Posted on December 15, 2022December 15, 202212/14/2022 winter plantings I ordered plants from a new to me nursery, Missouri Wildflowers Nursery. Hmm box with ok smells? Gram came running to see if he could have the box. “Hello little brother “ The packing by this nursery was quite clever! Shredded paper mostly over the rosettes or dormant pots. They also kindly marked the plants that were dormant. A few other species had low winter leaves (spiderwort) or rosettes (asters, pussytoes). Even the dormant plants had happy roots! The soil held together with roots but weren’t aggressively bound in. Paula found a small cicada larva under the oak tree while planting! We also uncovered an ancient Nylabone from Briar’s youth. She was unimpressed.
Posted on December 14, 2022December 14, 202212/13/2022 greenhouse survives a little storm! We got 2.5” rain in our gauge yesterday from an overnight thunderstorm! Mesonet had 1.8” at airport in Norman and maximum wind of 35 mph. so we were very pleased to see the greenhouse plastic and clothespins survived intact! Briar stands next to it. Waiting for her walkies. When we tucked in the trimmed plastic, we poked the corners in so water could drain into the bed. This is the corner Briar was standing by. The next corner drain looks good too. The corner back by other beds (behind where Briar stood in first picture) also has no standing water. And the view from that back corner again looks great! No clothespins lost, the plastic sheeting tidy and crisp over the metal hoops, and minimal puddling of water on the sheeting edges!
Posted on November 13, 2022November 13, 202211/13/2022 fluff Butterfly milkweed in garden are opening their pods. Took Briar for another walk at Saxon today. Saw a few juncos!
Posted on November 13, 2022November 13, 202211/10/2022 before frosts Briar shows off the beautiful combination of marigolds and Salvia greggii
Posted on November 13, 2022November 13, 202211/12/2022 frosty Marigolds are done. Photo by Paula. Winecup rosettes are fine for the winter! Photo also by Paula. We went to look at Saxon park. It was fun. Then we went home. Having dog thoughts in the backyard. Catctus Tom kha (Thai coconut chicken soup). Has garden lemongrass in it. Lemongrass is not frost hardy so Paula divided the stems to keep a few indoors over the winter, and froze a bunch of stems to use.
Posted on October 17, 2022October 17, 202210/17/2022 it might get in 30s tonight?? Shackleton inspected sweet peppers as I brought them in on a red tray. The long skinny red peppers are Corbaci sweet peppers. The round dark purple peppers are Purple Beauty sweet peppers.
Posted on October 16, 2022October 16, 202210/08/2022 Ruby Grant park Caterpillar on broom weed A grasshopper with very worn wings on Grindelia. A tree cricket on Grindelia! A megachilid bee on Grindelia. Fall is starting! Sumacs in particular are turning red. A noctuid moth on Maximilian sunflowers. A bumblebee (Bombus impatiens) nearby on the same sunflower plant. So many Maximilian sunflowers! Briar poses in front of the prairie filled with more sunflowers. A purple aster! On the first Liatris we saw, Paula found these purple caterpillars. Mom mentioned Schinia sanguinea at home recently and we think that’s what these are. She saw the adult first then later the caterpillars. Two other Schinia sp can apparently also eat Liatris according to this website (and of course they don’t provide a citation). However the owlet moth caterpillar book, which Mom has, doesn’t mention this. A sleepy Dainty Sulphur. It was a cloudy and cool day afternoon before sunset. A parasitic wasp resting on snow-on-the-mountain. Another interesting moth on Maximilian sunflowers. Green grasshoppers were distracted so I got a close up of their textured greens! The prairie is full of messages. Briar sniffs sunflowers as we walk by. A long-horned bee rests on a Grindelia. There were so many Grindelia at all stages. A very fuzzy Croton species.
Posted on September 27, 2022September 27, 202209/27/2022 moon and stars salad again Briar examines the food table which is covered with a mesh cover with fancy lace edges. The outdoor plague safety dining experience! You will note it protects a new version of the watermelon and feta salad. The main innovation here is that I suggested we use the melon as the bowl. Paula assembled the salad as before. I believe Judy gave me the fancy salad tongs long ago. They worked well and looked lovely.
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??”