Friday, April 27, 2012

Arbor Day 2012

The Eastern Redbud we purchased arrived today!  We didn't plan for the tree to be planted on Arbor Day but it's pretty perfect that Platt Hill Nursery's delivery/planting schedule worked out the way it did.





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Thursday, April 26, 2012

Berry nice

Bring on the berries!  Last week I busied myself with the task of constructing a raised garden bed in anticipation of the arrival of strawberry plants we ordered last month.  A long narrow bed frame (25'x3.5') was constructed to accommodate twenty-five plants.  Bare roots were shipped so we aren't likely to have strawberries until next summer, but we're excited about the addition of this edible in our garden nonetheless.

The variety of strawberry we ordered is named Sparkle.  It is a June bearing plant that will yield small to medium sized fruit.  Sparkle is touted as an heirloom quality variety with excellent flavor.  It is one of the three recommended varieties of strawberries for the Midwest region in The Backyard Homestead, which, by the way, is an excellent book.

Much consideration was given to the size of the bed frame and its ultimate location in the yard.  A square bed with a mat of strawberry plants?  A wide bed with two or more rows of plants?  We went with a long bed and single row of plants, mainly, because it will be easiest for John to tend to the plants as well as pick berries.  He's not as enthusiastic about the main garden as he is by the selection of berries growing in the yard.

Along with the strawberry plants we also ordered black raspberry bushes.  These were also bare root plants and right now it looks like two sticks are planted in the ground.  Hopefully, next year we will have a selection of red and black raspberries to eat.  We went with a mid-season summer bearing raspberry called Bristol.

While digging holes for the blueberry bushes a couple weeks ago, I noticed a few sleepy white grubs curled up like a 'c'.  Initially I felt bad for disturbing them, and all of the other life forms upset by the shifting soil, but curiosity got the best of me and I wanted to know exactly what they were.  When digging in the Earth as a girl I don't recall ever seeing any such thing in the soil.  Turns out, the milky white grub is that of a beetle.  But in order to properly identify them you need to pick them up and look at their hind end with a magnifying glass.  The hair pattern on their rump, or rasteral pattern, will tell you if it is the larvae of a May/June beetle, Masked Chafer beetle or a Japanese beetle.  I didn't take the time to look at these creatures through a magnifying glass but I did pick up the ones I came across when planting the black raspberries and, while wearing thick work gloves, popped them like a zit between my index finger and thumb.  Yes, I committed grub murder.  Several times, in fact, on Tuesday afternoon.  All that kept running through my mind is how many of those dang Japanese beetles were hanging out on the leaves of the red raspberry bush last summer, chomping and copulating.  There were many more of the white grubs in the soil near the red raspberry bush versus where the blueberry bushes were planted, too.  Maybe this means that in addition to goats, John and I need to raise a couple of pigs or chickens so they can eat the grubs!  Then I won't have to pop them.  Does that description make you squirm, too?


(A) Lumber is cut
(B) Weed block paper laid down
 (C) It starts to rain when only a quarter of the frame is assembled
(D) It's best not to use power tools in the rain
We need more soil.
Full of soil, topped with a layer of cocoa shells, and ready for the strawberries.

A strawberry crown


View of the backyard from the attic.
A thick layer of straw has been placed on top of the weed block paper between the two beds to form a foot path.



http://wrightgardenchronicles.blogspot.com



Friday, April 6, 2012

Spring 2012 in full swing



June 6 will mark the third year John and I have called our home Home.  For many reasons spring is always an exciting time, but owning our own home makes this time of year all the more special.  Each fall we plant a variety of bulbs in the front flower beds.  Come springtime we have a more colorful and diverse bed of flowers.  It is wonderful to see what all the new additions look like.  We haven't quite achieved the ever-blooming flower beds that we've imagined for so many years, but we're nearly there.



This year we're able to focus our attention on the backyard, now that major improvements have been completed with the house itself.  The Master Plan is to turn a good portion of the lawn into raised beds where food can be grown.  Last week we planted three blueberry bushes.  Plans for three additional raised beds are in the works and will be built within the next couple weeks.  One bed will be for melons (watermelon and cantaloupe), another for squash (Butternut and pie pumpkins), and a third for strawberries.




The raspberry bush that we planted two years ago is doing great.  It produced a few dozen raspberries last year but now that the bush has quadrupled in size, we hope to have twice as many delicious ruby fruits to nosh on this year.  At the end of this month we will be adding two black raspberry plants to Wright Gardens.  Tasty.

The purple lightning tree we've been longing for will soon be delivered and planted in our yard!  We visited a local nursery earlier this week and selected the tree from six that were available.  It is in a 15 gallon container and roughly 7 feet tall.  I agree with John's assessment, it has good arms.  For those of you wondering what the heck a purple lightning tree looks like, the proper name for the tree is Eastern Redbud.

In the early spring, when the tree flowers, tiny magenta flowers cover the leafless zigzag branches.  The bark is dark brown, almost black, so the end result (to our eyes) looks like purple lightning.  After the tree has finished flowering the tree produces medium sized heart-shaped leaves.

A new gardening helper is our landscaping cart.  John isn't as thrilled about the cart as I am but I'm so happy to have it.  The cart can carry up to 550 pounds and is easily steered around the yard.  The sides of the cart can fold down for easier loading/unloading, and came with a snap-on liner so smaller media such as gravel, soil and mulch can be transported as well.  I even plan to use this cart when there is a large haul of groceries to bring inside, or those times when I bring home two or three 40 pound bags of cat liter.  Wheels!  What a nifty invention.


Chet is curious about the cart.


Finally, we finally have a clothesline!  The posts were permanently put in the ground on Tuesday and, after giving the concrete ample time to set, I installed the cross-bars and strung them with line this afternoon.  I have wanted one of these old school heavy-duty clotheslines for many years and now, just like my Great-Grandma Anna, we do.  Two loads of laundry hung on the line to dry this afternoon with ample room to spare.  Ah, it's the little things in life...



Hello, radish!
A falcon flying over the house

What'cha doing, Mama?

Garlic Row


Red Parrot tulip


Yellow Parrot tulip