First Turnip. 10.12.17 |
Thursday, October 12, 2017
Nerine and Geraniums. 10.12.17
I moved these out of the rain, and will let them dry out as much as possible before moving them to the garage for the winter. This planting is about 3 or 4 years old now. The nerine is a nice surprise. I thought they had died out.
Labels:
geranium,
nerine,
overwintering geranium
New Load of Arborist Chips. Mulching Young Trees and Borders for Next Year. 10.14.17
We had a large, old, dead tree cut down. The arborist had a truck load of chipped tree branches, including those from our tree, so I asked for them to use as mulch.
It will take several truck loads to haul all of them. So far, I've mulched a major section of the woods edge border, which I spent the last 18 months cleaning up and planting with trees, shrubs, and perennials. It was fairly clean already, but with about 4 inch thickness of arborist chips, should not need any significant maintenance for most of 2018.
That's a major step in reducing my workload next year. Many of the things that I planted there, were unwanted plants and shrubs that needed a new home. Some were sizeable. I didn't want to buy things that might not do well, or more likely, be eaten by deer. Deer are the major limitation to what I can grow. At this point, I just want to get trees growing above deer browsing height, and stick to the ornamentals that they don't like to eat. I know they won't eat the dwarf mugo pines, crocosmia, gladiolas, ferns, Helleborus, daffodils, or hyacinthoides. Not sure about the Rhododendrons. I'm watching for deer damage to the Dawn Redwood, but so far they have not taken a liking to it.
I also mulched the year old Chestnut trees. They still need some hardware cloth to protect from rodents, then they too are set for the winter and for 2018 as well.
It will take several truck loads to haul all of them. So far, I've mulched a major section of the woods edge border, which I spent the last 18 months cleaning up and planting with trees, shrubs, and perennials. It was fairly clean already, but with about 4 inch thickness of arborist chips, should not need any significant maintenance for most of 2018.
Chestnut Tree, One Year Old. Double-Fenced, Mulched, and Ready for Winter. 10.12.17 |
That's a major step in reducing my workload next year. Many of the things that I planted there, were unwanted plants and shrubs that needed a new home. Some were sizeable. I didn't want to buy things that might not do well, or more likely, be eaten by deer. Deer are the major limitation to what I can grow. At this point, I just want to get trees growing above deer browsing height, and stick to the ornamentals that they don't like to eat. I know they won't eat the dwarf mugo pines, crocosmia, gladiolas, ferns, Helleborus, daffodils, or hyacinthoides. Not sure about the Rhododendrons. I'm watching for deer damage to the Dawn Redwood, but so far they have not taken a liking to it.
I also mulched the year old Chestnut trees. They still need some hardware cloth to protect from rodents, then they too are set for the winter and for 2018 as well.
Labels:
arborist chips,
borders,
chestnut trees,
Dawn Redwood,
deer,
mulch
Sunday, October 08, 2017
Update: Transplanted Old, Minidwarf Apple Trees, 2 seasons later. 10.8.17
Jonagold on M27. 10.8.17 |
I'm happy with how they responded to transplanting and care.
Liberty on M27. 10.8.17 |
Labels:
Jonagold,
Liberty,
M27,
transplanting fruit trees
Kitchen Garden Harvest. 10.8.17
The turnips were planted in a raised bed in July. This is a massive turnip now.
The squashes are butternuts, scallops, and some compost volunteers. Those may be natural hybrids of different types that I grew last year.
The squashes are butternuts, scallops, and some compost volunteers. Those may be natural hybrids of different types that I grew last year.
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