I need to add captions and descriptions to the rest of the pics, but this Spiranthes sp was neat to see coming up!Briar and Paula in safety hunter orange. False garlic with tiny moths. Paula caught a Little Brown Skink!The skink did not want to stay for a visit. A prairie verbena!Armadillo!!! Briar ready, but actual briar vines kept her from following it far. First Lomatium of the day. Briar helped by putting her nose by it. Arnoglossum sp! LeavesBigger Arnoglossum species leaves!The lovely valley we walked around. Had some damp spots. Milkweed! Probably Asclepias verticillata??Echinacea probably angustifolia? Leaf and last year’s seed head. Thanks for laying down in the mud puddle, BRIAR.Nostoc algae and scale lichens!Paula found this great potter wasp nest!Eventually found a big patch of Lomatium blooming. Some Lomatium in light shade. Some Lomatium almost done blooming. Some Lomatium out in the sun. Another prairie verbena. A puccoon just opening!
Mystery plants in rock garden. Mystery plant in rock garden. In the right place for where I put scarlet pea but maybe too pointy leaves? We shall see. I think a Houstonia bluet and a baby ponysfoot. This is in the right place for fuzzy beans. I suspect this is also a fuzzy bean (Strophostyles sp).
Antennaria neglecta (prairie pussytoes) from Missouri Wildflower Nursery is doing well!The second pussytoes is even putting out long shoots… maybe it will spread by runners??Three germinating Asclepias viridiflora!!A Datura wrightii from Wise Co TX that Mom gave me!False garlic is blooming nicely!These leaves are in the right place for Helianthus mollis, ashy sunflower, we planted last year as a seedling outside from seeds indoors.
Kieffer pear leaves look fine. A lot (or all?) peach flowers look wilted. This is okay, because it is such a young tree I want it to concentrate on growing, not fruiting. it looks like the leaves are coming out okay without wilting. The agastaches in backyard planter are fine. These just-transplanted ones are less fine, but something has been nibbling on them too (we’ll assume earwigs…). I think the front one made it but it’s hard to tell on the back one because it was mostly chewed up.
Camassia angusta was up a few weeks ago so I was worried about the C. scilloides bulbs we put out, but they are coming up now too!Another C. scilloides bulb coming up. I am naming it based on its location. This mystery plant with milky sap was kindly identified by Abby as salsify. It apparently has an edible root so we will contemplate its fate.
After moving the new soil to the garden yesterday, Paula wanted to move and layer the newer pile today. She put layers of leaves between layers of kitchen waste. Now we’re ready for more on the empty side!We put this compostable takeout fork in at some point and it didn’t compost. Apparently some compostable items require higher heat compost than our “cold” method.
After last year’s 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 (he’s exploring the prairie here) AND the front yard. Wow!