Showing posts with label heritage flowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heritage flowers. Show all posts

Sunday, December 08, 2013

More seeds for Kitchen garden and bee garden.


Another order, seedsavers.org

Bean, Dragon's Tongue PKT

Bean, Pencil Pod Golden Wax PKT

Pepper, Hot Portugal PKT

Pepper, Maule's Red Hot PKT

Squash, Golden Zucchini OG

Tomato, Cherokee Purple OG

Tomato, Italian Heirloom PKT

Tomato, Mexico Midget OG PKT

Flower, Four O'Clocks PKT

Flower, Bee's Friend PKT

Flower, Starfire Signet PKT

Sunflower, Titan OG


Image from vintageprintable.com
All of these are in the "Master Plan".  The garden beds are planned and all but one are built and filled; that last one is built but needs a chicken-wire bottom for moles and to be filled.

The 4 O'clocks are reported as deer and rabbit resistant, and may be a bee forage flower.  Phaseala ("Bee's Friend") is considered a great forage source.  The signet marigolds will be used in companion planting for vegetables.

I have a lot of seeds from last year.  I may try some of those too. 

This helps keep me going until late winter when I can start planting.  Especially cold days like today.

Friday, April 05, 2013

Heritage Irises, continued

The bearded iris order did arrive, as I was typing the previous post.

The rhizomes were smaller than previous orders from other sources.

My thinking is these are mostly, or all, diploid. Most modern irises are tetraploid and would have larger rhizomes. In addition, West Coast irises are expected to be larger due to growing season.  I think.  These were from Michigan, and the shorter season may lead to smaller rhizomes.

The important thing for me is they grow and bloom.

Ning planted them for me. A very simple task to plant these small rhizomes. Digging in the raised bed, there was a sizable population of earthworms. They would start coming out of the ground a foot away from each hole.  Add some well aged compost mulch around each.  Ready to settle in.

According to Old House Gardens, these should bloom this year.  Considering the size and need to settle in, if these do bloom this year, that suggests the others,, which are already much bigger, should do the  same.  I would like that.

Those rhizomes traveled a long way.

Not much I can do at the moment. Brief puttering and thinking about stuff. Quite some time back I ordered some heritage iris rhizomes.

By heritage, I indicate varieties that are genetic clones, through generations, from the mid 20th century, to the 19th century, and in some cases the 16th century. Propagated in endless succession by gardeners, and sometimes by nurseries, and sometimes by neglect, for generations and centuries. I ordered these rhizomes back in August of last year.  Ordering so far ahead is a leap of faith - a lot can happen in 8 months, and has.

 The raised bed is set up for them, and already has other irises, already well amended with a mixture of leaf compost and local soil (about 3 parts soil to 1 part compost), plus wood ashes, plus near the surface level, more kitchen compost and a generous dusting of ground eggshell for calcium. The irises already in the bed are growing vigorously, with stout green leaves, longer each time I look.

The rhizomes are shipping here,, should arrive today. It's interesting to me - and probably only to me - to look at the shipping record online. These rhizomes, having traveled through decades and centuries, and some at least across one ocean, and back and forth across a continent, are traveling again.  More when they arrive.

LocationDateLocal TimeActivity
Vancouver, WA, United States04/05/20137:27 A.M.Out For Delivery
04/05/20137:01 A.M.Arrival Scan
Portland, OR, United States04/05/20136:35 A.M.Departure Scan
Portland, OR, United States04/04/201311:32 P.M.Arrival Scan
Hermiston, OR, United States04/04/20137:54 P.M.Departure Scan
04/04/20135:38 P.M.Arrival Scan
Spokane, WA, United States04/04/20132:31 P.M.Departure Scan
04/04/201311:55 A.M.Arrival Scan
Hodgkins, IL, United States04/02/201310:37 A.M.Departure Scan
04/02/20136:28 A.M.Arrival Scan
Oshtemo, MI, United States04/02/20134:18 A.M.Departure Scan
04/02/20134:07 A.M.Arrival Scan
Wyoming, MI, United States04/02/20133:08 A.M.Departure Scan
04/02/201312:22 A.M.Arrival Scan
Ypsilanti, MI, United States04/01/20139:44 P.M.Departure Scan
04/01/20136:53 P.M.Origin Scan
United States04/01/20134:22 P.M.Order Processed: Ready for UPS

Iris Dalmatica minor Small Dalmatica Iris

from Renaissance herbals.

 -

from http://irapl.altervista.org/nit/viewpics.php?title=Iris+florentina

(from the linked website:  Iris florentina
Picture modified from Gilg, Ernst; Schumann, Karl - Das Pflanzenreich Hausschatz des Wissens (1900) - Permission granted to use under GFDL by Kurt Stueber. Source: www.biolib.de - Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this image under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled GNU Free Documentation License.
More to follow.