Visited home last weekend and Mom and Dad kindly let us take home some calcareous soil from an already disturbed area – the “lake”.I had planned to shovel the soil but they kindly offered the much easier method of front-end loader. π We did scrape in a few small little bluestems and other plants that I have kept!Since the soil was heavy, I carefully moved it into a bucket I could lift, and also searched for those little plants I mentioned got scraped in.Paula and I put careful layers of soil and water to get it compact in the planters by the front door.Paula smoothed them nicely and added water.You can see the plants I found in the background, sitting on the porch. This is the final picture with a dusting of cactus/succulent/citrus potting soil on top.Shackleton helped me sort the calcareous soil/barrens specialist seeds that Mom gave me.Here are all the seeds in place with little markers! I also put one each little bluestem in the pot, a possible Oldplainsman in each, and a mystery round-leafed green plant. We’ll see what they become!I did the two planters symmetrical but mirror images since they are on either side of the porch. Fingers crossed we get some sprouts in the spring!
Shackleton and Tuqu are eager to assist in examination of seedlings. Three varieties of peppers have sprouted! This kind of help is why they (the plants, not the cats) are going immediately to the cat free guest room.The ChimayΓ³ seedling has extremely fuzzy roots! Maybe because there was humidity trapped by the yogurt container lids? I have removed the lids now so they can get air flow to prevent damping off.
After last yearβs failed veggie seedlings due to root rot and damping off fungus, I drilled 4-5 big holes in all the pots. I am hoping to start a lot in the yogurt containers and build up the soil around the stems, reducing the amount of repotting for the plants that can root from the stem like peppers and tomatoes and their relatives. Briar was bored while we did the annual pruning of the dwarf fruit trees. Shackleton got a leash walk all around the backyard (heβs exploring the prairie here) AND the front yard. Wow!
Liverworts near the parking area!Briar is always blinking when she gets her picture taken. We saw some very green fine stuff covering the Sandy loam. Some obvious moss nearby. Then the green stuff with moss capsules! When I got home I saw Momβs blog post from today. The very fine green coating appears to be the protonema life stage of the moss! Thanks Mom! Guess βtis the season. Dog eyes open this time. A big cluster of dead ants. No idea why. A mystery plant on the edge of the path cut. The leftover seed heads of the mystery plant. A second smaller individual of this mysterious plant. The habitat of the mysterious plant. Paula spotted this gorgeous greenbriar leaf!Briar leaps from the water. It was warm out!Bounce bounce bounce! miraculously she wasnβt muddy. Good clean water. Enjoying some last smells before we head home. The Chef made Hoppinβ John for dinner. The green is chard from our garden, frozen from a previous season. The black eyed peas were from the farm share. Paula made cornbread from scratch.
New boxes. Gram stands on the cart box while Tuqu investigates some pet toys. Briar discovers some assembly required. Briar lets humans assemble the cart. Humans have thumbs. The Chef alarms Shackleton by cruising by. Zoom in on his eyes. Shackleton actually liked his cart ride once he settled in. He got to look at things and the dog didnβt get near. Gram was nervous about his ride and left his tail hanging out the whole time. First test of cart! We moved this rock from the irises to the rainbow garden. Briar says boring. But leaves are nice to sit in. Current state of the side yard. Lots of good sticks and leafy habitat for insects.The front door/garage nook keeps sinking in as the tree roots decay. We moved soil from the backyard mystery berms (a later post will feature this progress) to fill this in. Needs one more load for this year probably. You can see I raked the top layer of soil that probably had most of the Euphorbia maculata and Melothria pendula vine seeds to the side so I can put that layer back over the top once we have filled it back in. anyway, an excellent test of the cart! A big success!
Yesterday, 12/31, I finally glued on the rain barrel cap holders that the Chef 3D printed for me! I used epoxy after cleaning both surfaces with ethanol. Paula got solar powered outdoor lights for Christmas and has used them to make the path to the compost visible! Edit: thanks to Mom for inquiring if we can turn the lights out. Yes we can! Itβs important not to pollute the dark with more light than we use at any given moment. I am hoping these tiny seedlings are the annual bluets that sometimes grow in this part of the yard. Keeping an eye on them. A tinier potential annual bluet seedling next to the comparatively large wild geraniums. These two pictures were 12/31/2022. 12/28/2022, the Ratibida columnifera rosettes survived the big cold!Two Verbena halei rosettes also exist and made it!Finally, and very thrilling, two potential Penstemon oklahomensis seedlings! They donβt appear to be hairy leaves like some other common seedling volunteers. Stay tuned. Shackleton enjoyed a leashed walk in the same excellent 12/28 weather. Jeanne kindly sent us some Salaginella riddellii- Riddellβs Spike-Moss. We put the biggest chunk in the rainbow garden (in green of course) on 12/25. We put a smaller piece of the spike moss in the cactus planter. 12/25 was so nice we also moved some volunteers. This is the big root of a poke berry! We moved those along the back fence where another pokeberry lives. We also moved several ampelopsis from random spots in the yard to along the south fence trellis. A blackjack oak acorn with a sprout on it! We planted this exciting find (12/24) into a pot on 12/25. Fingers crossed for a spring sprout. Judy gave us an adorable toad house! I have placed it near the veggie beds. Please come eat our earwigs, toad friends. 12/24 checking the pot containing Sedum nutallii from Jeanne. The sedums seem to have made it along with Verbena rosettes (V. Halei??) and other intriguing volunteers. Going somewhere! Wow!! Happy briar in the car. On 12/24 we visited the lake at Lexington WMA. This seasonal creek was frozen solid! The lake was too. Briar wears her hunter orange. After the deep freeze, only the top tips of the recently transplanted rosemary got frozen. They were pressed down by the sheets. But the sheets protected the rest of the plant!
It was a beautiful day yesterday so Paula wanted to turn the compost! I fetched our pitchfork which is from Mom and Dad. The Chef created a new handle and stick for it. The back, older pile may be ready by spring! Weirdly it was drier, though. We set up some hoses to direct water from the closest rain barrels to both piles now, since itβs not good to leave water in the barrels when it might freeze. A very fast rollypolley!Paula adeptly captured this woodroach. Itβs a North American native genus! For those worried about roaches in the house, Iβve never seen one in the house. This is an outside only friend, doing its ecological role of nutrient cycling by munching on detritus (here, in the compost- just what we need for veggie waste to be turned into good rich soil!). Itβs the invasive and introduced-by-European-settlers (presumably accidentally) roaches that are human-associated, such as the German Cockroach. The tragic face of a dog not allowed in the compost area. She likes to eat eggshells. Thereβs also a great stash of feral cat poop down behind the house in the leaves. For Briarβs sake, please keep your cats indoors. She might be allowed a chance at the eggshells if there wasnβt cat poop!!
Briar was very interested in the three squirrels. Shackleton liked the sun, the squirrels, and the chickadees and juncos! Good stuff! I was pleased to see the juncos eating chenopodium seeds and wild sunflower seeds off the dead plants as well as the supplemental bird seeds we put out today for the cold weather. It got up to 19 F.
I put out bird seed since itβs so cold and a flock of a dozen or so juncos visited. They never came when we first moved here- they needed the cover of the wood pile and later the brush pile. I put the seeds on the stepping stones and by the brush pile especially to make it easier and safer. Shackleton might have noticed the birds. The birds say any and all movement was leaves! Definitely no birds!! Fortunately for them, this polar explorer is indoors only except on a leash. Much safer for birds and warmer for Shacks.