By the front door and garage.Close up!In the rock garden!A baby Missouri fluttermill primrose.The other two babies. Only three came up this year, last year the germination rate was higher.While I was at the plant window, I saw the Ashy Sunflower seedlings are still alive in their humidity chamber!!
Horsetail just shoves the hard soil out of the way!!More Stark Surecrop Pie Cherries.Soaker hose hard at work for the winecups and chamomile.The hose has a leak so I put the leak over a pot of Maximilian sunflowers.The Chef spotted ants carrying away this insect. Maybe a soldier fly??He also spotted this milkweed bug. Hi milkweed bug! All three butterfly milkweeds in the front yard rainbow garden are up, plus the wild milkvines are pushing up everywhere too.
The ashy sunflower humid tupperware had those two new seedlings. Last time I transferred out into soil, they shriveled within a few days.So, this time I’m making them a little greenhouse to get adjusted.This pot actually has two: one seedling and one I found sprouted with a root but the cotelydons (seed leaves) weren’t out yet from the seed husk.The upside down lunch meat container doesn’t quite seal over them, so I put damp paper towels as a sort of barrier. We’ll see if it works!Accidentally knocked off some flowers of showy evening primrose by the sidewalk when going back and forth to get pots and soil.
The winecup sprouts are now in assorted soils. A few in a big pot, lots in sprouting pots. The rightmost pot is one of the purple and pink perennial pots.Lots of winecup seeds and sprouts to hopefully become ground cover where the soaker hose is!While I had the potting soil out, I also repotted the Missouri fluttermill primrose seedlings. There are three total – one kept wilting, so I figured they needed more soil to have a stable moisture level.
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.
The Tupperware experiment Ashy Sunflowers have a few more sprouts as of 04/26. I need to move them more carefully as the last two I tried to plant promptly shriveled up and died.Texas mallow coming up!The other individual of Texas mallow coming up!Now on 04/28, an Ashy Sunflower actually sprouting from seed! I believe this was one that got stratified.04/28 rock garden is looking good.Penstemon grandiflorus from prairiemoon.com as bare root seems to be growing!The Astragalus (ground plum) not looking as good again.Finishing up the 04/28 pics, the culinary sage is blooming in the rainbow garden!
I recently noticed a small tree in a raised bed. I finally pulled it today.I was quite shocked to discover it was a native black walnut! I have put it in a pot in hopes that it will live and I can find it a home. No room on our lot, sadly.
A wild perennial violet was growing in the mulch in the front yard near where we’re going to fill soil in, so I dug and divided it. I put some in a pot along with mistflower, that tiny berried nightshade I can’t remember, and a showy evening primrose. Let’s see if they can do okay together in a pot! The purple and pink perennial pot!
Between rains. By the mailbox.After rain. In the rock garden.Missouri fluttermill primrose in the rock garden.I like how the sepals are red speckled.The ground plum looks a little better!!While it was raining, I finished Gathering Moss: a Cultural and Natural History Mosses. It was good! Highly recommend! Thanks Mom for lending it.