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Christmas
Day, 2009
I took
the two younger girl dogs out for a walk this evening. It was almost
dark, but that didn't stop them from romping and snow-stomping, barking
and carrying on.
I saw what I thought would be a great picture: my stone fox
leaning over in the snow with his head and one shoulder exposed. The
day was fading fast and by next light the rain will have washed that
picture away. I snapped one in the dusk.
The garden looks so
beautiful with its brown and white color scheme
today. I never got around to cutting anything down after the season and
I am
glad now. It doesn’t always pay to be neat and tidy.
The
winter solstice has come and gone and that means the days are getting
longer (they are! My insisting the days get longer always works at this
time of
year. You can count on me, like clockwork). It
must have been some big deal to our ancestors who farmed the land for a
living. I wonder with no TV or computer to get them through the winter
months how many farmers of yore watched the moon travel across the sky,
and watched the lengthening days with hope, knowing the soil would warm
again and accept the gift of seeds and seedlings to feed a
family.
September
29, 2009
I
am overwhelmed by the butterflies, caterpillars, and bumble bees in the
garden now. Two monarch caterpillars have started their journey
toward their new life in front of my eyes, but I've missed the final
act. I had no idea
it happened so quickly. First, I saw one attached to the underside of a
leaf. It slowly started to curl up. I thought I would come back down
in a few hours and see what had happened. When I came back two hours
later, it was a done deal! I couldn’t believe it. How could that
have happen so quickly? It has to be so hard to turn from a caterpillar
into a chrysalis. Doesn't it?
Two
days later I happened on another caterpillar on the underside of a
Salvia Indigo
Spires. He was just
starting the process: green,
black, and white; striped, fat, and very zen. "Ah ha!" I
thought, I
will come back in one hour and see how far she has
progressed.
One hour later, I came into the garden and presto, all done, the green
gem was already formed.
If I am so lucky to find another this
year I am not leaving. I'm not even going to blink. There's some magic
in this everyday miracle of nature. When you have gardens as big as we
do,
miracles of one type or another are an ongoing thing. This very large
garden started from things so small, seeds or
cuttings. Every time, they grow into just what they are programed to
be. The seeds that come from my phlox never turn into
surprise
frogs in the garden. Some great new colors
of phlox seedling yes, but no frogs.
Some new things we have at the moment: Epimedium ‘Orange
Queen’ are great for dry shade. I love these plants, I have to admit
I took one for myself. Hypericum ‘Chocolate Lion’ and ‘Pink Lion’: I am
also keeping a few those beautiies for my garden. The fruit of
these plants in flower arrangements is to die for. Plus those bright
yellow flowers in summer are perfect. The fall blooming anemones
‘Prince
Henry’ and ‘Party Dress’ both double pink spreading shade
plants. These need some room to spread.
Well I have wiled away a few
minutes of your time telling you about the happenings here at the
moment. Always good to keep in touch. Come visit us and see the garden.
We always love to have visitors!
--Karen
July 30,
2009
How
the Garden Gives Back to
Nature
It's
high summer:
The blue
birds and cardinals have found the ripe fruit of the native pagoda
dogwood. What fun! I get to watch it all happen and it’s all
serendipity. George and I got the dogwoods years ago and we sold not a
one. They grew crooked and stunted because we just left them in their
small pots. Four years ago we put one in the ground and I saw how
beautiful they were, but still no takers (maybe because the beautiful
one was in our back yard that is private). Last year we put them all in
the ground and I am so happy to have bird feeders I don’t
have to fill.
More signs of summer: The
monarch caterpillars have found the Asclepias physocarpa (we call it
monkey balls). The
Asclepias are now reseeding in my display garden out front, and I just
pull up the few I don’t want. I think the butterflies get hungry and
feel there's an open sign that says Free
Eats at the Morningside Butterfly Restaurant. Then they
tell all their closest friends and relatives who also come back year
after year to lay their eggs and belly up to the plant bar. And I love
it. That's why I make sure those plants are in my garden every year. I
love showing people their green, black, and white bodies making short
work out of the leaves. One day they are fat and sassy, and the next
day they are gone, having inched their way to a safe spot to prepare
for the miracle of rebirth into winged messengers of future
generations.
Finally,
keep an eye out for the cone flowers, which are getting ready to feed
the finches. Echinacea's pink, orange, white, and yellow flowers will
be replaced by bright yellow wings as nature intended. Lets hear it for
natives and non-natives plants that feed our inner soul and the outer
world of nature. Sounds like two for one to me.
Karen
June 1, 2009
I
have come to believe our place here is magic and that people come here
to feel it. A friend who has suffered a great tragedy in her
life
has used gardening to ease her sadness. Working with the earth and
making a special garden is her way of remembering a daughter. Gardens
can be like the soul of someone we love, we are not left alone if we
garden in someone's name and keep thoughts of them close. They will be
with us always in the garden. I have my mother with me as I garden
often.
I believe working the earth is a blessing to
everyone
who is open to it. We shut ourselves up and out of so much that is of
the natural world, we limp along waiting for the next thing to make us
happy whatever it is, and there is always a next thing. Well, you know
what? I stopped looking for my happiness outside of what I already
have: family, friends old and new, my happy dogs, the cats that eat
their fill of mice and voles and leave the parts everywhere, what could
be better then this?
This evening I picked some of my favorite zinnias tonight, like
apricot.
I also planted salvia ‘Phyllis Fancy’ which has pale lavender flowers
because the hummingbirds know it’s better then anything else
around (all you have to do is pick one of the flowers and suck on
the end to see for yourself). I DO love it when the garden is
alive
with bees and butterflies and hummers. Tonight I was cutting back the
spent blooms of my salvia ‘Caradonna’ to encourage a second flush of
flowers, but I had to be careful not to rub elbows with the bees
filling up on pollen for the evening trip home. They were
honey
bees and I have enjoyed watching them hover around those deep
purple/blue
spikes for weeks. Thinking about it now, I believe 'Caradonna' is the
same color
of our new shady rest pergola. Friends and family helped put it up and
it’s almost time to rest in it’s shade. When life gets to hectic at the
farm me and the dogs plan on resting up quite a bit. Come and
join us sometime. We will drink mint sweet tea and chat and laugh and
that should be enough to make anyone happy. A bouquet of happy thoughts
to you all and good night,
Karen
May 20, 2009
It’s
been the darndest weather this spring: Cool-misty, cool-
rainy, cool-cloudy, and then really hot all in the same week. The
plants in the greenhouses and in the gardens certainly recover faster
than I do. There is also no denying how the weather has made everything
lovely this
year. The gardens have had enough rain, and the world looks
green and lush.
We
are doing well at
the nursery this
year; we had no idea what it would be like. I appreciate the
love and support from friends and strangers alike. I guess we
are becoming known for peddling beauty to everyone who stops
by. Yesterday a young family came down the driveway in the
late afternoon, I smiled and said hello and they said they were just
looking. They gave the the display gardens the once over before getting
back in their car and heading out the driveway. Thats what I want our
place to be: a respite
from all of the hustle and bustle of everyday life. I believe
the people who make their way here feel that as well.
Finally,
next week we are
putting up a shade area attached to the retail greenhouse just for
sitting and relaxing (something we all need to do more of). When the
breeze blows through, it will be like
heaven. The new sitting space will also afford a great view of the
gardens, which are now showing off false indigo, golden spiderwort, and
catmint, among others things. Come and join us and talk gardening
anytime.
Happy
Digging,
Karen
March
30, 2009
The
stage is set,
the lights are coming up, and it’s almost show time.
We
are rushing
headlong toward our opening. It is coming so fast, as fast as the green
shoots emerging from the ground all through the gardens. Our
Morningside calendar has filled up with wonderful classes, check them
out in events.
This
year we are
going to be adding a small herb cutting garden for fresh herbs. George
is going to be taking some to the market and if people who come here
would like fresh herbs we will go out into the garden and cut some. Of
course we have to put the garden in first. We do have the spot picked
out, we just have to amend the soil, figure out how many of what to put
where, and plant them. Hmm Karen, and when is this going to happen? I
am a firm believer in miracles, and as miracles go, this one doesn’t
seem so out there. Herb cutting garden? Just make it so. Check back
later to see if anyone was listening.
I
also want to start
including a few recipes on these pages and in our class. I love to
cook (nothing fancy just what I would call good country fresh
food, and the way to get fresh food is from your own yard). So we are
putting in our first extensive veggie garden. That should also be
fodder for a few laughs here as my small efforts with tomatoes and
peppers has been spotty at best. Ornamental gardens I can handle, but
the kind of garden I can eat out of, well it is my experience other
things want to eat out of it as well. Fences don’t keep blister beetles
out of the garden. I learned about crop rotation the hard way last
year. This year I hope to fool the little suckers with a new garden
location.
George
is still
working on his rain garden, which is coming into it’s own. He is
working on a living willow fedge, which is a cross between a hedge and
fence. It is an experiment, but exciting if it works. Our fascination
with willows continues...they are cropping up everywhere here. I was
thinking next year of having a pussy willow day so everyone who wants
to can enjoy them also. Honey bees are enjoying them at the moment.
Willows are good bee food as not much else has pollen at the moment. I
also love to bring big bunches of all the different kinds of willows
(we have about 6) into the house. Happiness is spring, fresh food and
willows.
Happy
Gardening,
Karen
March 20, 2009
I think
yellow is the color
of early spring. It seems to be everywhere: the daffodils, the
forsythia (‘Kumson’, right) blooming in pots, and the big yellow twig
weeping willow. Even the finches get into the act by changing from
their dull winter browns to neon yellow. It catches the eye and lifts
the heart with the thought and hope of spring.
As
rocky as the
economy gets, gardens and gardening will always be just what it always
has been, we can count on that. Garden ups and downs can only come
from, say, the weather or garden-eating animals or my unwillingness to
do the work I know needs to be done. We can adapt our gardens to almost
all of these conditions to ride out the rocky times. Plant drought
resistant plants, deer proof plants, be more diligent with weeding. In
gardening we can be pro-active and take control of our gardens; we have
so much control. We can make them as big or as small a garden as we
feel like working in. It doesn’t have to be an overwhelming task. A
beautiful container at the door is a garden.
This
spring, thanks to a
very good friend Clara’s suggestion we are going to have two classes
that speak to the ability to put a garden anywhere. The first will be
an English trough class and, in the next, we will be making a fairy
garden in the troughs. Fairy gardens are those petite magical gardens
that a fairy would love to inhabit. Gardens don’t have to be the size
of Versailles to stop the heart and make you sigh. Sometimes being here
at the nursery I am struck by people who like the idea of gardening but
think it’s too much work The problem is just semantics. Maybe we could
call it "earthly meditation" or "communing with plants" instead of
"work." Remove the old idea of toiling away in the hot sun with a hoe,
and replace it with the idea of a quiet time to hear the call of the
natural world again. You can be anywhere, in a city on a balcony, or in
the country, the natural world is always calling we just have to be
quiet enough to hear it. And if we listen close enough, we might even
hear one of those fairies.
Happy
Spring,
Karen
February 4,
2009
Days
are getting
longer...sigh. I can say it for sure now: our gardens are receiving
more light to warm up their sleeping hearts. Sure, I'm writing this
during a cold snap, but I feel spring is really on the way and the days
of intense cold are on the way out. Our first greenhouse is full of
herb cuttings and all of George's perennials are raising their tiny
heads above the soil of their birth. We are going to have all kinds of
"new-for-us" plants this year, along with some of our old favorites in
smaller amounts so we can offer more variety. I will pass on a few
every time I write, either new or undiscovered by most gardeners.
One
of my favorites
from last year that we will have again is Digitalis purpurea heywoodii
"Pink Champagne." If you were one of the lucky few who bought one last
year I would love to see it this year, because we forgot to keep any
for ourselves! Heywoodii has beautiful silver foliage with blush pink
bells.
A new one
is Lonicera
sempervirens 'Major Wheeler' (right) which flowers heavily from spring
through fall. It's 3 - 8 feet tall with a 1 - 10 foot spread and has
crimson-red trumpet-shaped flowers. The long flowering time makes this
special, who wouldn't want something that flowers from spring to fall?
Another
new plant for
us is Aspen Sunflower (Helianthella quinquenervis). It is a clear
yellow without a hint of orange or gold. As a member of the sunflower
tribe, it is a great food source for birds in fall (I love natural bird
food plants).
Moving
on to our
display gardens: last year we were establishing a grass and sedge
garden and Geo's rain garden. The whole property will soon be one giant
garden for everyone to enjoy. We want customers and friends to wander
our home and take whatever ideas fit for themselves. One of the best
parts of this place is how it keeps us in touch with our gardening
community. We hope our reach goes beyond our 4 1/2 acres and our love
of gardening reaches into your heart, too.
Happy
Gardening,
Karen
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