Posted on March 27, 2023March 27, 202303/24/2023 Friday mildly mysterious 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).
Posted on March 27, 2023March 27, 202303/25/2023 Saturday observations 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.
Posted on March 27, 2023March 27, 202303/26/2023 yard anemone! From Mom and Dad’s house! Transplanted last year.
Posted on March 11, 2023March 11, 202303/11/2023 Camassia (wild hyacinth) emergence 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.
Posted on March 11, 2023March 11, 202303/11/2023 annual violets blooming I am pleased that not only are the undisturbed violets blooming, but so are the ones I transplanted last month! The annual Viola bicolors do spread well by seed so I’m hoping they fill in more next year. They certainly are working to take over the raised beds so I’ve been spreading them more places. This is my non-grass groundcover area around the vegetable raised beds.
Posted on February 11, 2023February 11, 2023The excavation of a path and that weird berm 12/30/2022. I’ve scraped a bit of soil and leafy debris off the concrete area that extends as far as the rock wall of the garage does. Right now, water drains from here back towards the house. There’s also a foot tall berm along the fence (a few pavers on top of it) visible in the background, which is very inconvenient for walking on. This is the western edge of the “prairie” area but in summer is mostly a tangle of invasive dayflower and a big mulberry stump’s stems. 12/30/2022. Paula and I got a bunch of concrete shards and small rocks out of the pile around the bird house pole from the previous picture. These work ok as a border for front yard raised beds. I have also taken to putting our nicer actual rocks on top of them for better viewing. This pile needs distributing now but I can do that gradually. 01/02/2023. after the previous rock shard excavation, before stump removal. 01/02/2023. Paula axed the mulberry stump. We could have left it, but it is not conducive to water draining away from the house here. She also pulled a lot of rebar up. We think a few owners past probably used them to hold up landscaping timbers. 01/04/2022 Paula has energy and unexpectedly cleared the whole berm. 01/04/2023. She also pulled many old rebars up, again. 01/05/2023. Paula continued to enjoy perfect cool digging weather and nice soft earth to move. She put this rain barrel in its spot and worked on leveling and grading. I need to order pavers so we can put the path in before seeding with our prairie grasses and flowers. 01/07/2023. Briar helps us measure to see how many concrete pavers we need for the fence path. 01/10/2023. The concrete pavers for the path plus concrete block edges arrived. Briar examines. 01/12/2023. Blocks are in place, but need leveled and then filled with soil too. the goal for these blocks is to guide more water flow towards the path and away from the garage. 01/21/2023. Got all the blocks leveled shortly after this photo. 01/21/2023. A start on pavers along the fence. I know a better surface would be created by putting sand and other crushed base under the pavers, but for the next few years I’m going to have this as good enough. 01/23/2023. The pavers don’t quite fill the gap to the fence so for now I’m leaving alternating gaps for drainage. 01/23/2023. A view from the other side. The goal is to get the path three pavers wide everywhere, but the majority of mud is covered now. (Cleaner dog toes.) 01/25/2023. Snow on the path! 02/06/2023. I put the last pavers in the past except a few spots where old rebar stuck up. 02/07/2023. We spread saved up wildflower and grass seeds before a few days of gentle rain. 02/07/2023. This spot is under the eaves so it gets less wet, so I hope it will still be ok for buffalograss. 02/11/2023. Need to sweep, but I moved all the empty pots to the little bamboo shelf. 02/11/2023. Paula and I moved soil from the north side of the house, where it was inexplicably piled up against the wood siding, into the concrete block hollows. the final step tomorrow will be moving some widow sedum, nutall’s sedum, juniper leaf, and fern leaves (in case I missed any spores) into these blocks. That’s all for this project!
Posted on January 22, 2023January 22, 202301/16/2023 creating a special caliche/barrens habitat in containers 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. 🙂 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!
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 October 11, 2022October 12, 202210/09/2022 Saxon park Schinia gaurae moth (the clouded crimson) caterpillar on false gaura! We counted nine around our 1.75 mi loop. The tall rosettes of the false gaura were nice to see since they look just like my garden one. A Schinia moth I haven’t identified feeding on aster flowers. This bumblebee loved the Salvia azurea. Back of two spotted bumblebee where you can see the spots! Funnel web spider says no pictures, please. A tree cricket hiding on Liatris. The seed pod of a Baptisia. Mom said possibly B. australis var. minor Paula found two big beautiful lynx spider mommas! Wow! This is one guarding its egg sac. A tiny caterpillar on false gaura. The first Solomon’s seal I’ve seen in the wild! We have several in the yard but no idea if they’re volunteers or planted. Probably a buckwheat, the botany consulting committee says. Abby, Mom, and Jeanne also agreed this was probably a dwarf lead plant. Paula found a magnificent sumac leaf turning yellow to red. The Sumac is really turning beautiful reds all over!
Posted on October 5, 2022October 5, 202210/05/2022 no rain just watering seedlings too tired for captions