lydamorehouse: (Default)
 Fancy shadowy shot of a bee on fleasbane
Image: Artsy shadowy shot of a bee on a fleasbane blossom

I think I will try this one on the New York Times. It's awfully artsy. I'm not sure how the New Yorkers could resist something this fancy! Even though, I'm pretty sure that the shadow was caused by my own body. But, they don't need to know just how amateur I am.

Yesterday was our last day up at our friends' cabin. As I've noted, they have a rewilded and naturalized their shoreline. What I may never have mentioned is that maintaining native plantings is constant work. One of the things I like to do for Gerriann is pull whatever non-natives they identify for me. This work is not required. Our friends are extremely generous and would have us up to the cabin even if all we did was laze around in the sun and swim in the lake. We've been friends for decades. Mason doesn't know what summer is without a trip to visit Ger & Barb's cabin. 

But this year I had some fun because Ger identified TWO new plants for me to pull. Mostly, what I'm pulling are trees that are trying to establish themselves in this nice sunny spot on the shore. Some of them are even native trees, but when you do this sort of thing--rewild or naturalize--You do sort of have to decide what kind of look you want and Ger wants sun and sedges and a kind of open prairie (only with lake plants) look. At any rate, I am sore but happy today having dug up a bunch of offending trees!

Even though the wind was cold yesterday, I also spent a huge amount of time in the actual lake. At one point it was just me and the loon. Lovely.

Here's all of us!

the Siren crew (Geriann, Barb, Mason, Shawn and me)
Image: Geriann (center), right front (me), right back (Barb), center back (Mason), and left (Shawn)


lydamorehouse: (renji has hair)
 This morning Shawn had yet-another doctor's appointment. 

As I think I have previously reported, Shawn is scheduled to have full knee replacement in her right knee at the beginning of October. The surgeon basically told her to see all her specialists and get everything done before then. So, we had an appointment yesterday and another this morning at 8 am. Yesterday's appointment was to fix an ingrown toenail of hers. The knee surgeon is the sort who will cancel the surgery if there is a cat scratch on someone's body anywhere near the incision sites. So, she really needed to get that done, but then toe care necessitated us getting up SUPER early so she could soak and changed the bandage of this toe. 

I was (I think understandably) kinda b*tchy about everything. Shawn and I snipped at each other in the car for several blocks.

But, as we turned on to highway 36 to head east to the Maplewood clinic this morning, I could see a MASSIVE accident behind me on the Westbound side. There were dozens of flashing red lights. We can see the cars backing up in that direction and I think, oh boy, I hope everyone is okay, but, dang it, we'll have to take another way back. Despite all this, we arrived early at the clinic. I'm settled in, in the car, doing my Duolingo (my friend's quest this time 50 lessons over 90%!! I AM LEARNING JAPANESE, DO THEY NOT REALIZE THIS??) and, I'm not paying attention to the time, but all of a sudden Shawn texts me and says that the doctor has actually gotten caught up in the resulting traffic jam around the accident AND, somehow, the computer failed to log her in as having arrived and so she's now behind some other patients.

At this point, I could not longer hold my irritation.

First of all, my phone battery was dying, so there really wasn't much else to do besides relax and go for a walk. I didn't expect to see much of interest. Maplewood, for you out-of-towners, is a northeastern suburb. I mostly know if from one of its busier streets, which, was, in fact, where this clinic was. So, I mostly wandered the parking lots of Arby's and McDonald's and the like, until I came to a residential street, which I immediately turned down. 

About a half block down there was an AMAZING wildlife habitat. Someone had taken one of those stupidly huge suburban lots and completely transformed the entire thing into a pollinator cafe/native wildflower space. 

suburban oasis
Image: suburban oasis

I probably stood there and watched the bees and butterflies and American goldfinches zipping around for a good, solid ten minutes. It was PARADISE. 

And, of course, that's when Shawn pinged me to let me know she was done. She was so late at this point, however, that she cancelled several meetings and I had to do the same. So, instead of rushing to work, we took the long way, I showed her the garden, and we drove to get a fancy coffee and sandwich. Because work can wait.

Slow down.

That's what the universe is telling me. 

And I'm glad I did.
lydamorehouse: (crazy eyed Renji)
 A seed event, which sounds potentially ominous to me for some reason.
Image: A seed event, which sounds potentially ominous to me for some reason.

Shawn will, periodically, text or email me things with all-caps headers like, "SIGN UP FOR THIS."  Earlier this week, under such a heading, she sent me a link to something called the MN SEED Project Seed Collection Event at Monarch City. Just as an aside, "Monarch City" also sounds to me like it's a side quest in some MMORPG. At any rate, as we are always trying to expand our native plantings, I dutifully did just that.

Due to this absolutely fantastical name "Monarch City," I will admit that I expected that we would be deep in some hidden urban wonderland, equipped with nets and colanders and gods know what else and told to buddy up and Never To Step off the Path. Instead, when I arrived at the West Minnehaha Recreation Center, I realized that I was looking at a park that I drive by nearly every Saturday morning on the way to the recycling center. It's just a park? Like, the majority of this space is grass, a baseball diamond, and it looks like an urban park, nearly anywhere in the world. EXCEPT. Apparently, along the fence edges are HUNDREDS of unique species of native wildflowers. 

I had, at one point, said to Shawn one Saturday morning many, many months ago, "Hey, I think those are native plantings," but I had no idea that this was an incredible resource for urban foraging for native plant seeds.  

Plus, the MN Seed collector folks had set up a table complete with packets of seeds that were up for the taking. I grabbed over twenty? What will I do with so many? My plan is two fold. First, Shawn and I are thinking about expanding our native plantings to the boulevard. We don't have a huge amount of sun, but one of the places we do is on the boulevard. Plus, I picked up some BIG plants, which I think would probably do best somewhere like the boulevard. We'll see. I have to figure out how to germinate these things, so we'll see. I did get some EXCELLENT advice at least, so it should be doable. 

At any rate, once a decent-sized group had gathered we got started. It will say that today is dark and drizzly, so there were probably only about ten of us total--and I feel like that included the MN Seed Project staff.  We were collecting mostly for the Project itself, although we were very much encouraged to take home small packets of seeds for ourselves. 

Me, collecting some rudbeckia trilaba, aka brown-eyed Susans
Image: Here's me, collecting some rudbeckia trilaba, a.k.a. brown-eyed Susans.

The work was fun. Strangely, so? As I was telling one of the other people in my grouping, this was the sort of thing I did, naturally, as a small child. I used to love to pull apart seed pods to look inside, or to take the little poppy seed pods and pretend they were pepper shakers. I could have stayed the full two hours, but I got very cold and it started to drizzle a little. I hope that they get a ton of seeds out of this event. 

The other fun I had was learning about a new app called iNaturalist and wandering around the newer plantings and taking pictures of many of the flowers still in bloom. (These were planted later in the season and so were a little late blooming.)

prairie coneflower
Image: prairie coneflower

This one was a favorite, blue sage (salvia azurea.)
Image: This one was a favorite, blue sage (salvia azurea.)

butterfly weed pods
Butterfly weed pods

I took a lot of pictures of other native plants, but I won't bore you with them. If you live in St. Paul, MN, however, I will suggest that you stop by and check out Monarch City (685 W. Minnehaha Ave Street, 55104). You will probably be like me at first, where I was like, "Where? Where is this CITY???" because it really doesn't look like much at all, but just park your car and stroll along the fence line and you will begin to see.

I was excited to hear that the Frogtown Green Association is trying to get permissions to plant natives all up and down Pierce Butler Route in an area they've dubbed, "The Bee Line," in part because it is already home to the endangered rusty-patched bumblebee.  I foresee a lot of volunteer opportunities in my future.
lydamorehouse: void cat art (void cat)
Some of my long time readers may know that last year I won a grant to plant a micro-habitat in my yard for the bees. The program was called Lawns2Legumes and they don't really give you a whole lot? What you get is a few hundred dollars reimbursement for plants purchased, a phone call from a master gardener, a couple of Q&A Zoom meetings, and a lot of brochures on how-to do it YOURSELF. That probably sounds like a dis, but I actually think that this is a situation where the program is doing everything it can with the money it has. They can't come build it for you, but they do everything they can to encourage you do finally do The Thing.

I'm currently in the hardest part of this project which is maintenance.

For anyone curious, here's a post from when it started: https://lydamorehouse.dreamwidth.org/615516.html

Here's what things are looking like today: 


Garden path in 2023
Image: Garden path today

So--it's kind of a hot mess? But, there are several successes that will inform where I go from here. The purple cone flower, which was a donation from my friend Gerriann's well-established native garden, is doing great this year. It seems to be in the right place for it. Since the thin-leafed versions that I planted of it elsewhere in this garden never managed to take off. Although my understanding is that a lot of these plants take a looooooooooong time to establish themselves, so I won't give up hope on them for a few more years yet. They may also be in the wrong spot? I thought I'd found a good sunny patch for them, but perhaps it's the wrong kind of sun. 

I think the most exciting success is this guy:

blue lobelia
Image: FANCY/FUNKY blue lobelia  (pink flamingos in background.)

I didn't remember planting this, but boy am I ever glad I did. I wasn't sure if it was native or invasive so I ended up taking a picture of it for Google to search. Google directed me to a UK website, which described blue lobelia as "a most agreeable wildflower." Going on to note that "it self-seeds politely, forming a nice clump without becoming a nuisance."  And, I'm sorry, I just WANT such a polite, agreeable plant, don't you?? Plus, I double checked and, as linked under the picture, this is a native plant to MINNESOTA, as well. 

Much to Shawn's delight, the other plant that is doing extremely well in this garden is the brown (or black, I'm not sure,)-eyed susans.

brown-eyed susans, probably
Brown-eyed susans, probably.

Lots of other things just didn't make it or will have to be moved to sunnier spots. The good news is that I failed to get some of my leaves up off the boulevard last year and now there is a nice dead patch that could also use a nice, native planting. I can potentially move some of the ones aren't doing great without a lot of sun there, next year.
lydamorehouse: (Renji 3/4ths profile)
 trillium in the garden
Image: trillium in the garden.

As I was telling a friend this morning, I feel like my gardening has a very specific pattern. Every Other year, I'm good at it, the garden cooperates, I end up with an amazing garden, and I feel great about it. This year is the Other Other year, where I look at all the molding leaves that I've probably left too long, despite what every tells me is good for the bees and other bugs, and I just think, "Ah, f*ck. This whole thing sucks." 

I have, in fact, tried to plant things with this in mind. When I was doing a lot of hiking in the State Parks a couple of years ago, I noticed that thing that our former president who shall not be named failed to: no one rakes the forest. Like, it's fully covered in leaf detritus, and things push up in spite of all that. So, I started very carefully looking to see which plants seemed to thrive in this mulch rich, no-one-is-raking environment. I noticed that trillium managed not only to pop up despite heavy leaf cover, but also bloom in a very pretty, very showy way. So, I got some rhizomes in the mail and here we are. The other thing I planted a lot of over the years are ferns. So, right now my gardens might be a mess, but they are blooming. 

The native garden that I spent so much time and money on last years is... doing stuff? It's currently impossible to tell seedling/returning perennials from weeds, so I'm going to let things get taller and more obvious before I decide that all that work was a wash. I do think that I'm going to want to add a few more coneflowers both to that garden and to our fairly sad boulevard garden. 

The thing I'm most excited by is that I finally have some violets established in those gardens and I am praying over them every day that they will do their thing and SPREAD.

What about y'all? How does your garden grow?
lydamorehouse: (Default)
I have forgotten which plant this is... maybe hyssop?? 
Image: I have forgotten which plant this is... maybe hyssop??


Every day I go into my front native garden and make "grow!" gestures at my plants, like the bog witch that I am. So, I am always inspecting the plants to see if insects are eating them or if they need water (it's been such weird weather here in St. Paul, MN. There have a ton of thunderstorms, but they've been so brief that the ground has stayed dry under tree canopies!) 

And so I noticed this good smol friend hanging out on the joe pye weed:Image hidden for bug phobic (specifically spider phobes.) )

Earlier in the week, I thought I'd spotted a ladybug on the same plant, but, upon closer inspection, was a look-alike Asian beetle. (boo.) Still, it's kind of amazing how quickly these plants have attracted wildlife. 

A wild monarda is blooming as well. 

Monarda fistulosa (Wild Bergamot) droopy after recent watering.
Image: Monarda fistulosa (Wild Bergamot) droopy after recent watering. 

How does your garden grow?
lydamorehouse: void cat art (void cat)
 A bright blue spiderwort blooming in a literal sidewalk crack.
Image: A bright blue spiderwort blooming in a literal sidewalk crack.

I sent in my Lawns2Legumes reimbursement request for the pocket habitat that I spent a couple of hundred dollars on, and, lo, in a literal sidewalk crack on the side of my house, a bright blue prairie spiderwort, native to not only Minnesota, but specifically Ramsey County, where I live, has volunteered and bloomed. Rather than consider this THE GREATEST IRONY OF ALL TIME, I shall imagine that this lovely native bloom is a thank you gift directly from the Goddess. 

Because it's either laugh or cry.

In other news, we ended up spending a fuck ton of money on Willow, our Void, who had been throwing up a lot. Because this is the self-same cat whole swallowed an actual needle, I did tell the vet to go ahead and take x-rays just to make sure that she wasn't barfing because of some insane (insane intestine!) obstruction or another. Willow was perfectly clear, though the vet did see a lot of gas and whatnot in her intestines. The best guess was, in fact, a bout of stomach flu, or some kind of minor bowel infection. The vet prescribed some antibiotics, but Willow has been deeply resistant to the squirt (to be fair to her, is smells like that fake banana smell. Why? Why not, I dunno, tuna~!) and has taken to hiding under the bed for a lot of the day. It might be the humidity? But her hiding is not very like her and so now I'm all worried again. Does she have an actual infection? Should we be more aggressive trying to get the medicine in her? Or is the medicine what she's hiding from?? 

I wish she could tell me. 

Other than that, we spent the 4th hiding from the fireworks, ourselves. I've started another "ugly" Christmas quilt, though this one I like quite a bit more.

Second "ugly" Christmas Quilt
Image: red and green and white quilt, my second "ugly" Christmas quilt

Here's a close up on some of the fabrics:
Close up on the fabric in the quilt
Image: Close up on some of the fabric in the quilt, there are a lot of snow persons and creepy Santa clones.

And, yes, I did notice after I got this section together that the army of Santa clones are kind of all bunched together. At this point, I kind of don't care? It's visually (from a distance, at any rate,) more about the green and gold star bowties and the solid red bowties. 

Tell me what you think (so long as it's a compliment! I'm not in the mood for critique of my stitching or fabric choices right now, sorry!)

lydamorehouse: void cat art (void cat)
By chance someone was giving away native plants on the Book of Faces yesterday. She was available for pick-up at 8 am, which was NO PROBLEM for me today, since I had trouble sleeping last night and was up early. (We have a sick cat who needs a vet appointment and, of course, the stupid internet fight. Both conspired to wake me up at 4:30 am and not let me fall back asleep.)

I still need to do some mulching, but here's how it's starting to look:

Native plants bought and looking kind of scraggly.
Image: dirt with natives planted in it, plus the edge of a sidewalk Mason and I built for our postal carrier.

So, just looking at this picture, I can tell that I need to get more (and better) mulch. I kind of hated how this stuff smelled, however--very chemically. I got it at Menards because I live within spitting distance of Menards and so it always seems like it should be a good place to go. I think when I get up to move the sprinkler, I may hop in the car and head to Mother Earth to see if they have anything better. I also need dirt because I want to expand my boulevard garden with the remaining plants I got from the nice native FB lady.

Anyway, the things you are looking at in this picture include: a sedge of some kind (that's the grassy looking thing,) black-eyed susans, New Jersey tea, coneflowers, monardia, some joe pie weed in the back, asters, and a bunch of other oddities that I'm not sure are going to make it. 

Gerriann's flowers
Image: path from other side (on a day I had not yet weeded the cracks in the sidewalk)

So, my friend Gerriann who is also very into pollinator plants and natives gave me a bunch of free plants, too, much, much earlier in the season. They are already very well established. On this side the closest plant to you is that joe pie weed, then comes a bunch of sedum, boneset, and... more stuff I no longer remember what it is. (mmmm, I'm going to have to look at my list or have Gerriann over to re-identify them.) 

slightly better angle
Slightly better angle of the whole thing. 

It's starting to look better. It's still not the showpiece I would like it to be, but it will get there eventually, one hopes. 

Meanwhile, I'm super disappointed in the side garden that I worked really hard on last year. It's in such a tough spot being entirely shaded by our  'Autumn Blaze' maple tree... which also blocks a lot of the moisture. So, it's shady and DRY. I have, of course, populated it with a lot of hostas and ferns, but sometimes a person wants more than yet-another hosta shade garden, you know?  Well, I will keep working on that. 

The rest is looking pretty good. I'm quite pleased with my longest established garden in the backyard.

The herb garden has become mostly oregano and mint. Something is eating my basil (and it's not me!) 

And, weirdly, the Asiatic lilies are looking amazing in the side yard.

Asiatic Lilies
Image: fiery red (with slightly orange centers) Asiatic lilies

How does your garden grow?
lydamorehouse: (Mistaken)
 My friend [personal profile] naomikritzer tipped me off that "Mother Earth Gardens" over in Minneapolis had basil of all varieties. Since we needed to go to the bank to deposit some checks, anyway, Mason and I headed out this afternoon to check it out. Actually, Mason stayed in the car and I donned my mask and headed in.

It actually was surprisingly uncrowded. Most people seemed to know what they wanted and so grabbed that and didn't really browse. That gave me a chance to check out their native plant section. So, along with the basil, I picked up:

Native columbine (this is a photo from this website: https://wimastergardener.org/article/eastern-red-columbine-aquilegia-canadensis/  My garden it not nearly this tidy.)
a cluster of blooming red columbine

I have always loved columbine, since coming across it wild at Y camp as a teen. I've tried to grow this in the past, but I'm a bit more hopeful this time around because I have the time to fuss over it. Apparently, it likes things moist and I should be able to provide that where I put it. 

I also picked up some prairie pussy toes, which apparently need male and female plants and I have no idea what I got. I suppose that once they sprout and show off their flowers, I can go back to the nursery and pick-out whichever sex I did not get. The females look like this (photo credit: https://www.minnesotawildflowers.info/flower/field-pussytoes):

pussy toe flowers

I also picked up purple cornflower and wild indigo, both of which need full sun. I don't have a lot of that, but I think I found them a good spot on the south side of the house. 

I should really get out and go for a walk today, too, but I am exhausted from waiting to get through the bank drive through. I could NOT believe the line.  There were cars jammed in all three spots and I bet I waited a full twenty minutes? Maybe longer? When I got up to the camera/teller box, the teller told me that it's been like this since the stay-at-home order. They closed the interior of the bank, obviously, and so everyone is being funneled through the drive through. A lot of people, apparently, have never done the drive-through (which isn't complicated, but which does take some figuring out the first time) and so often they spend ten minutes or more on each customer, just walking them through the process. I was starting to lose my sh*t, however. 

Since we were sitting there for so long, Mason and I decided to order take-out from My Burger.

It's been a big driving day for me, honestly, since I also started my day at the grocery store. I was able to find all the flour again, but now the shelves are absolutely picked clean of chicken. I picked up some white fish (cod, I think?) with the thought of trying out a fish taco recipe, since my family will eat some fish. 

Thank goodness we decided to thaw a 17 pound turkey last week. We made it on Sunday and so now we have all the poultry we could eat for a few weeks, at any rate. Because my wife is who she is, we have another 20-some pound turkey still frozen in the freezer. 

How have you been? What are the shortages where you are? How does YOUR garden grow?

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