Saturday, May 31, 2008
Overwintered and other Geranium (Pelargonium)
Here are some of the overwintered geraniums (Pelargonium). The most successful and easiest approach was to have them in containers and just leave the containers dry out in the garage for the winter. This is the "cheap+lazy" method since it really doesnt entail much effort, and results in nice good-sized plants by early summer.
The variegated pelargonium was overwintered. It is just coming back into its own. The finely cut leaf pelargonium was just added. It is scented, citrus. The smaller flowers are sweet alyssum, probably coming up from seeds from ones that bloomed in the container last year.
So tell me, please - why do I need a peppermint scented pelargonium when I have peppermint-scented peppermint growing all over the place? Anyway, it does smell, strongly, like peppermint. This one is new, so is not an overwinter example.
This wals also overwintered as above. This one is pine scented and it smells very much like pine. The scent is stong. Cool. Each time that I walk past it, I pinch off some more and smell it. The dark purple leaves are part of a Tradescantia pallida. This did well in other containers, using the dry-for-the-winter system. I was also surprised to see one poking up in the strawberry border, surviving the winter in ground. That is probably a fluke, this is really a tender tropical plant.
This is another scented one. I forget the variety. It did not survive the totally dry method 2 winters ago - this was kept as a cutting over that winter. So this winter I kept it almost-dry in a cool sunny room. Also took a cutting, using the lazy-gardener's method of cut off a piece and stick into some potting soil and water like any other house plant. That worked too. I cleaned it up a bit, and stuck some cuttings in the ground or with other plants. If they grow, that's good. If not, nothing lost.
Just regular run-of-the-mill geraniums. The prior over-winter entries show how they looked coming out of the garage. 6 weeks ago the leaves were dry and crispy, and the stems didnt look much better. All that I did was clean them up and set them in a semi sunny location. Again, the lazy gardener's method of overwintering, and the cheap gardener's method of having some large geraniums for the deck. They'll be blooming soon.
Labels:
cheap+lazy,
geranium,
overwinter,
pelargonium,
scented geranium
Magnolia sieboldii
I'm not sure that it was worth it. Maybe next year it will have more flowers. Novelty is worth something. I've never seen one before, except in the catalog.
I looked around google for more information about this Magnolia. It is also called "Oyama magnolia" for the mountain where it is native in Japan. It also grows in Northern Manchuria and Korea. (Ning grew up in Manchuria and states that he's never seen one before). The Japanese and Korean varieties may have lighter coloration of the stamens, with the Manchurian varieties having darker red stamens. This information from "The World of Magnolias". This variety seems to be in the darker stamen group, although not as dark as in the original catalog picture. Apparently it is better suited for shade, and this one is in a more sunny spot - maybe that's why it dried out 2 years ago during the summer. Last year I watered it more frequently, compared to the other shrubs, and it did not lose leaves that summer. According to multiple sources, it blooms over a several-week cycle, and then sporadically through the Summer.
Peach Tragedy
Fish emulsion is stinky, and probably for that reason the dogs love it. They follow closely and lick the watering can when I set it down.
The newly planted peaches were completely untouched by the leaf curl. As bare root trees, I suspect that they were stored indoors, in a climate controlled barn (I saw that at Raintree Nurseries). That supports the idea that preventing rain from washing spores into the buds might help prevent the disease. I had worried that covering them would make overheat, due to solar energy, or make them dry out, because the rain would be diverted. However, this is far worse. It's also proof that neem oil is not a panacea. Of course, nothing is a panacea, and I knew that. My plan this fall will be to build a 'barn' to cover each tree. Since they are miniature trees, it should not be too difficult.
Kitchen Garden
I hate to say it, but I planted some 'orphan' tomato plants in an area that is frequented by the cat for her litter box. These ARE larger and greener than the others. I guess this is OK - they are fruits, so the food part is not near the cat's 'products'.
Today I planted another set of Ning's beans. In addition, I planted bush zucchinis. Something ate the prior seedlings. I planted new cucumber seeds, for the same reason.
Labels:
beans,
cheap+lazy,
cucumber,
herbs,
heritage vegetables,
kitchen garden,
multiplier onion,
tomato,
zucchini
Ginkgos
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