Monday, March 18, 2013

The Mystery Plant

So, I mentioned the mystery plant.  Last year when my folks picked up the four roses on the front of the house from a small nursery, the pot that contained the biggest rose (a Sara Van Fleet) also came with a hitchhiker - a small lilly-looking plant. The nursery lady sent it home with the folks, and we decided to pot it up. 

It grew and grew, and then it died. I completely ignored the pot all winter long. It was left under the carport where I was wintering other plants, but I didn't water it or really even think about it. 

Until I was transplanting the strawberries... 

I needed extra dirt, and since my budget is pretty limited, I tend to use recycled dirt in the lower halves of pots. And there was the mystery plant's pot sitting there with all that dirt. I started to scoop out the dirt, but when I got halfway down into the pot, I discovered these glossy roots with thick bulges. I discovered the bulb root! And it had spread through the entire pot. So I hastily recovered it and started watering it. Now I have 10 sprouts coming up.  


These pics are dated Feb 28 and March 16th, respectively. It seems to be growing quite happily! Last summer I saw a plant in the store that resembled this one. I think it makes a yellow or an orange unscented flower. We shall see.

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Finishing the Flower Beds

Busy busy. We mulched the front beds.









Then we finished the flower beds around the back.

Then we planted the final hydrangea. Mom grabbed some hyacinths. I love these plants; they smell incredible. I first encountered them last year at the store. We walked in, and this honeysuckle-like scent hit us in the garden center. We followed our noses all over until we found them. For weeks we enjoyed their fragrance, and then they died. We tossed 'em. Yes, I know. I'm cringing still. We were very upset, and hadn't done our homework to know that it's routine for the plants to die back in late spring/early summer after they're done blooming.

So now we have 15! Last year I bought two stargazer lilies, now I have 12. And I had one Mystery Plant, and now I have 10. So if I'm starting with 15 hyacinths... heh heh heh. (This is why I'm not allowed to plant bulbs in the yard.)

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Starting Over

So, bad news. I ended up with an infestation of gnats.

You know how a dog looks who's covered in fleas? That's how the surface of my potting soil looks. I think I discovered the infestation too late to effectively get rid of it AND save my seedlings.


Here's why: 

You see these two pics on the left? I took them tonight. These little plants are approximately 5 weeks old.

Now check out the picture under it, courtesy of Victory Seed's page on starting tomatoes from seeds. The plants pictured there? 16 DAYS old.

There is something rotten in the state of Stephanie's garden.

The best my research has indicated, the gnat larvae are probably feasting quite merrily on the roots of my plants; they haven't grown in a long time, not since putting on the nodes for their first leaves; a snap of warm weather allowed me to keep them outside for a long stretch, during which time they probably picked up the gnats. I didn't notice til a day or two ago when my house started filling with gnats because I was bringing them inside with the seedling pots.

 I did my best to get the gnats out of the soil. I even used pesticide dust to try and kill them. To no avail.

So, the game plan has changed.

I'll be buying a tomato green house seed starting kit from the store tomorrow night or so, and starting another batch of seedlings that way. With all luck and fingers crossed, I'll get healthy seedlings like the bottom picture in close enough time to plant.

It's disheartening to see 5 weeks worth of effort ruined in about two days.

That's all for now.

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Building Flower Beds

Check out what I did today! Last spring my family was able to plant 9 gardenias, 1 azalea, and 7 rose bushes. Unfortunately, three of the nine gardenias didn't make it (and yes, I'm giving the stink eye to these two midget dogs across the street who like peeing on things). The azalea nearly died too because of a huge drought we had in the hottest part of the summer. Only a few parts of it are left (but the parts left are blooming! If blooms happen, there will be pictures).

So today we replaced the three gardenias, transplanted the azalea to a sunnier location, and planted a hydrangea in its place. There's another hydrangea earmarked for a spot by the deck, but we didnt make it that far.

But the biggest thing we accomplished today? We built the flowerbeds on the front of the house. Photos!

Before - 

The corner of the house and the gardenias Right.

The rosebushes, Left.


The corner of the house again on Right!








The rose bushes again, on left!

All that's left now is to fill in with the mulch, but the work force (me and the parents) got tired. 

That's all for now!

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Things are starting to grow!

Bulbs are my favorite type of plant. If I had a garden and was only allowed one type of plant, I would be hard pressed to decide between rose bushes and bulbs.

There are a hundred billion types of bulbous plants out there; my particular favorites are lilies. And my specific favorite lily is the humble day lily.

Day lilies are garden workhorses. They take a lot of abuse and give you nothing but good returns. They can handle poor soil and irregular water, and they are generally very low maintenance plants.

I planted a clump of Stella d'oro day lilies last spring; they were gorgeous! They even had a faint fragrance. They died back very early though, and I was honestly concerned they wouldn't return. But I cleaned out the spot they were planted in, and look what I found! Day lilies sprouting.

Last spring while buying plants, mom and I were drawn in to the heady fragrance of some oriental lilies. They were pink with dark pink spots and white stripes. They bloomed for a long time and filled the air with a perfume that almost knocked us off our feet. Then they died back very early. Concerned, I did my research and found out they were really summer-blooming lilies that had been forced into early spring bloom to lure in shoppers like myself. So.

But they're coming back now! Believe it or not those scraggly looking shoots are the oriental lily. Ignore the pot of onions. That's another experiment for another post.

That's all for now. I'll have pictures when things start blooming! It's so refreshing to see the first greenery of spring.

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Meet Jack

So, Jack is my 10 month old cat. He likes to help with things. Like laundry. Or sewing. He especially likes gardening.




Jack has a green thumb.

Jack ate my pepper plant today at lunch. I guess he was hungry. He did not apologize.

The short of it is I am now down a pepper sprout. I've started another one today; the last one took two weeks to sprout. I'm aware how far this puts me behind on my planting timetable, but it is what it is.

Jack's lucky he's cute.

Monday, March 4, 2013

The Gift of Herbs

Last summer my sister's friend was very thoughtful and gave me three herb plants. They were two mints and a rosemary bush. I had no idea what to do with them.
I could tell immediately that all three were in containers that were far too small for the plants' needs, but I figured that they'd been potted that way intentionally as containers just to transfer them in.
But I didnt have time to do the repotting; I was barely keeping up with my garden's typical demands, let alone figuring out the proper care required by mints and rosemary. Plus last summer was a very hard time for my family.
Needless to say, my inability to devote enough time to my garden last year meant I almost lost all three plants.
The first mint, the Kentucky Colonel mint, required immediate transplanting, since it wouldn't even stand up straight. The pot tipped over due to the height of the plant, and so many roots had grown through the bottom I couldn't just set it in the garden with everything else. So I stuck it in a pot with some recycled dirt and called it good. This mint, thanks to the extra space it got right off, has fared very well.

Here it is beginning to send up stems on new growth.

The second mint, a Chocolate Mint, didn't fare very well. It was very cramped in the roots department, so cramped that there wasn't even much soil left in the tiny pot it was in. The soil that it was in wouldn't hold water and the drain holes in the pot were far too large. Both of these problems meant that water went right through the plant, and slowly it began to die from under watering. The Chocolate mint is definitely my favorite of the two, and I was distressed to find that by the end of last summer there were only a few leaves left on what had been a very healthy plant. So I found a day, grabbed the last of the potting soil left from the whole year, and repotted both it and the rosemary.

I was astounded at how quickly the Chocolate Mint recovered. Within days, there were brand new leaves showing on top of the soil. Within a week or two, the top was green and runners were going everywhere. Unfortunately, as seen here, it didn't enjoy the winter cold. But it's coming back up for me, nevertheless. Hopefully with some TLC this year, I can have a very lovely mint plant once more.

The rosemary very nearly suffered the same fate as the poor chocolate mint. The pot it was in was about 6 inches wide and about the same deep; the root ball was about the second most pot-bound plant I've ever seen. The soil it was in was poor, as well. But this hardy plant only lost the tips of a few branches to yellowing and browning. After all that neglect, 95% of the plant was still green. All of the new growth happened in late late summer after I repotted. It's come through the winter as if unbothered by the cold. The only trouble is the plant had an unpleasing shape to begin with, and the new growth has compounded the rather... unattractive shape.

My goal for this year is to trim and shape the bush into a more... bush-like appearance.

I noticed the scent of the rosemary turning bitter through the winter months; the sunshine I've been able to give it in the past week or so has sweetened the fragrance a good deal.

I'm unhappy with all of the pots that these herbs are in. They were done last-minute and with the scraps of what I had left at the end of the season; therefore these were the last pots I owned at the time. I want shallower pots for both mints; preferably something shallow but very wide, to accomodate the spreading surface roots of both varieties. However, I may end up electing for a slightly deeper pot for the KC mint, as it has a distinct upright shape that may necessitate the balance and stability of a bigger pot.

As for the rosemary, it may sit where it is for a while. That's the biggest pot I own, and my garden plans for this year may mean I dont have the funds to just hop over to the store and grab a pot for it until later.

Overall, I have been happier than I ever imagined with these three plants. I never knew how rewarding it was to have aromatic plants in one's garden. I can brush my fingers across the spines of the rosemary plant, and someone standing two feet from me will smell its heady fragrance. These plants are forgiving and tolerant of a busy schedule and troubling life events; they keep on rewarding you with their rampant growth and wonderful aroma despite it all.

Enough sentiment. I love 'em. I plan on adding a few other herbs to my garden this year. Maybe basil. We'll see.

That's all for now!