Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Garden plans for 2020

The last day of 2019!

A snow covered garden and yard to welcome 2020


Here's hoping for a happy 2020. We will see what this year brings for us in life overall.

But... we have excellent plans for a busy year in the yard and garden in 2020!

My highest priority project for 2020 is buckthorn removal from our woods. There is so much of it!!  We did get one quote from a buckthorn removal/tree trimming company last year which I think was for $600 for removal of the buckthorn from our property plus cutting down one tree limb that is overhanging the fence.  I knew I could do the buckthorn removal myself rather than paying that! We will have to see how many weekends it takes us this spring but I know it is doable.

1) Buckthorn removal - starting in April or when the snow melts!
     I have stump killer to paint on the stumps once we do the chopping, and have also been saving up black baggies which I read can be affixed onto the newly cut stump to prevent regrowth.

2) Ordering dirt and possibly rocks to fill in the gully that is forming in the backyard from water running off a back street. We definitely need to do the small gully that is developing in the grassy portion of our lawn this year.  The gully in the woods portion is huge and will take a lot of dirt and rock.  Mike thinks we should use rock... I think we should use dirt... we shall see what we end up using, likely a mixture!
     We also have quite a few other small holes around the yard which we need to fill in with dirt, and some bare patches that could use some grass seed.

3) Garlic mustard removal - this will be an ongoing battle for years I expect but my goal is to get the buckthorn and garlic mustard out and plant some native Minnesotan wildflowers in the woods instead. I have so many orange daylilies around in places I don't want though, so I will also plant these in spots in the woods as well since I have so many to use up! I would love some walking paths through what is now a buckthorn thicket.

4) Finish garden fence. The fence is up thanks to Mike and his dad's excellent work but I need to cut a piece of the wire mesh to cover the current fencing in the gate, which has holes large enough that young rabbits can leap through!  This summer the smaller rabbits found their way right into our garden for their lunch buffet.  We also need to connect the top of the fence to the wire cords at the top to help keep the mesh fence holding its shape.

5) Call TruGreen back to help us with our creeping charlie problem. I think we have more creeping charlie than grass at this point in the backyard. We have kept the dandelions at bay the past 2 years but the creeping charlie has won the battle.

6) Call a tree trimming company to cut the limb that is overhanging our dog run fence as well as cut down one tree that is growing out at an angle and shading my garden!

7) Move out the excess raspberry plants and all of the daylilies which we have now fenced into the increased garden space.  This is a big job!!! I should have done this when we first fenced in the extra area for the garden but never got around to it. I think this will probably take a good 4-5 weekends worth of work as now the raspberries and daylilies have been growing unchecked without rabbits to mow them down... so there are a lot to move.
     I was thinking that I would move the extra raspberries back to the furthest portion of our backyard and create a line of raspberry shoots there which I will stake up and try to keep orderly. I would have to fence them at least from rabbits but chicken wire should do that job.
     I would like to move the daylilies to the edge of the woods where we should have a lot more sunlight after removal of all that buckthorn.  I think it will also keep the garlic mustard at bay too having the orange daylilies there as a groundcover.
     Then once all this is out of the garden, or the raspberries are tamed back into more order, I will have more fenced in garden space in which to plant!

8) Make some order of the remaining raspberries in the garden.
     I love having that raspberry thicket enclosed in the garden for those 2 delicious weeks of raspberry picking and eating.  But I really want to try to control the thicket.  I want to try to train the plants into rows similar to how we train the tomatoes with wire or twine between fence posts at either end of a row.

9) Move out the excess strawberries from the garden.
     The strawberry patch has thrived in the garden! As of fall, it is now spreading well beyond its border and runners are now in the asparagus section and in the main garden section. I think I will move these to use as a groundcover edging the fence along the dog run fence. I don't know how they will work there but I think it is worth a shot.

10) Do the regular garden planting and preparation!
     Here's hoping for better luck with my zucchini this year.  I also want to try beets this year.

11) Clean the back garden shed exterior and wash all the mildew off the siding.

12) Enclose my mint with a small fence. I have some decorative fencing about a foot tall or so which I think would work well. I want to mark the area so when Trugreen does come to spray their chemicals they do not spray it on my patch of mint.  This mint was in my grandmother's yard in Nebraska, and she dug this up for me maybe 5 years ago. I planted it initially at Mike's parents' house and then transplanted it here after we bought this place!  It has survived but not really thrived as I expected mint to do. I expected to be having to keep it in check which has not been the case at all. Maybe with some more sun without some of the buckthorn shade it will do better.  I am looking forward to learning how to dry mint leaves to make tea!

13) Repair rotted wood in upper garden shed and repaint it.
     I do not actually think this will get done in 2020. Mainly because repairing rotted wood is something neither Mike or I know how to do.  I did nail a board over a hole in the back of the shed where animals had gnawed through and were coming in to make their homes, so that was a (very very small) start. But hopefully in 2021 we can patch all the rotted or otherwise bad wood and get this shed in much better shape. The repainting I can definitely do. Hopefully we can learn how to do the wood repairs. I look at people's pretty garden sheds when I walk Maximus through the neighborhood and have taken pictures of the best looking sheds I've seen as ideas for ours. I think it will be impossible to get that shed to stop smelling like mouse though. :(

14) Clean the trash out of the woods.
      We have slowly been doing this since we bought the house but there are still some piles of old pallets, chicken wire, wood pieces and other misc trash that has spread through the woods. The farthest part of the woods has the most trash. The neighbor's trash from an old shed full of trash on the edge of their property (now recently removed) has dispersed itself through the woods, including into our property. And it looked like people had an area in the woods where they would sit and drink beer and have a campfire in years past.  We have carried out some of the beer cans and trash from that area, including a mini-fridge that was left there for some reason!  But there is more to go.  It would be nice to get this finished this year.

15) Mark our property lines with logs as fences.
     Unfortunately one property corner marker from our land survey got ripped up when our neighbors took out that old shed full of trash I mentioned!  Mike and I spent some time last fall back there with metal detectors to try to find the metal stake which should have been buried at that property corner but had no luck finding it. We found plenty of other buried metal trash, old nails, wires, etc in that area but even despite the many false positives, we could not find that buried stake.
     But, once we get the woods all cleaned up, my idea is to drag some of the many logs laying around to form a sort of a "fence" or property line marker. It would not be exact given that we can't find that one property corner marker, but our best guess. Hopefully this should dissuade neighbors' trash from finding its way onto our property and avoid future beer drinking parties using our woods.

16) Move the daylilies out of the dog run.
     Finally one that is quick and easy!

17) Move the daylilies from the garden bed behind the garage.
      Another job which will likely have to wait until 2021 given the number of other more important  things we want to get done this year.  But if by chance I have spare time ;) I want to dig up that entire bed of orange daylilies and plant a new garden bed there.  It is a large bed which faces east and gets great sun.  It would be perfect spot for a perennial bed of flowers I like more than those orange daylilies.  As with the mass of daylilies in the garden, I plan to move these to the sunny edges of the woods.  I haven't made a garden design of what I want to plant there but I know I want a row of tall flowers like a hollyhock or delphinium at the back edge along the garage.  And I would likely put a couple peonies somewhere in the bed.  But, step one would be to dig up the daylilies and transplant them elsewhere, and then put some cardboard or something else down to kill remaining weeds until I plant the bed.

18) Pull up the black plastic and remove the rocks around the tree at the corner of the front yard.
     This is another thing I meant to do last year.  Once I get these up, I want to plant a shade garden under that tree. I imagine it will be better for the tree to not have that black plastic smothering its roots, I would think!  I want to move some extra hostas under here from other areas of hostas I have that need dividing.  And there is already a bleeding heart which I planted under here which has so far done great and which I love!  It is right in the front yard and a perfect spot for a beautiful deep shade garden.

19) Clean up the north side of the house by the air conditioner. I want to dig up the ferns from this area and weed out the thistles from along the house here. I planted one azalea here 2 years ago, and I would like to add another. Mainly I want to get this side of the house looking better so the neighbors on that side like us more. :)  I will weed this garden bed, move the ferns to the woods, and mulch.

20) Trim the yew hedge in the front yard in front of our bedroom window.  I might need Mike's longer arms for this job. Or better clippers. I tried to trim this beast last summer and did make some headway but it still looks overgrown and untidy.  We will work on it.

21) Prune the 4 small apple and cherry trees I planted. I planted 3 of these trees in 2016. I really should have pruned them by now but every March I think about trying it and talk myself out of it because I don't know how to do it.  My goal is that this spring I will at least thin out the branches even if I don't know how to create a "central leader" and "scaffold" branches like I read about.

22) Finally put together that archway for the gate in the dog run.  I might have lost some pieces by now so maybe I can't even do this! This was another project I started last year and didn't finish. Or possibly even the year before?! This is another project to get finished in spring as soon as the snow melts... no more procrastination!  I have the William Baffin climbing roses planted and in position to start their climb over the arbor if I ever get it put together.
   
23) Try starting peony seeds.  I saved seeds from my (possibly Sarah Bernhardt?) peony this fall and I am curious if I can get them to germinate.  It is not really that I want too many more peonies of this variety, as it definitely flops over and needs a peony ring, but I just would love to learn how to do this!  I think for future peony purchases, I am going to make sure to look for peony varieties with stronger stems that don't need as much support.


Hopefully I can accomplish at least some of these 23 goals next year!!


The lilac tree covered with snow in the garden

Monday, December 30, 2019

Houseplants December 2019

My aloe has a flower stalk for the first time!  Grandma S gave me this aloe plant, and I have divided it many times over the past 5 years or so whenever it puts out babies, which is very often!  All of these other aloes on the windowsill and the table are offshoots of this one plant.
But, first time for a flower!


So much aloe!
They thrive with my kind of care which is very occasional watering.

Lots of snow outside

A snowy day for the dog to be outside. He didn't stay out long... just long enough to bark at the snow.

Very pretty snow on that big tree. As long as that big branch overhanging the fence doesn't come down.  I hired someone to cut it last year but they never came, so it is still around.  

Sunday, December 29, 2019

Front patio and yard late December 2019

I am back from AZ now and back into the cold. It was wonderful seeing everyone and I miss them so much!

This AM we had fog and the temperature is in the mid 30s, so have been getting rain today. It also rained pretty much all day yesterday.  It is very pretty out with this fog and misty rain!

I got that wreath for free after Christmas from Menards!

A second free wreath

Still with lots of icy snow now after a day of rain.

Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Yuma December 2019

I had a fantastic time seeing mom and dad and everyone in Yuma!  It was excellent getting to go from the snow in MN to the sun in AZ.

Mom and dad's yard is beautiful. They have so many fruit trees and lovely plants growing. I started taking pictures in the backyard and didn't make it to the full front yard, so I am missing pictures of their pecan trees, mulberry, and some other plants.  But here are some pictures from their beautiful yard in December in AZ!

The backyard

Grapefruit tree

Orange tree

Fig tree and chili plant

Tangerine tree

Some more grapefruit and orange trees

Grapefruit are my favorite!!  Dad also has a big container of grapefruit juice he juices for me when I get to Yuma. I love it and love my parents. 💕

The back chicken and duck pens with my parents' sunflower patch on the right.  The sunflowers are dead now for the winter but they reseed and will come back up next spring. My mom told me how they make a home for so many tiny birds that live in the sunflowers and eat the seeds.

There are a few sunflowers remaining.

The sunflower patch in winter.  My dad was going to cut them all down, but saw that there were still birds in here eating some remaining seeds. So he decided to give it some more time.

Grape vines

The front yard

Sunday, December 1, 2019

Front patio and yard December 2019

Winter has arrived!  The yard looks very different from the mid-November views.  Now is under a good coating of snow.





Monday, November 18, 2019

Front Patio November 2019

Today I swept off the leaves from the front patio and it is decorated for fall. The birdhouse was a gift from mom and dad, and I love it!  I had it hanging from a hook on a corner of the house, but it ended up falling, and I like it here where I can see it everyday.  The flowers in the pot were from Bethesda thrift store, and the wreath was one I bought last year.




The front patio garden beds are mostly mulched and cleared for the winter.  I still need to cut back the peony stalks and mulch the bed on the left.

Next spring, I hope to dig out that remaining juniper bush I do not like on the right and that old partially dead spirea bush on the left middle.  Since these beds are right in front of the front door, I want to plant things I like more.  My latest lavender plant is on the right middle. This is my third attempt to have a lavender plant survive the winter.  I have mulched it and will probably add some more mulch or leaves.

Saturday, October 5, 2019

Planting lilies October 2019

I went to the North Star Lily Society bulb sale today and had a good time planning where to plant lilies.  I plan to put all these in the dog run where they will be safe from rabbits eating them.



L. 'Claude Shride'
Division II - Martagon
Avg bloom: June    Avg ht: 5'
Greyed purple, few yellow spots

L. 'Brocade'
Division II - Martagon
Avg bloom: June   Avg ht: 5'
Pink, yellow center, chocolate spots

L. 'Anastasia'
Division VII OT - Oriental Trumpet
Avg bloom: July   Avg ht: 5'
White, rose-pink center

L. 'Pink Flight'
Division 1c - Asiatic
Avg bloom: June/July    Avg ht: 4'
Deep coral pink, long pedicels
Unregistered

L. 'Arbatax'
Division VIII LA - Longiflorum Asiatic
Avg bloom: June/July    Avg ht: 3'
Rose pink, white center, very large

L. 'Purple Eye'
Division 1a - Asiatic
Avg bloom: June/July    Avg ht: 3'
Dark pink, maroon spreckles
Unregistered

L. 'Auratum'
Division IX - Species
Avg bloom: July    Avg ht: 3.5'
White with gold ray

L. 'Cogoleto'
Division VIII LA - Longiflorum Asiatic
Avg bloom: June/July  Avg ht: 3.5'
Silvery pink, red spreckles
Unregistered


And here they are all planted in the newly created lily garden in the dog run.
I planted these a few weeks ago a couple days after I bought them, but didn't take a picture. Now it is November 7 and winter has arrived. :( I don't think the high will reach 30 degrees today.  Hopefully everything in this new bed will survive. I planted all the lily bulbs and also a peony and some ground cover plants to grow around the lilies.

Sunday, September 29, 2019

Bob's zinnias - 2019

Bob and Mary Ann's zinnias are beautiful! Bob planted these from seed and they really thrived in this spot.  I think I may plant some zinnias next year somewhere after seeing how beautiful these turned out to be.

Yard and Garden update September 2019

Fall is here!  Our garden season is about at an end for this year. As usual there were many many things I dreamed about doing but didn't get to.  So, I will keep dreaming about them for next year.

It rained last night and our yard was green and dripping today. It is beautiful and cool out!

I went around and took pictures of all the areas of our yard today for an overview of the yard as we end 2019 gardening season.  Here goes:

1) The front patio.
All decorated for summer, and now moving into fall.  The two large flower planters I got on end of summer sale in early September for $5 each!  I plan to move these to the back patio next year to start an herb container garden back there.


2) The front patio garden.
Only my hardy geranium is blooming now (9/29/19).  This has become one of my favorite flowers as they survive without care from me, deer and rabbits leave them alone, and I love the color of the light purple flowers.
I did some weeding of creeping charlie here yesterday but still have a ton of weeding left to do here! Hopefully I can finish it and get these beds mulched and cleaned up this fall.
That pile of creeping charlie on the concrete is what I weeded yesterday. The weeded area doesn't look too bad!

Last year (or two years ago) I planted some wild columbine and it has self seeded I guess and is taking over the left hand portion of the garden bed in this picture. I have left it since I do like the flowers on it, but we will see.
In the middle of the bed in the front in this picture is my hardy geranium with its purple flowers.
To the right is a lavender plant that I planted this year (2019). We'll see if it can survive the winter.  Maybe third time will be a charm!  I plan to cover it with leaves this year to see if that will help.
In the back of this bed is the juniper type shrub that I want to finish digging out, a spirea bush which I may or may not keep, and a ton of creeping charlie!

The other side of the bed.
This has 2 peonies (the largest one on the left is the white one), 2 spirea bushes, a large weed, another hardy geranium hidden in there, a couple other plants, and creeping charlie.
My hardy geranium flowers after the rain

3) The driveway bed.
I planted the lemon balm here a year or two ago and it has been taking over this garden. I have left it as I don't really mind! I think it is a nice groundcover for the garden and it smells so nice. Hopefully next year I can try drying its leaves for tea.
My biggest and best peony is full of seed pods now. I need to cut those off and try planting those this year. I am curious if I can manage to grow a peony from seed!
The only things blooming in this bed now is the sedum, and still a few blooms on the salvia (sage) plant. Bees love that plant for sure, and I like it for how easy it is to grow, its smell, long lasting flowers and the bees it attracts. What I don't like is how it gets huge and flops over the other plants in the garden. I need to buy plant rings next year for my two salvia plants to minimize this.

The peony seed pods.

Sedum in bloom 9/29/19
Still a few blooms on the salvia plant


4) Front yard fruit trees
These are still doing well and getting bigger every year!  I need to muster up the courage to prune them this March. The past two years I have read directions for how to do it but haven't had the courage to actually get out there and cut branches.  That will be a goal for early 2020.
I guess deer have been eating the leaves off the lower branches?  I don't know what else would be tall enough to reach those branches. As soon as Mike mows, I am going to put back up the chicken wire cylinders to stay up fall through spring.
The periwinkle I planted as a groundcover directly beneath these three trees is also doing very well. It has spread and has taken over more of the area beneath the trees.

Lower branches have had leaves eaten off.
Vinca/periwinkle is doing well beneath the trees!

5) Front yard corner tree bed
Still a mess. It will be a big job to move all the rocks which are currently covering the ground of this bed, and then pull up the black plastic.  Another goal for 2020!  But, then I can do plant some hostas and other shade plants under here and I think it will be beautiful. Most prominent is the bleeding heart up front, which has done great here, and the lungwort right under the tree which has also done very well.

6) Air conditioner bed.
So much to be done here too! I want to dig up all those ferns (which are all brown at this time of year) and move all those to the woods next spring.  The azalea I squeezed into the ferns 2 years ago is still alive. It has grown a little but not too much being that it is probably shaded by the ferns most of the year. It is just to the left of the air conditioner.  I would also like to move those hostas and daylilies that are to the right of the AC and plant things there that I like more.  And get rid of all the thistles!  Also, the "grass" in this area is actually 90% creeping charlie and 10% grass.

7) Front yard road rock bed.
Nothing blooming here at this time in fall. My peony I planted here has not grown at all.  This is my second attempt to try to plant a peony here. I guess I will have to see how the other plants look here, and may need to replace this peony.  I can also do some dividing of the hostas here and move some over to the front yard corner bed above once I get rid of the rocks there.


8) Retaining wall garden bed.
The shrubs have really grown and the cherry tree has also been doing excellently!  I will have to widen the chicken wire cylinder next year as it is already outgrowing it. The lamium I planted for a groundcover beneath it is spreading nicely, and the creeping phlox on the edges is also still going strong.

Hopefully that creeping phlox that is lining the front edge will spread eventually to make a nice groundcover.

Up front left is my second salvia plant which is doing its flopping thing into the yeard.

Here is my summersweet bush on the right accompanied by the volunteer dalily which I need to move, a few patches of creeping phox, irises lining the back wall, and many invading thistles.

Not many blooms now, but an occasional spirea bloom (on the left) and a weigela bloom (on the right).

The hibiscus at the garage end of the retaining wall.  It is still going strong!  I need to weed out those thistles and creeping charlie and remulch.

9) Garage garden bed.
Never got around to moving these daylilies. I kept an eye on the milkweed and never did see any monarch cocoons on them this year so I am going to pull them out next year.
Goals for 2020: do another round of thistle weeding. Start moving these daylilies to other spots in the yard - probably lining the edge of the woods once I remove the buckthorn.  Decide what I want to plant here instead!  Start digging up the creeping charlie and decide what to put in its place. I have been thinking of a thyme lawn here or a chamomile lawn (in my dreams). As much as I think the chamomile would smell so nice, if I can get thyme established it seems hardier and more likely to grow thick and keep out the return of the creeping charlie.

10) Back stairs sunroom garden bed.
I have kept the weeds down for the most part here this year, although now the creeping charlie is invading again. The two old spirea bushes are still around - not my favorite. I have planted three periwinkle plants here to start a groundcover. And I have planted three thyme plants here between the stepping stones to start a groundcover there.  They haven't spread yet but are still alive so that counts for something.

11) The dog run garden.
Only thing blooming back here now is a raspberry bush with one red raspberry which I ate.  I planted a peony here last month which is in the spot where a dead spirea was that I dug out (right next to the upside down dog bowl). Still three large spirea shrubs here along the patio.

The raspberry bush is along the fence to the right of the gate and it has thrived here.
The blurry raspberry which was tasty. I like that this bush has raspberries still appearing at the end of September!



12) The back shed area and edge of the woods.
We have so much buckthorn to cut down along the edge of the woods. I would love to weed this area and haul out all the trash from the previous owner and fix this shed up. It needs rotted wood replaced and needs to be repainted. Then maybe we can put in a firepit and stone patio back here (possibly).
As it is, I keep pulling the garlic mustard that appears here but I know this will be a forever job as long as the neighbor's portion of the woods edge remains full of it (which it is!).
Those stakes mark two reblooming lilac plants I planted. They are so far still alive but still very tiny - I don't think they grew more than an inch this year. Maybe too shady.
That shed needs work.  And so many weeds!

A buckthorn forest!

13) The garden!
The garden is looking very wild because I have yet to try to prune or move that raspberry thicket. And they are growing like crazy!  But apart from the overgrown raspberries and lilac tree, everything else is looking great. We have had a very productive year with tomatoes and cucumbers. And I have some lovely squash on the vine now. I don't know if it is ripe yet so I have been leaving them there.


Some more buckthorn forest on the left lining the edge of the woods.
Up front outside of the garden fence is my mint from Grandma's garden. Just beyond the fence is my rhubard. To the left is the asparagus.



Squash! Coming to the end of the season so the vines are dying back.

The end of my tomatoes. We had an excellent crop this year!

The strawberry patch with the asparagus and rhubarb

What I harvested today: lots of tomatoes and two cucumbers

14) The back back yard and woods
So much clearing to do in the woods, and somehow need to figure out how to keep flowing water from melting snow from digging a channel back here. And also need to figure out how to get grass to grow!