Posted on March 29, 2023March 29, 202303/29/2023 baby yucca???? Paula and I were out planting some seeds and she noticed this baby spike in a tray of yucca seeds that have been out all winter!! The Baptisia sp seeds before we planted them. I nicked each seed surface then soaked in room temperature water overnight. We put some on either side of the patio plus some in a pot for more controlled monitoring as that seems to help with germination sometimes. Paula also noticed the persimmon seed at the seedling base. I appear to have planted several.
Posted on March 22, 2023March 22, 202303/22/2023 nighttime-only cat! babies!!! And dinner! Briar helpfully alerted me to a potential friend carefully crossing the back fence today! What a magnificent neighbor. Turns out a few peach flowers survived. The ones with dropped petals are quite striking with pale tips over maroon backgrounds! I believe this is the annual (?) Cardamine sp from nearby seeded into the prickly pear planter. Abby has kindly identified this as a human-introduced species Armeria serpyllifolia, thyme-leaved sandwort. It isn’t from North American originally but doesn’t seem to dramatically disturb the landscape. This one may be an introduced chickweed. But a fuzzy one, not Stellaria media. More baby inland sea oat seedlings in a second pot!my Multiple baby native Rosa sp from Fannin Co TX. Thanks Mom! This seems big enough to be the persimmon I actually planted?? Seedlings in false gaura pot, but not sure they look right. Oklahoma penstemon given to me by a kind fellow Norman citizen! Maybe smartweed amongst the Chenopodium. We shall see. A Datura maybe?? The label fell out of this pot. Anybody recognize this seed? I am informed the mustard leaf garnish is from garden and that the soup contains poblanos from last year from the freezer.
Posted on November 20, 2021November 20, 2021Last bits of vacation last week Common persimmon tree. A native with edible fruit! Yum! I will try to sprout some. Yum. Gracie likes to eat fallen ripe persimmons. Mom served blackberry cobbler with homemade no churn ice cream too. A different day: leftover juice and berries from the cobbler with shortbread and whipping cream. Judy gave me this Mexican sage which Paula helped me plant as soon as I got home last Saturday. Good vacation but time to hit the road! Reunited!!!! I am informed the cat was profoundly lonesome, clingy, and annoying in the absence of his big sister.
Posted on November 9, 2021November 9, 2021New stuff Read this good book Mom had. “A new garden ethic” by Benjamin Vogt. Definitely recommend it! Arguments for planting native plants and considering all our little friends and neighbors both animals and plants. Paula, we’re borrowing this. Seeds from home! Mom collected the common persimmon before I arrived.