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Backyardnotes

~ All things botanical in photos and words—in my West Seattle garden and elsewhere; seeing and creating art and assorted musings.

Backyardnotes

Category Archives: Uncategorized

I KNOW THAT SPRING IS ON THE WAY…

12 Monday Mar 2012

Posted by backyardnotes in Uncategorized

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Aquilegia, catkins, cedrus deodora, corylus avellana contorta, daphne laureola, Harry Lauder's Walking Stick, lungwort, peony, pulmonaria, Spring, spurge laurel

Cedrus deodora 'rose'

BY LITTLE HARBINGERS around the garden. The cedrus deodora drop their opened cones, shattering when they hit the ground to scatter their seeds leaving ‘roses’  all around.

Cedrus deodora

There are two of these trees at the borders of our property. At heights of 50-60 feet, most likely they were planted 40-50 years ago. The seeds sprout easily and grow quickly like weeds. When the seedlings are two-three inches tall I pot them up and hand them off to an enthusiast of evergreen trees.

Daphne laureola

Daphne laureola, also known around here as spurge laurel has been blooming for a couple of weeks now. It is unfortunate that this variety does not have the fragrance of its more well known cousins but I really like the yellow green flowers clustered like jewels at the crown. The flowers will yield small black berries favored by robins and that is how they spread. New plants pop up in places not always favored by most plants; that is the driest, shadiest places around the garden that receive mostly natural irrigation. If you catch them early in an unwanted place pull them like a weed! This daphne has dark green, leathery leaves and grows to about 2 1⁄2 feet tall and is not unattractive. In my garden there is usually a place for small, shrubby plants with high drought tolerance.

Peony buds and shoots

This unamed peony emerges from the ground like no other that I have. The fat flower buds start pushing up first, long before the leaves or stems in late January. It seems to me that they should suffer from hard freezes and snow but miraculously they don’t. By the beginning of March the buds have pushed up two-three inches and the tender, slightly translucent leaves begin to loosen their grip around the buds, unfurling in a most beguiling way. I find the color and sculptural form arresting and dramatic.

This is pulmonaria. It may be pulmonaria angustifolia, officianalis, or saccharata; I have now way of knowing as it came from Grandma T’s garden and there is no telling as to its origins there. It is likely the original was planted in the 1930’s or 1940’s.  Also known as blue cowslip, lungwort or Bethlehem sage, these cheery little pink and blue flowers begin to bloom in early February, persisting well into April.

Corylus avellana contorta

I await the coming of the catkins—they signal spring is on the way. I love the way they dangle and gently sway in the wind. Also known as ‘Harry Lauder’s Walking Stick’, this specimen is in a very large pot on our deck and adds a very sculptural element.

‘Harry Lauder’ has tiny magenta flowers that follow the appearance of the catkins are easily missed—they were an unexpected surprise the first time I spotted them,

LUSH! SPRING! GREEN! is how I feel when I look at the bright green foliage and red stems of the aquilegias. It will be a couple of months yet until their flowers make an appearance. It is the appearance of plants like this one around the garden that make the promise of spring more than just a winter’s dream.

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TODAY’S WEATHER

11 Friday Nov 2011

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THE FIRST REAL STORM systems of the season are rolling in today.

Totally unrelated to today’s weather is this heron is perfectly silhoeutted at sunset last evening in the fir below our house.

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AUGUST MASH-UP–PART TWO

12 Monday Sep 2011

Posted by backyardnotes in Canning & Preserving, Harvest, Ornamentals, Uncategorized, Vegetable garden

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camping, canning, garden chores, harvest



BY THE THE BEGINNING OF AUGUST
there is plenty of deadheading to do. As I started this tedious chore I felt inspired to create a bouquet using the more interesting deadheads (August 18th above) and have continued to add to it (as of September 8th below).

The same day that we dug the iris I enlisted the extra hands to help clean the garlic. With three pairs of hands we cleaned four varieties in no time. Yesterday I cleaned the remaining 25 heads. Total garlic harvested: 142 heads.

CANNING began in earnest with cherries, apricots and zucchini in late July.

Since spring-like weather persisted well into June the cherry and strawberry harvests were late. I put up five half pints each of strawberry and cherry preserves in the last week of July. These were modeled on a low sugar preserves recipe from Eugenia Bone’s blog post of July 18th.

PEACHES started showing up in the markets mid-August so I made peach preserves (seven half pints) and froze sliced peaches in half pound bags (5). At the end of the month on our way home from Palmer Lake, I bought more peaches (fifteeen pounds) and about four pounds of the last (!) bing cherries at Lone Pine fruit stand in Wenatchee. The cherries were wonderful and I put up 8 more half-pints of preserves. The lovely looking Glowstar peaches however had a difficult time fully ripening. They became 6 pints of what I am calling Ice Cream Peaches; kind of like a loose, syrupy preserve flavored with vanilla beans and Calvados brandy. They taste yummy!

The bulk of tomatoes remained firmly green even with the red plastic mulch until the last week of the month. And at that, only a handful or two had ripened.

We spent the week of the 22nd happily lazing about at Palmer Lake in northeast Washington. The DNR campground is small and was surprisingly short of visitors for a change. The water was warm, the weather was warm, we paddled around the lake, and I caught up on my travel journal. There is good birdwatching habitat around the lake; cherry and apple orchards to the east and some walnut orchards and open pastures to the north. Tom saw an Indigo Bunting! We have been ‘bunting hunting’ all summer on our trips to eastern Washington–too bad I missed seeing it. We saw a muskrat one morning in Palmer Creek and a beaver in the water at our campground on our last morning.

I LOVE FINDING something new and unknown to me. On one of our walks we spotted a hatching of Box Elder bugs, boisea trivittata. I snapped this photo so I could identify them when we got back home. Apparently they are a nuisance in most areas, but we had never seen them before. According to Wikipedia “They may form large aggregations while sunning themselves in areas near their host plant (e.g. on rocks, shrubs, trees, and man-made structures).” That is just how we saw them.

Time to move on to Septet

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AUGUST MASH-UP—PART ONE

30 Tuesday Aug 2011

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WITH SUMMER COMES MANY DESIRABLE ACTIVITIES and so the blog posts take a back seat. The photo above is not very exciting, but is of a chore that needed doing. After Grandma T. died, there were lots of plants to be rescued and relocated. These amaryllis belladonna were among them. They have not bloomed for about two years so time to divide. This pile was derived from five or six ‘mother’ bulbs planted in a couple of places and over several years became very crowded. So many bulbs that I gave away most and reset the rest. I also dug up all of the Lenora Pearl (with the help of Simon & Sophia’s hands to make quicker the work and earn fair-going money at the same time) and Saturday Night Live iris and divided them as well. Long overdue!

While the iris were out of the ground and the nasty root-running grass was removed, the groundskeeper (a former cement mason) reset the birdbath on a concrete pad, hoping to keep it level for a few years. Then I reset the Lenora Pearl iris and some of the amaryllis.

Speaking of Belladonnas, that is the name of this beautiful lily that I purchased from B&D Lilies at the flower and garden show. Wonderfully fragrant and sparkling color.

After returning from our last camping trip in July there was plenty of weeding and deadheading to be done in every corner of garden. But, the rewards were visible everyday with an August parade of blooming beauty :

Dahlia ‘Lauren Michele’

Daylily ‘Frans Hals’

Lilium ‘Rexona’ also from B&D

Martagon lilies

Dahlia, variety unknown

And in the vegetable garden:

The brussels sprouts are growing nicely and about 4 feet tall with sprouts forming.

This was a perfect head of ‘Graffiti’ cauliflower.

The flower of ‘Black Bell’ eggplant

A little buttercup squash

Banana peppers

Rescue pears

And, Spartan apples

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APRIL PHOTO A DAY

24 Sunday Apr 2011

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