Sunday, January 27, 2019

Weekend at the Farm January 26 - 27, 2019

Here is one of my first paperwhites of the season.  Paperwhites typically bloom in January in this area.
I worked a half day on Saturday, arrived at the farm in the afternoon.  Bert was already here.  Weather was very cool and cloudy.
  • Saturday evening we had carrots and mustard greens from the garden with our dinner.
  • Sunday morning I weeded in the Vegetable Garden.  Many of the beds are mulched, and that has been extremely effective.  I ran out of mulch before I could mulch everywhere, though.  Time to get more mulch!
  • Things look pretty bedraggled right now.  I don't spry herbicide in the winter.  The winter weeds are growing in all the paths (which happens every winter).  Despite the unkempt appearance of the gardens, all I care about and all I absorb is the promise of spring - the wildflower seedlings, the fat leaf buds on the trees and shrubs, the green points of the spring bulbs emerging from the soil.  It is captivating.  There will be plenty of time to clean up the paths as March approaches.
  • Bert and I spent some time cutting yaupon in the little glen that I'm encouraging at the edge of the wildflower meadow.  I started this project last weekend by myself cutting yaupon that were skinny enough to get with loppers.  I use a little oil can filled with poison to squirt on the cut so that the yaupon won't grow back.  Bert cut the thick yaupons with the chain saw, I poisoned, and we both dragged them into the woods where we dump stuff.  He gave up after about 45 minutes, but with the area now really cleared out, I spent another hour or so continuing on cutting the skinny yaupon and penetrating the woods a bit further.  I don't know, maybe I'm crazy to do this, but if it turns out in the summer to be not noticeable or impressive or inviting, then I'll let it grow back wild.
  • I walk the meadow every time I'm here now.  The weather is so forgiving in the winter months that it is a pleasure to wander around and see what is coming up through the dead winter debris.
  • I dug up a clump of Rudbeckia that was growing right at the edge of the flowerbed outside the dining room window and moved it to the front flowerbed.  The flowers always lean into the path and become a nuisance during their summer bloom-time.  
  • I moved a half dozen or so clumps of Ox Eye Daisies growing in paths over to the Medicine Garden.
  • And I moved four clumps of asters from the Star Garden to the Long Border.  I hope they take over there as successfully as they have taken over in the Star Garden. 
  • Went inside for a little lunch, then back out again to work.
  • I weeded the blue-green grass out of the Daffodil Bed for a while.
  • I dug up 20 or so Philippine Lily seedlings out of the white rock paths in the Circle Drive and planted them in the Shade Garden.  They are about two years away from being mature enough to bloom.  I have some brand new seedlings in there that I sowed this fall, and some tiny seedlings here and there that I sowed last fall.  The leaf drop is so heavy in there that I decided I would have to plant seedlings rather than sow seed in that garden. But, as it turns out, I am having some success with the seeds. 
  • Bert and I walked around all the gardens in the dusk of early evening.  The temperature was perfect.  
  • I drove in to work on Monday morning.

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