Monday, May 18, 2009

Lots More Planting, New Tree, Frost Warning

Hmmmm. I seem to be getting worse instead of better at my posting. Thank you to my followers who reminded me. LOL It's nice to be missed.


I think I mentioned how after leafing out, our sweet little River Birch was half dead or half alive (depending on how you look at it), so I called the nursery. They inspected it and agreed to replace it. The new River Birch 'Heritage', arrived Saturday. The new tree is the same height, but the caliper (thickness of trunks) is half again as thick as the original. It's also much denser so we've now staked it for safety from the winds we get here. If we had a large property, we would have simply moved it and let it be a beautiful Birch shrub until 5-10 years down the road, when it might develop new leaders upward. But with a small city lot, we just don't have space.


Our little feathered friends have been eating us out of house and home. We refill the song bird feeder 5 and six times a day!! But this is baby time and they all are feeding wee ones. I've made a discovery though. I bought a 20 lb bag of special supreme feed from Wild Birds Unlimited. Nothing but the best for our birdies. Three kinds of seed (I think) large sunflower, small black sunflower and safflower seed. I find an inordinate amount of small black sunflower in the "leavings" under the feeder. Even the doves and squirrels don't clean it up. Also I had been told there are basically no sticks etc. in WBU feed. Well, there were enough and big enough sticks to clog the feeder!! So it's back to Lowe's for me for bird seed.



Here's a lucky shot of a red faced finch arriving. BTW some of the House Finches (red face and back) seem to be redder than others....like this guy and the one on the right in the previous photo. Any ideas what that's all about?



This weekend we built/filled the second raised bed in the back yard. It runs along the garage and will be a warm sunny spot. I have dubbed it the Tomato Bed. So yesterday I planted it. My "tomato forest" of seedlings has now moved to it's permanent home.... well, half of it has moved. There are 34 tomatoes here. I think that's enough to feed a small army. Guess we'll be doing some canning. Salsa, here we come. About half of the rest went to my neighbor. The rest.... anyone want tomato plants?



I also finished the first bed in the back by planting 3 "store bought" peppers, an egg plant plant, two tomatoes (no room in the tomato inn). It is the largest and it is now full.

I must say it is a joy to plant in these raised beds. You just stick your hand in, make a hole and plant. No digging necessary.









Last night there was a freeze warning so we covered the tender plants in the back beds. We used a roll of weed blocker plastic which we also used on the bottom of the beds to stop weeds and grass from coming through. This is the Tomato Bed.



For the Onion/Pea Bed we only covered the large peppers and two lonely tomato plants. Everything else (I hoped) was strong enough to be safe from a light frost. By the way, the odd looking part of grass in front of bed #2 (the unfinished one) is where I removed the black weed block and two blocks because I didn't need that much more room to plant. The grass underneath will recover nicely, I think, except for where the two blocks were laying down. I've reseeded them. When that bed is filled with soil, I'll be planting beans and corn and herbs.

Well, that's probably more than you wanted to hear. To finish for today, suffice to say, the small Acer griseum 'Paperbark Maple' and the Cercis canadensis 'Forest Pansy', and the Picea orientalis 'Oriental Spruce' are doing just great. The birds love them (and the new birch) as staging spots to attack the feeder. We also have added a bird bath, but still no mulch in the beds so there will be more pictures coming. Oh, yes, I have two buds on the iris my cousin gave me and my neighbor gave me a bunch of Monarda Bee Balm for the front bed.

Hope everyone stays healthy and has a wonderful week.

10 comments:

Twisted willow said...

The raised beds look great. We use that type of bed here in Ireland - but many to keep the roots above the water level! It's true what they say about Ireland and rain.

CONEFLOWER said...

Hello Twisted Willow, welcome to Gardens and Birds, etc.

Iowa Victory Gardener said...

Hi Coneflower,
Your beds look great, and I'd gladly take a few tomatoes off your hands if you were closer! We'll have to get ours this next weekend when the bed is tilled up by then. One of our neighbors is giving us the heirloom Cherokee Purple, so that will be interesting to see what it's like. Marnie really likes that one, I know.

Why not pop some basil seeds in among your tomatoes by the garage ... it's a perfect companion plant to tomatoes and you can plant it elsewhere too so you'll have plenty for pesto. I wish our garden were along as far as yours now, but you know the rain and other challenges we've have had the past few weeks!

Sliced tomatoes, shredded basil and Nasturtium flowers with a balsamic vinaigrette (don't forget the Dijon mustard) are an excellent summer salad. Hungry yet?

I didn't want to pester you about posting (I hate that), because I figured you were really busy there, and this post demonstrates it!

Iowa Victory Gardener said...

Oh... forgot to add ... we have tons of Monarda (red and purple) we'd love to share. I can't get my sister to take any more at this point, lol!

CONEFLOWER said...

Morning IVG and Fernymoss. Don't worry about pestering. I don't see it that way. Family Man gives me a lot of toe tapping when it's time to post again. LOL Besides, it's nice when folks want to see/hear more.

I'd love to trade tomatoes for Monarda. Probably the 600 (just guessing) mile trip wouldn't make it pay though. :-)

The salad recipe sounds fabulous! I have basil plants (that I started from seed) in the large bed, but I'll sprinkle some seed around the tomatoes also. Thanks for the idea. I also have dill coming along. Keep those idea coming. We'll use them for sure.

olivia said...

Wow ... it's coming along so well. Nice that you were able to get the tree replaced. Lots of work getting it to this point, and it shows - nicely done! Being able to plant so easily in your raised beds is a dream. (I can relate to the digging and less-than-stellar soil to work with...;-)

Fantastic shots of the birdies! LOL, they eat a lot don't they. Looking forward to the photos you get of the birds in the bath ... :D

IVG -- yes, that sounds DELICIOUS!

CONEFLOWER said...

Morning O! I won't be doing another brand new garden design at a house without LOTS of hired help. About three years from now I'll be really happy with it all. (The old sleep, creep, leap adage for perennials) But right now I'm about ready to just sit back and drink my coffee. LOL

Thanks for coming by. Wanna cup with me? I'll make a new pot.

olivia said...

I won't be doing another brand new garden design at a house without LOTS of hired help.LOL ... :)

Got a flower identification puzzle for you. Over at Knucklehead's site here: [link]. Any ideas?

CONEFLOWER said...

Hi O! I also wrote on KH site. I have no idea what that might be. My comment to him was:

"My guess is a Mutated Ninja Tulip except it has 8 stamens (?) and only 4 petals and the leaves are all wrong. Does that help? Maybe it's a tulip from Australia where "everything" is backward."

Family Man said...

Hiya CF,

Your garden looks wonderful as usual. I'm glad my toe tapping has got you writing. Now I need to do a reverse toe tap and get myself to going.

I'm going in to get more dental work done tomorrow and hopefully that will be it for about a month or two. I told the dentist the big thing I was looking forward was shaving off this big walrus mustache. It's amazing how many napkins you go through when eating. :)

Looking forward to more pictures and take care.

FM