Some of my country was frosty today. I even heard rumours of snow. But not here! Today (between hail showers) we had lovely sun and not too much wind.
Of course, I was out in the garden as much as possible. We even had the grass mowed; first go of the year, thanks to iDJ’s wonderful uncles and their gas mower. They even took away the clippings, which was very welcome to me, as my compost bin is full to the top.
Digging out some of that black gold is a job for another day. Maybe tomorrow, if it stays nice.
I used the hail-shower time today to start some seeds, finally. More gazania, more rudbeckia, and trying yet again with the coleus and zinnia that have failed to germinate year after year. Just for the hell of it, I am also trying lilac seed I collected off of a friend’s tree, ancient broad beans, and pumpkin seeds that I saved from the past Halloween. These are in homemade mini-greenhouses on the best windowsill (sorry, cats). More Gerbera daisies, and some funny fuzzy sunflowers called ‘teddy bear’ that hubby found, liked, and bought for me. He does love his sunflowers. Also something called ‘honesty’ which I don’t have high hopes for, but hey; you never know.
I trimmed a lot of tiny bits of dead wood from my three blueberry bushes, and put a layer of needles from last year’s Christmas tree on top of the soil. Supposedly they are good for acid-loving plants. I still have most of a bucket of needles left over, too. Want some? They are premium: mostly dog-hair & random-strands-of-tinsel free.
Glad to see the best of my three blueberry bushes is making flowers, too – by next weekend I should have some happy bees sampling them.
I also gave some needles to the azalea my mother-in-law got me two (?) years ago. It’s not been a very happy plant, and tries to flower in November for some damn reason, but this spring it seems to be settling in and realising that it has to live here.
Not the healthiest looking thing, is it? Weird furry leaves, too – can’t blame that on the dog. At least is it blooming at the right time, finally.
The clematis is going gangbusters. I’ve not given them any attention whatsoever. I’d say some of this is at least 12ft (3.66meters) high.
I think I am going to (try to) kill the grey willow they climb on, and use its corpse as a trellis for way cooler plants. The birds love this tree as there aren’t many other trees nearby. I had plans…but my lilac from seed is now six or seven years old and still only a foot tall. It won’t do. Then again, if it wasn’t in a pot…
Raspberries are making flower buds, too! And spreading out into the grass like weeds. Dammit.
The tallest one there is six foot (nearly two meters). It is entirely new growth from last year, so all of this will make fruit. I’m going to be up to my eyes (literally) in raspberries.
New lilies from last year are coming up fast!
As are the old red-and-black ones that have been in this pot way too long now. Going to have to do some heavy culling and sharing this winter.
Dammed slugs have eaten the entire tops off of my yellow lilies. Hence all the blue pellets you see in all these pictures. Sorry but not sorry – I do poison the little sumbitches. I have thousands in my garden, and no chickens or hedgehogs to help.
Another thing the slugs have been at: the nicotiana I grew from seed last year. They did fuck-all in 2015, but overwintered well and are now getting big.
But. There was an awful lot of leaf-litter gathered under those big leaves: from the sweet pea that you can see on the far right (it’s not any variety that makes sense), and random plant-rubbish blowing into the drive. So it was slug-heaven under those nics until today. I cut off most of the raggedy leaves before taking this pic, and obviously was liberal with the slug pellets.
And don’t you love the ivy? I love the ivy. I didn’t plant it. I didn’t have to: its Ireland. My neighbor, however, hates it. It’s technically his wall, too. Oops. All I know is that I don’t have to paint that part because leaves.
Something the slugs don’t eat: garlic. I really thought I’d gotten it all last year – I harvested about a kilo. Clearly, I missed these. Still: slug pellets because they are eating the hell out of the two native primrose I stuck in this planter (which aren’t doing much but getting eaten, at the moment).
Lavender is coming into bloom! Had a bumblebee around today seeing if these were ripe.
My columbine (aquilegia) went from basic leaves to this in a week. Caught me off-guard. I haven’t even been around with the peter’s special yet. Tomorrow…
Last-meet Katy! She’s a flamer, but don’t hold it against her. Been an indoor plant for about a year now, and so top-heavy it isn’t funny. She’s a kalanchoe that I think I got for about 30 cents when she was done blooming. Shame that people just don’t have the patience to care for a living thing when it isn’t ‘pretty’. I’m glad I do – repotted once, needs it again, and she is quite the stunner.
The lillies being eaten may not be slugs. Look around for small red beetles. They destroyed mine last year.
You can also use coffee grounds in stead of pine needles for your blueberries and acid loving plants.
Well done on the rest!
Oh, I know those beetles! Never seen one here, yet. It’s funny that only the yellow ones are nommed upon – I’ve got orange ones right next to them untouched.
I have tried the coffee grounds before – it looked a fright! The needles at least look pretty.
How is it your lavender is blooming and here in the Eastern US I am barely seeing leaves? Rotter.
Sorry! It wasn’t a very harsh winter. Now if it will just stop being windy I’ll be happier!
Love your Flamin’ Katie! Kalanchoes are the most amazingly varied plant family. Honesty is Lunaria, it has purple flowers and gets those round translucent seed pods we used to call Fairy Pennies when i was a child. Nice plant, and the seed pods are pretty in the winter. It’ll look after itself and self-seed.
Fairy pennies! Sounds perfect. The packet said to plant where you want them to grow, but I’m using a heated propagater as it is still chilly and I’m impatient!
I think Katie is a cutie, too. Just hope one of the furry ones doesn’t knock her over!
Gorgeous ‘greens’ in every pic! Love the lavender and the lilies 🙂
I hate slugs. I hear salt deters them…so does snail bait – the only thing I’ll use, but I hate slugs. Your plants are doing so well. That picture with the lavender is beautiful with the texture and contrast.
Thank you! Himself actually made a point to compliment me on my pictures this post – don’t think he ever did before!