced in 1817.

Upon their introduction into trade, the Noisettes immediately became popular because they were remontant. That was still a rarity back then. All Noisette flowers are pale shades of cream, pink or yellow.

What's Blooming Now - Powderpuff Hollyhocks 05/16/10


Hollyhocks are so pretty, but their tendency to develop rust is very annoying. It takes a lot of conscientious spraying here in Texas (I don't know if rust is associated with humidity or rust is common everywhere) to avoid the ugly problem. But I love the old fashioned flowers, and hollyhocks certainly fit into that category.

What's Blooming Now - Frostproof Gardenia 05/15/10


Gorgeous and wonderfully scented gardenias. I love them. They need lots of iron to stay healthy!

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Caterpillars Everywhere!

You have to be a pretty easy going gardener to put up with this! There are three caterpillars on this cabbage that can be seen in the picture. There are several on the undersides of the leaves. I am growing this cabbage as a larval food source for the "Whites" The Whites include the Checkered White, the Cabbage White, and the Great Southern White. None of the larvae on this cabbage are in the White family, but nature has a way of telling you what it wants to do rather than the reverse. Hopefully I'll get some Whites before these little fellows eat the entire cabbage.

A Day at the Farm 05/13-15/10

Easy Ned Daylilies loaded with buds.

I like Easy Ned because the flowers have a different shape than most daylilies.


Easy Ned flower with several insects on it. I let insects live. So many of them serve a good purpose. Why spray?

It rained pretty steady Saturday morning so we went to town for breakfast and went to the hardware store. It cleared up by 9:00.
  • Fertilized all the shrubs around the pool while it was raining so they would get a good soak.
  • Fertilized my Salvia and Impatiens around the pool with fertilizer and some of the rainwater I am collecting in rain barrels now. I am recycling water in three rain barrels my husband placed around the house.
  • Fertilized Mlle Fanziska Kruger and Belinda's Dream in front of the house.
  • Fertilized Honey Sweet, Pearlie Mae, Livin' Easy, Lady Hillingdon, Souvenir de la Malmaison, Mdm. Isaac Pereire, Valentine, and Monsieur Tillier in the Rose Garden.

  • Fertilized all of my La Marne roses that line the driveway. They have small flowers but a very good smell.
  • Weeded, weeded, weeded.

  • Staked my cucumbers.

  • Harvested billions of poppy seeds. I really mean billions. I can't believe how many I have.
  • Staked my morning glories so they will climb the arbor.
  • Planted a Pennisetum 'Fireworks" in the Wave Garden. I'm on the look-out for some Little Bunny Grass and some more of the wonderfully colorful Fireworks Pennisetum. They have both been hard to find thus far.
  • Worked in the Vegetable Garden. Fertilized the tomatoes, cucumbers, eggplant, and peppers.

  • Fertilized the Big Daddy Hydrangeas and Salvia in that flowerbed.

  • Fertilized the point in the Star Garden that holds my Joe Pye Weed, Verbena Bonariensis, and Red Cauli Stone Crop.
  • Fertilized my Rudbeckia Maxima.

  • Weeded, weeded, weeded some more!
  • Cleaned out the bird baths. What a yucky chore...when you wait 4 months to do it...

  • I have never seen so many caterpillars in my life. They are on everything. They have eaten many of my plants down to the nub. Everywhere I look they are hanging on branches and stems, eating, eating, eating. They aren't butterfly caterpillars unfortunately. They are moth caterpillars. Generally speaking moths larvae are furry and butterfly larvae are hairless. But I'm just leaving them to their business. I'm not killing them. They make things look ugly, but they don't harm anything. My husband even remarked on how many there are. It's like some sort of weird science fiction movie - Attack of the Moth Larvae.

  • Butterflies are starting to get plentiful. I saw a Variegated Fritillary today, among others. They are very pretty! Also saw some Red Admirals. They are very distinctive. I'm trying to get a picture, but they move so fast!

Saturday, May 8, 2010

What's Blooming Now - Sea Star Sedum 05/07/10

Sedums are succulent ground covers. They are really wonderful, each one is more fascinating than the last one. The shapes and colors of the leaves are beautiful. The flowers are individually very small, but they really stand out because the groundcover becomes a solid carpet of color.


A close-up of the flowers.

You can see how Sea Star Sedum got its name. How charming! The flowers are shaped just like sea stars.This is a picture of Sea Star Sedum before it bloomed. I think it is a fascinating little ground cover whether in bloom or not in bloom.
Here are some other sedums I have growing:
This is called Silver Frost sedum. It blooms white flowers.

Mexican Sedum is blooming right now. The color of the flowers is yellow, they stand above the plant about 6 inches high. The color of the leaves is chartreuse, so that is a nice punch for the garden when it is not in bloom.







Friday, May 7, 2010

What's Blooming Now - Heritage Rose 05/06/10



Heritage rose was introduced by David Austin in 1983. This flower shape is known as a "cup and saucer". This is one of the three best smelling roses I have in my collection. The other two are the Star of the Republic and Chrysler Imperial. All three roses have scents that you cannot forget.

What's Blooming Now - Cedar Sage 05/06/10


Cedar Sage can take some shade, but I believe that it needs sun in order for it to bloom well. As the name suggests, this Texas native is often found under cedar trees. I have mine planted under a cedar tree amongst some coreopsis.
My cedar sage has only bloomed in the spring. I've never been able to get it to bloom any other time.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

What's Blooming Now - Sweetspire 05/06/10

The flowers of Sarah's Eve Sweetspire are a little bit more prominent than the flowers of Morningstar.
This is a Sarah's Eve Sweetspire. I planted it this last winter.

This is a close-up of a Morningstar Sweetspire flower.

This is Morningstar Sweetspire that I planted about three years ago.

Sweetspires like a little shade or dappled sunlight or morning sun/afternoon shade. I have two varieties: Morningstar and Sarah's Eve. They will colonize if left alone, in other words, they increase with runners that spring up all around the mother plant. They are evergreen. These are good shrubs. I recommend them.




Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Johnny Jump Ups

I have Johnny Jump Ups growing in my Vegetable Garden. They surround some carrots I have growing in a raised box. They are easy to grow from seed and such cheerful little flowers. The flowers are edible which makes them a perfect plant to grow in the Vegetable Garden. Pretty and edible.

I used to visit and revisit it a dozen times a day, and stand in deep contemplation over my vegetable progeny with a love that nobody could share or conceive of who had never taken part in the process of creation. It was one of the most bewitching sights in the world to observe a hill of beans thrusting aside the soil, or a row of early peas just peeping forth sufficiently to trace a line of delicate green.

- From Mosses from an Old Manse, 1854 -- Nathaniel Hawthorne


Monday, May 3, 2010

What's Blooming Now - Ballerina Rose 05/01/10






Ballerina makes pretty hips. I might let all the hips form even though they will inhibit flower production. I haven't seen Ballerina look prettier and this is my third year with this rose. So, if I'm ever going to get a good show from rose hips this may be the time.







Sunday, May 2, 2010

What's Blooming Now - Mexican Feather Grass 04/30/10

Mexican Feather Grass is in the foreground of this picture.





I love grasses! I fell in love with them last year when I was driving to my farm every couple of days last summer and fall. They were beautiful along the highway, swaying in the wind, turning golden in the fall.
Mexican Feather Grass is very pretty. The seed heads, which are called flowers, are not prominent. But they are golden and delicate.
I only have a few places left to fill in my Grass Garden. I'm looking for more Japanese Forest Grass (which likes some shade), and I want some Bunny Tail Grass. I haven't been able to find either of them yet.