I’ve been working my ass of lately. The weather has been great and I want to take advantage of it before the heat comes along. The majority of the outdoor projects should be coming to a close by the 2nd wk of June. Switching to gardening and plant care for the duration of the summer.
So, what’s been done since last time. Yesterday, I got the chainsaw out and scuplted the two evergreen stumps that flank the back porch. Heh, I just wrote, “got the chainsaw out”. Whoever took the trees down dig a pretty good job up to the point where they got too tired or the job got too big. One stump is next to the grill. A crude, off angle shelf or bench was cut into it. Besides that both pretty much look like big stumps.
My intention was to turn them both into planters for low water plants like sedums. And to expand and level the bench. I started by cleaning them out as far as I could. That was a rather disgusting job and those parts of the tree had probably never been cleaned. I found a worm, lots of snail shells, an incredible amount of dirt. A whole that was 4 inches became 12 just with cleaning.
Then I chainsawed the bench level, deeper, and more square. Cut off any jutting limbs and recut the ends of several limbs to give them a more even look. This was a lot of work. Turns out the trees are cedar, very nice smelling, and tough. The water hose washed off the wood chips and “dirt”. A cocunut fiber planter was cut up to cover gaps between the limbs. Potting soil was added and then plants.
It turned out pretty good. The bench cut is great. Now, it looks intentional. The cutting revealed the beautiful cedar color and lent purpose.
Lots of plants have been purchased and planted. Probably four flats of zinnias, petunias, and marigolds. The marigolds go everywhere to protect agains nematodes and other soil born pests; garden and flower beds. A few herbs go in both types of beds; oregano and rosemary. If I could grow chamomile easily it would be planted every few feet over the whole yard. The intention is beauty and overall health. Flowering plants and disease/pest resistant plants mixed.
In the front yard, I redug the flower bed under the hedge. And was very suprised to see that the turned sod had become the consitency of peat moss. My intuition about digging that first week was correct. Six weeks later it paid off. Also, the curbside bush got some company from flowers; zinnias, marigolds, snapdragon, daisy, and calendula.
The backyard flower beds got trellises for the sweet peas and zinnias, marigolds, and petunias. The pumpkin seeds went in one corner. And cantaloupe and watermelon in the other corner. I couldn’t wait for the seeds so I got a six pack at Sutherlands. Soon they’ll get a trellis to help with the space issues. This corner is very interesting to me. It’s under three pecan trees on a mound. Yet, it seems to get almost full sun given the motion of the sun and plants and fence around it. I suspect in the summer it will be a very cool spot.
When planting the cantaloupe I was very excited to discover that chamomile had sprouted in several spots. Chamomile is referred to as the plant doctor. You’re supposed to set a pot of it next to any sick plant. I have so far been unable to grow it at all. Seeing in the yard is great.
I’m not sure if the seeds will come up. So, I decided to try an experiment. Let me back up. Last year, I tossed the rotting halloween pumpkin in the compost bin and was very surprised to see that many, many of the seeds sprouted and were very vigorous even though they never saw the light of day. In fact, I checked the bin Sunday and there were 4 good pumpkin sprouts. I planted them in dirt, put them in sun, and 3 have survived and look fantastic. 2-3 times better than the peat pot plants.
My experiment is to put 6-8 watermelon seeds and a packet of red corn in plastic contains, cover with worm compost, and place in the worm bin. I’ll let them sprout in the bin and pull them out like the pumpkin. I found one blog post by someone who sprouted his seedlings in worm compost and did a side-by-side comparison with regular soil. His pics showed plants 2-3 times bigger. But I could not google someone who had actually sprouted their crop in the worm bin. So this will be a “first”.
Several vegetables were started inside and moved to the raised beds. It looks like one bed will be tomato centric. An heirloom seed I got off the Internet, Cherokee something and packet of store bought seed. Of course lots of flowers and herbs in the same bed. Oregano, marigold, sorrel, bee balm, purple basil, chamomile, caladiums, petunias, and whatever else. The other bed is based on beans. 2-3 long bean types and 1-2 bush beans and purple potatoes. The potatoes have some allysium seeds sprouting on them. And I threw a packet of lettuce and radishes near the beens. Other plants in this bed are petunia, zinnia, chamomile, marigold, and marjoram.
Six tomatoes were planted in the bed from peat pots and 3 are alive. Several times I thought they were all dead. Then one day I noticed two had grown substantially. One day they had the first and second set of leaves and the next day they grew the third set. The only other seeds to do this were the marigolds, which never looked very sickly. I think it was the heat. We had a couple of days of 80′ degree weather and I suspect the chemistry of tomatoes needs these higher temperatures for growth. There’s still one more sickly tomato, but I keep pulling for him. He’s managed to stay alive for this long.
Another interesting note was that the sorrel started getting sunburned. I felt I had to plant it because it was looking poorly and looking poorly is usually due to lack of water or lack of sun. He wasn’t suffering from lack of water. Anyway, I built a little shade for him. I considered moving him, but I suspect the tomatoes will soon tower over everthing given a chance and that will work out perfectly.
The garden bed has sprouted and looks great. Lots of little plants, most of them unidentifiable at this stage. Some corn, a few beans, 6? cucumbers, and many unknowns. Of course, I threw soemthing like 8 packets of seed in this ~100 sq ft space. The weather has been perfect for seeds. The day after I planted it was wet for two days. Then sunny for 3. Then wet for two.
The days it dried freaked me out, because the surface of the ground cracked big time. Luckily, the WT A&M compost I ordered in March showed up and I put it on the bed to “seal” the cracks. This is by far the best looking compost I seen. Light and fluffy with no odor. I’m going to order a lot of it next year.
I saved the best for last. The Pergola is proceeding slowing. 4 of 6 post holes are dug. The ground is somewhat leveled. Half the wood is here. The site is cleared. Concrete is lying around. The post bases are painted. And I given the plan and construction plans and incredible amount of thought.
Unfortunately, it keeps raining and filling up the post holes. Today, I even had a plan to use a Walmart sack to dip the last little bit of water out of the bottom of the holes and it rained enough to completely fill two holes. It takes 1-2 days to mostly dry out. Every rain is like a 2 day delay. My drop dead goal is by 5/20 to have posts and main supports in place. The dozen or so rafters will take a while. Since, the supports are not square each rafter notch is unique. That one task may take 2 days.
Well, that’s 2 hours of writting and it’s bed time. Until later.