lydamorehouse: (crazy eyed Renji)
lydamorehouse ([personal profile] lydamorehouse) wrote2020-05-26 03:04 pm

Not So Victorious Garden

 I took a gamble when I planted ancient seeds found in a hide-away spot on the porch. It's been a couple of weeks now and none of them germinated. Alas!  

BUT. Since I had to go to Menard's (local hardware store) today anyway, for a part for the leaky downstairs toilet, I stopped by their seed aisle to see if there was anything decent left. There was! Now I am going to start again. It may seem late in the season for some of you, but here in Minnesota I used to always hear people say: "Don't plant until after Memorial Day." Guess what? THAT'S TODAY.  So, I feel okay starting over. 

In other exciting gardening news, I ordered a few 'corms' of jack-in-the-pulpit from the internet, because I really love jack-in-the-pulpit and I have (or so I thought) only one.  While I was out planting the new plants, I discovered a baby jack-in-the-pulpit!

Here's the original, mature plant, in case you are unfamiliar:

jack-in-the-pulpit
Image: alien looking plant with a hooded pitcher.  

Here's the baby!
baby jack
Image: baby jack (no pulpit yet)

I wouldn't be so sure, but it looks just like the leaves coming off some of the corms that I bought. Because I'm always curious about plants AFTER they've been thriving in my yard for some time, I read the wikipedia entry on jack-in-the-pulpit (arisaema triphyllum) and discovered that it is pollinated by something called a fungus gnat.

This is not a sexy sounding pollinator at all, but, given that jack-in-the-pulpit is native I suspect that providing plants for it is a Good Thing. 

It looks like it might rain at any point today, so I might just take the lemonade (not what you're thinking this is, UK/Australian/NZ friends!)  I poured myself and sit on the porch with a couple of gardening books and the seed packets I scored at the hardware store. Also, because I know that [personal profile] rachelmanija will want to know, the seeds I got were:

Marigolds (two varieties for pest control)
Sunflowers
Golden zucchini
pumpkin
peas
cherry belle radishes
purple kohlrabi

Wish these seeds luck!


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