Sunday, May 30, 2010

Design on a Dime- Grandparents Edition "Finale"

Today my daughter and I went to my grandparents to work on their backyard. My grandma is having difficulty getting around these days, so I wanted to spruce up her backyard to make her WANT to come outside. I posted the BEFORE pics last week, you can view them here. They lost a lot of plants to the frost that hit us back in December, so I wanted to replace some of those and add some additional color too. The hummingbirds love it here. She's commented often about how many times they visit her feeder- but it wasn't until I spent 11 hours outside that I got to learn how much. I am jealous! I spent most of the day getting dive-bombed by hummers who were a little ticked that I was in their territory. Hopefully they'll get over it when they see that a lot of my plant choices were for them. Most of the new additions are pretty small, but they'll fill into the space nicely. My grandparents love to visit the beach (notice the abalone shells), so I tried to add some tropical plants- or at least as tropical as we can get here in Sacramento. My mom and I both dug up some of our canna's to bring over, so they now have four different kinds that will colorfully greet them each summer. I also wanted to add some plants that could break up all of this fence. I bought them a Robertson's naval orange tree because they love to eat oranges (and citrus is kinda my thing...ya know?). I chose Robertson because it is a heavy producer, but is also one of the more compact oranges- so I can keep this tree below 6 feet without any problems. I also chose it because the fruit tends to grow on the outside of the tree- so they wont have to be digging into the tree to find their fruit. Some of the other "taller" additions are two Rose of Sharon 'Sugar Tip' Hibiscus and a 'Syringa Boomerang' Lilac- all which I got from Farmer Fred. Actually, over half of the plants I used for my grandparent's garden I got from Fred, so I really lucked out! Thank you again Fred!

I also added some hardy verbena to form into a nice purple carpet, some salvia grahamii to keep the hummingbirds happy, and autumn joy sedum to feed the bees and the birds.
I managed to save a heavily damaged kangaroo paw plant that had gotten hit by the frost. My grandpa was going to take a shovel to it and toss it out a few days ago but my mom told him to wait and just let me do it. Today when he walked outside he said "I see you dug up that one plant that died that your grandma liked". Nope, just cleaned it up a ton- it's in the picture above in the lower right corner.

I put a lot of annuals in the yard to add temporary color until the other plants have a chance to fill in. There are petunias, zinnias, coleus- even a couple tomato plants will provide some nice color. The hardest part of this little day project was the soil. It was horrible! It was full of rocks and chunks of cement. I spent a large part of the day digging their soil out, and replacing it with a much higher quality of soil and some compost. I had planned on using most of the bagged soil I brought to dress up some pots, but I ended up using it all in the beds- the pots can get done another day! I ran drip lines to all of the new plants, then used 5 bags of bark to cover up all of my lines. The final result is 100 times better than how it started. Sure- if I had tons of money I could have done a lot more, but this is perfect for them as it is. I think they were just happy that I came and helped out for the day.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

New Blooms!

Sorry, just overly excited about the succession of blooms we're having- especially since all the rain has put a damper on my vegetable garden. I swear, I'll get back to vegetables soon. And not just artichokes.
How about this blue? I couldn't get a decent shot of this- but it's actually purple and blue right now, and it's stunning! I'm really hoping today's storm doesn't knock it over. This is Larkspur 'Chorus Violet'.


Coreopsis 'Early Sunrise'
Marigolds....

An occasional Rudbeckia bloom here and there, it's a bit early for them though....

Another Bachelor Button....

Our first daylily bloom of the year, a yellow one that I don't know the name of.

Jupiter's Beard....

I believe this is Cheiranthus x allionii "Siberian Wallflower". I really need to do a better job at remembering all of the names of my plants.

Watsonia 'Raspberry Delight' (I think?! I have two- and can never remember which is which!)

The Meyer lemon tree is still covered in blooms.......

A Kangaroo Paw is just about to bloom...if my neighbors ivy doesn't smother it to death beforehand.....

Achillea

When we bought our house it had about 100 rose bushes surrounding the whole perimeter. I ripped them all out. This one comes back every year, despite me hacking away at it with a shovel. Because of its persistent nature, I've decided to let it stay, since it seems to be almost as stubborn as me. I don't know what kind it is though.

Oh- thanks to the rain, we still have lettuce! Normally it's bolting at this point from prolonged periods of heat. Since we're experiencing weather we should be having in March, the lettuce gets a longer season.

I think that's all I'll show for now. Guess I should save some of my hodge podge garden to show you next week :)

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Design on a Dime- Grandparents Edition


This weekend kiddo and I are going over to my grandparents house to help spruce up their backyard. They moved into this house in a retirement community a few years ago after living most of their lives on acres of land. This past winter they lost a lot of plants (thanks to the hard frost we had), so I'm going to come in and add some new life to this little piece of space. Among the dead are a palm tree (which my mom and I are kinda happy to see didn't make it), a fern from mine & hubby's wedding, and a geranium (shocker right? What person over 70 DOESN'T have a geranium?!)

What I'm struggling with is trying to find a nice mix of plants to fill in the space- that I can afford! Sure, it's easy to stick in a bunch of cheap annuals to brighten up the space- but they'll die! And we'd be right back to this in a few months.....
I'm also going to be adding some edibles to the space. I got a few extra tomato plants from kiddo's school garden project, along with a lemon cucumber plant, and I'm thinking they could use some herbs too.... basil, rosemary, maybe a sage....

So, my question to you would be: what do I do? If you had limited funds, how would you go about sprucing it up? Keep in mind it should be low maintenance, and there is a drip system in this space that I easily manage the watering with. Any ideas are welcome! (Pictures are courtesy of my mom- Thanks mom!)

Sunday, May 23, 2010

What a Difference a Year Can Make

Today I'm emotional. No, I'm not PMS'ing. I was looking through old pictures of my yard, and came across a bunch from when I started my front yard garden- a year ago. I didn't even realize that it has officially been a year since I've started this project, and all of a sudden I'm proud (ecstatic!) of what I've accomplished in such a short period of time. Sure, if I was rich I could lay down some major coin and have someone else do it all for me in a weekend- but I wouldn't be as attached to it as I am now, because I did it myself.

May 19th, 2009 we started with having a bunch of old trees removed. Before you bash me for having trees removed, you have to understand they were 60 year old Modesto Ash trees, heavily infested with mistle toe. Modesto Ash have a lifespan of 50 years, their time was over.

This was all of the lawn I used to have. Now, keep in mind, this is only my side yard. For those of you who are lawn lovers, I still have plenty! But this entire section is now gone. And I don't miss it.Last fall we started with having the fence built, and the 10 feet on the outside of the fence had its lawn removed. Thanks to neighborhood CCR's, this is where I had to put my fence, and this is as tall as my fence could be. Last fall I put in a bunch of plants out here, along with six citrus trees. This picture was taken December 7th, 2009, after we got snow. In Sacramento. Yes, I know my Christmas light/sheet covered citrus trees are ugly to look at from the road, but they MADE IT. They are all still alive! It's worth it to me to have a few neighbors turn their noses up at me in order to save these trees. Not many of the other plants I planted in this section made it.
Here we're at March 21st, 2010. You might recognize this picture from my Ugly Garden post. This is still much more prettier than the lawn I had before. This is what we jokingly referred to as Xeriscaping. It has changed quite a bit over the past two months.
It's now May 23rd, 2010. No more lawn, no more plain dirt. Our garden is started. It has a long ways to go before it is the picture that I have in my head, but gosh darn it I am so proud of it! This used to be several thousand square feet of lawn that we never walked on....but now....

now we have Tomato Alley.... where you will find several varieties of tomatoes that should last us through the summer- such as Great White, Black Krim, Mr. Stripey, Black Cherry, and Japanese Black Trifele. The tomatoes are mixed in with various peppers and herbs- like sage, cilantro, tons of basil (can you ever have too much basil?), cumin, and black sesame.
And on the street side the citrus are doing awesome. Here we have Chandler pummelo, Yosemite Gold mandarin, Owari Satsuma mandarin, Red Rio grapefruit, Midknight Valencia orange, and a Bearss lime. Plant-wise we'll have year round color- starting with the citrus in the winter, followed by the poppies, daffodils, lavender, and irises in the spring, with a variety of coneflowers, gaillardia, achillea, sedum, and salvia's taking us from summer to fall.

The biggest reward would be that we're actually enjoying the space now. We never even walked over to this side of the yard before, we just kind of ignored it. Now, we come out here every evening. I think we'll enjoy it more once we install french doors on this side of the house (now we have to walk around the house to get here), and I think it will look much nicer once we install the patio and walkways (I mulched them as a temporary measure). Arbors over the gates covered in climbing roses will help add some vertical height, as will the Garden Prince almond tree, the Fuji apple, and the two pomegranate trees that are also planted in here. But, if I finished all of that now, what would I have to work on in 2011?

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Forbidden Fruit

Tonight I walked through the garden to do a check-up on all of the fruit tree's. It's important to check them regularly to become aware of any problems before they get too serious. With my citrus trees, scale can spread among them quite quickly, but can easily be taken care of if I catch it early on one tree (instead of waiting until it has spread to all ten). I have quite a few young trees that I've planted over the past year, and since every fruit care class I've ever taken has encouraged removing fruit for the first couple of years (to encourage a healthy root system on the tree), I removed all of my fruit about a month ago. Well, today while walking the grounds I saw a few pieces that I missed.

Someone once told me that every piece of fruit you pull off in the first year will give you three pieces of fruit the following year. I'm not sure if that is true, but I'm not chancing it. Which is why this Dorsett apple just got yanked off the branch and discarded.

The same happened to this Independence Nectarine.

And this Gold Dust Peach.

This practice doesn't just apply to fruit tree's though, it also applies to blueberries. So say so long to these Sharp Blue blueberries too, while you're at it.

As much as it's hard to pull off this fruit, I can't help but thinking how much better my fruit is going to taste in the long run, and how much healthier my trees will be.

Additional bad news tonight though- leaf curl. I have it on both of my peach trees, and I'm pretty sure I have it on my nectarine as well. This makes me sad. I shall now spend the rest of the evening searching the UC Davis IPM website to see what I can do about it. As far as I can tell there really is nothing I can do until the fall.

Monday, May 17, 2010

Getting Mr.BigPicture to Enjoy the Details

This weekend my husband and I had an interesting discussion about our (my) garden. The discussion started because of my blog’s recent nomination for a Mouse & Trowel award. I had asked my husband to vote for me (as he should, right?!). He responds with “I already did. But I guess I should actually READ your blog to see if you were deserving of my vote.” I was a bit shocked- I knew he didn’t comment on it, but I thought that he at least looked at it occasionally. Guess not.
The first post that popped up was my Garden Blogger’s Bloom Day post from this past weekend.
“Where did you take these pictures?”
“Um, in our yard?”
“Seriously? These are pretty.”
“No, I walk around taking pictures in other people’s yard’s and pretend they’re my own.”
“Where is this one?” he asked while pointing at the picture of Nigella hispanica ‘African Bride’ So I take him outside and I show him the plant, and for a few minutes he was able to focus in on this plant and appreciate the details of each individual bloom. I think I got a “That’s cool” out of him. He then begins to look at each plant individually, and starts asking lots of questions (BTW- his nickname is “Askhole” because he usually asks WAY too many questions to the point that people find him annoying). I found that I had a story for almost every plant he asked about. Sometimes I told him where I got the plant from, or who I was with when I bought it. Some of the plants were gifts from other gardeners. Some were grown from seeds or cuttings. Alex pointed out the plants that she picked out (like the sprouting Pineapple Lily pictured below). I pointed out how when a bee visits the Cerinthe major it gets really loud- almost like they’re drilling inside each bloom. I made him smell every single herb we were growing. I told him which plants were picked to attract bees, butterflies or ladybugs, and which ones would provide food for the birds in the fall.
It was nice, if only for 15 minutes, to show him what I’m growing. He genuinely appeared interested and appreciative of the garden I was putting together for us. It was nice to have him appreciate the smallest details of the garden instead of just looking at the overall Big Picture. I’m hoping he’ll take a bigger interest in the garden now, other than just eating all of my tomatoes. I don't need him to garden (actually, I'd prefer if he didn't garden!), I just want him to enjoy the one he has.

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Garden Bloggers Bloom Day Post- May 2010

We have a lot going on for Garden Blogger's Bloom Day, and I will warn you that this is only a small portion of what I have blooming ( or find interesting). I took over 200 pictures for this month- it is exciting and overwhelming at the same time!


Tomatillo- I think this was one of our purple varieties (sorry, I mixed them all)

Erysimum and achillea. In other words, wallflower and yarrow. Basic, easy, reliable. Oh- and bee's love them.
Columbine. Otherwise known as Aquilegia formosa, the Californian native Columbine. It took me two years from seed to get this to flower, but now I easily have 30 or so blooms. Very pretty!

Heuchera blooms

Nemophila menziesii"Baby Blue Eyes"





Nicotiana alata "Lime Green", from Annie's Annuals

The California poppies just won't stop.....

Artichokes

Nolana Reichei from Annie's Annuals

Dianthus gratianopolitanusFirewitch

Nigella Hispanica "African Bride"

Centaurea gymnocarpa“Velvet Centaurea"

Chandler Pummelo from Four Wind's Growers. It looks battered, but that's all fruit you're seeing! It's a young tree though, this will have to be heavily thinned. That makes me sad.......

Euphorbia "Breathless Brush"

A newly planted Mimulus "Richard's Red' from Annie's Annuals. It's already a big hit with the hummingbirds.

Meyer's Lemon. My favorite plant of all times. We have two of them, chuckered full of blooms. Chuckered full of FRUIT. You can never have too many lemons, I swear.

Marigolds. Ugh. I hate these, visually. But, Alex picked them out. So they stay.

Trandescantia "Sweet Kate"

Fringe Flower. Otherwise known as Tellima grandiflora, another purchase from Annie's Annuals. It is doing wonderful under our huge 60 year old coastal redwood, where nothing else will grow!