Posted on October 16, 2022October 16, 202210/16/2022 after 3/4” rain Heath asters from TX have started blooming. I think these may be sand lovegrass seedlings. I put them in a lot of pots with native flower seeds as a potential nurse plant. This is the Muhlenbergia schreberi grass from Abby. It has a fun common name. I wanted to ensure I don’t lose it or mistake it for something like a skinny bermudagrass in the shade. This is the planter of soil from Jeanne that had a big patch of annual Sedum nuttallii. There are a bunch of sedum-looking seedlings but also plenty of other interesting looking babies too!! I seeded these cowpen daisies pretty late and didn’t know if they’d come up until next year. Instead, they seem to have noticed the declining day length and have made the world’s tiniest cowpen daisy blooms. This is normally a medium size plant! At least one Carolina snailseed root from Abby has produced new leaves.
Posted on September 28, 20229/27/2022 Maximilian sunflowers around town I’ve heard several people say their newly transplanted Maximilian sunflowers are just now starting to bloom. We visited this one this evening!
Posted on September 22, 2022September 22, 202209/22/2022 afternoon after work The backyard sunflowers are quite magnificent at this point. I don’t see any in this picture, but I saw several bumblebees up on the flowers. The Salvia azurea are really doing well. I have a new bunch of Indiangrass sprouting and blooming! The little bluestem is blooming too. This clump has gotten quite happy in its second or third year now. Jeanne, Abby, and Mom have been kindly helping me over text to confirm my accidental imports of non native and invasive King Ranch bluestem or “KR grass”. As they bloom and get identified, I have been pulling them. I’m also continuing to work on pulling the annual, invasive Commelina communis. Unlike the native perennial dayflower, its roots are very shallow.
Posted on September 5, 2022September 5, 202209/05/2022 new dayflower! Abby has found the perennial and native dayflower in her yard and kindly shared some. It has very different roots than the non native annual one! Earlier in the day, Shackleton supervised while Paula watered baby cacti. Careful pouring to wet the soil around the babies. “What is this fuss? Who opened my curtain??”
Posted on September 3, 2022September 3, 202209/03/2022 about to bloom The surviving plant of Mexican sage from Judy is thinking about blooming!
Posted on August 7, 2022August 7, 202208/07/2022 bulb time Wild Hyacinth bulbs arrived in the mail yesterday! We planted the three bulbs in a little crescent along the edge of this drier strawberry/honeyberry bed, and reinforced the dirt berm to trap a little extra water. Prairie Moon Nursery says they like medium-dry at most, but will generally do okay if it’s wet during the bloom time (which is usually our rain times). New earwig… We saw it moving around as we dug into the hard packed dry soil! It was somewhere between 2-6″ down. Just as bone dry the whole way. It swam across the water mud as we watered in the new bulbs. Hoping it might be a native one but waiting on what inaturalist or friends say.
Posted on June 2, 2022June 2, 202206/02/2022 New book in the mail! The Social Wasps of North America by Chris Alice Kratzer. It looks very useful. Awards for bravery all around tonight. Shacks walked right past Briar and she stayed put. Purple coneflower finally opening up! Ironweed is budding, seems early?? This is one of two dill seedlings in the herb bed. Pretty sure now that this is the Mexican sage from Judy. Whoa, standing cypress about to bloom! The just-planted two leaf senna doing okay. The older two leaf senna seems to have gotten nibbled. I’ll have to consider if I should put some Vaseline around it against earwigs or a wire cage over it maybe for rabbits. A non native moss rose (Portulaca). Dog behind.
Posted on May 30, 2022May 30, 202205/30/2022 holiday Monday A megachilid bee on Gaillardia pulchella (blanket flower or firewheel). I repotted the lemon balm into a clay pot so I could use its plastic one. In the upper left I also put one winecup in the very long tall head shaped pot. The root system was starting to escape the sprouting cells so I should probably plant its friends soon too. I needed a lot of medium to large plastic pots to put showy evening primrose (here in middle) and Maximilian sunflower (next pic) in actual soil. These are the Maximilian sunflowers I’ve been pulling from the prairie area, where the main plant we moved was last winter. I was storing them to give away in a tub of water and soil, but they were looking sad, so I figured it was time for potting. There’s so many they are crowded, but whoever takes them can separate them out. They seem very, very hardy. While I had my hands dirty I repotted the ashy sunflower (Helianthus mollis). I figure it can get much bigger in this pot, and then we can plant it in late summer to overwinter in its final location (to be decided). Someone (tail end pictured…) Kept wanting to bark at our fine feline friends in the plant window. So I made it less convenient.
Posted on May 12, 2022May 12, 202205/12/2022 all the not dramatic regular stuff Walking onions from garden, assorted farm share veggies, with glass noodles and chicken. Pulled a lot more Maximilian sunflower this evening. I put it in a tub with some potting soil to keep until they can go to new homes. I found a baby spittlebug on one sunflower stem! I took it over to the sunflowers we’re keeping so it can keep eating. In the front yard, a few winecup seedlings are coming up in the ground cover orchard area. More baby winecup! I pulled up two more native black walnut seedlings and potted them. Hopefully this one can make it with only half its remaining food. Anyways, this makes a total of four. I have found good homes for most or all of them now. Our lot is too small for another big tree.
Posted on May 1, 2022May 1, 2022A prairie gardening book with nice species accounts and germination information The Prairie Garden: 70 Native Plants You Can Grow in Town or Country by J. Robert Smith with Beatrice S. Smith. The authors founded a prairie seed and plant nursery that’s still in business. I’ll have to check them for plants in the future! The table of contents is available online at Google books too. You can get your own copy new or used. It’s still in print!