Showing posts with label plans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label plans. Show all posts

Saturday, August 1, 2009

The first of August

Where did the summer go? I know, technically, we still have a few weeks of summer left, but the sun angle is changing, it gets dark a few minutes earlier each day, and plants are starting to set seed as if they're done for the year. That means it's time to start making serious plans for next year's gardens.

The Potager.

During my constructive staring episode in the backyard a couple weeks ago, I thought about creating a raised bed 32' long, 4' wide behind the tomato patch. This is where I would plant my squash, cucumbers, and corn next season. This is behind the rose garden bed I started last week. Things change.



Now that the oak tree has come down, there's an area of the gully that gets more sun than the current potager. It only makes sense to clear this area and build the raised bed here.



I've already got the landscape timbers. I got them for a steal. Most of them are cracked or warped, but plenty usable. It's good to be an employee sometimes. First dibs, and all that.



The Perennial bed.

I am very happy with some areas of the perennial bed. Along the street, the combinations have worked well. Each week, there's a different look thanks to the bloom cycles of the plants I placed here when it was nothing but bare soil. I've already reworked the corner a little. The red spider zinnias and convolvulus tricolor were pulled a while ago. I moved some rudbeckia and datura to this corner. I'm still not happy with the outcome. We'll see what it looks like if/when the zinnia seeds I sowed are in bloom. We've still got 3.5 months until our first frost.



Behind the arbor, this part of the bed is shadier than I realized, even when the sun is at it's zenith. I need to find plants that prefer a little shade. I'm sure I have something that will do well here. The bee balm I planted still hasn't bloomed. It does get a little morning sun now that the oak tree is gone, but not much.



I want to rework this entire area. The Knockouts need more sun, the cosmos just look weedy. The zinnias and cleome aren't nearly as thick as I would have liked. I'm leaning towards making this my red/orange bed instead of pink/orange. The Thundercloud Plum will be moved. I'll wait until it's completely dormant this winter. I've already picked out a spot in the backyard.



I want something that grows tall along the back side of this area. Maybe sunflowers?



The Front Bed.

By the front door, I am really not happy with what's going on here. I've started making changes. The tea olive in the corner will stay. Another will be moved from the backyard in a few months. The hydrangeas will go into the shade bed next to the driveway that I built a couple weeks ago. The Japanese maple will stay. The datura will be pulled once seeds are collected. White daturas will be scattered here next spring. The rooted gardenias from last year are already in the ground and growing nicely. Two or three years from now, they should be a good size. There's just too much going on in this bed right now.



The Back Yard.

The Belle of Georgia peach tree and dwarf cherry will be moved to the current potager. I'll be rooting more fig cuttings this fall too. I want to create a mini orchard. The seedless grapevines need more sun. They'll resent being dug up, again, but it needs to be done.

peach


sad cherry


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I collected seeds of purple cleome and plain old rudbeckia hirta today. I need to start carrying containers with me when I walk the gardens each morning.





The brugmansia in the perennial bed has cracked now. It's probably one of the yellow ones I think is Charles Grimaldi, but without absolute confirmation, I just call it my yellow Noid.



It's 72 degrees and cloudy. More rain expected today and Sunday. If it's not too bad, I'll spend some time tomorrow moving the hydrangeas, planting out the ones I rooted, and potting up the new gardenia cuttings I took weeks ago. I've got two more roses to move. The Lagerfelds in the white bed need more sun and space. I'd also like to cut out a few of the Roma tomato plants. They were terrible. I didn't harvest but once though they produced a lot. I'd rather eat store bought tomatoes than those nasty things.

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Making Plans

I'm having a hard time getting started this morning for a variety of reasons. Yesterday I had planned to plant out some cool weather veggies, clear some more brush from the gully, and a whole list of things I could never accomplish in one day. Instead, I think I'll use today as a planning day.

Beside the front steps, I have a small bed that was filled with overgrown and ugly foundation plantings when I bought the house. Last summer, I paid a guy $20 to remove everything. In December, I tilled the area and pulled out what I hope are the last of the nandina roots. Those things propagate easily from root cuttings so the chances that I got them all are nil. I left the one camellia and it's regrown to a height of about 18". I had planted two "August Beauty" gardenias in this area last summer. Like most of that variety, they committed suicide shortly after blooming. I've got rooted cuttings of a gardenia from a neighbor that I'll plant here in the spring. It will take a few years for them to grow to a decent size, so I'm thinking of filling in with impatiens and other shade loving plants this summer.

Before. There is a camellia in there somewhere.

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Today.

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Other plans include trying to decide what will go where from the wintersown sprouts. I may sketch out a few plans while sitting in my adirondack chair. Or I might just make some mental notes knowing that it's all going to change as I go forward.

From the front steps, you can see two different beds. The one against the house doesn't retain a lot of moisture when it rains. I tilled this area in December and added a lot of organic material. I hope it helps, but I'm planning to use a lot of drought tolerant plants here just in case. I've got coreopsis, coneflowers, salvias, and creeping groundcover plants to put in here.

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And then there's the back beds, the north side garden where I planted hostas, the perennial bed, the front slope, etc and so forth. All in all, I need LOTS of plants to fill everything in. I don't have a lot of patience, but I do have a lot of sprouts and rooted cuttings.

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Sunday's picture.

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Believe it or not, there are things popping up out there.

Daffodils
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Ditch Lilies
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