As the title says, a good couple days. Started Tuesday grocery-shopping. I'm not happy without fresh fruits and veggies, and holidays always throw my shopping schedule off. People come out in masses for picnic, BBQ, and travelling supplies. The lines are long. So if I forget to shop 3 days before, I wait til the day after. And I forgot that (since July 4th was a Sunday) July 5th would be an "observed Federal holiday" and govt contractors general follow the Feds (for the practical reason that there is no one for them to talk to).
So I shopped Tuesday. It was nice to have broccoli, asparagus, and buttercrunch lettuce. It was nice to have peaches, berries, cherries, grapes, and oranges.
In the afternoon, I FINALLY planted a lot of flower seedlings in the newly-cleared bed where I planted pole beans a month ago. The beans are 6' tall already. But because they are on a trellis, they only use a 6" strip at the edge. So there was all that extra space. Those green things in the bed are pulled weeds, brushed off before I planted.
I had all these perennial and self-sow seedlings, so in they went! I got 3/4 of all my flower seedlings in the ground. It doesn't really matter if they do all that well this year. They will be good enough for transplanting to more permanent spots in the late Fall. After planting them, I watered them deeply.
I had done some repair work on a fan-sprayer a few days before. The holes were clogged and poking a needle into the holes didn't improve things much...
So I drilled out all the holes. Unfortunately, my smallest drill bit was larger than the original holes, so the water didn't spray very far. But I realized I had made a high-volume, low-pressure fan nozzle. That has been quite useful. Had I realized the consequences of the larger holes, I would have done it deliberately before. I still have 2 other fan sprayers that work as intended, so nothing but a gain in this.
Yeah, I built the tripod it sits on... Very adjustable. So I replaced the 2 nozzles with a stadard fan nozzle. The drilled fan nozzle is great for raised beds as it waters from edge to edge quickly. The round nozzle is on the deck hose since the round spray suits the round planter pots well.
Which left the next major problem the overgrown daffodil/tulip bed. They don't care about the weeds, but there were blackberries and loosestrife invading the bed. The bed is about a 30' circle, and there are daylilies growing along the edge, a sunflower bird-feeder in the center and a 4x4" post to level the stepladder I need to fill the feeder.
So I took out the riding mower to clear the weeds and blackberries. It was awkward guiding a large mower in a small space, but fortunately this new mower has a button that allows the engine to keep the blade turning while in reverse. And the blade deck is slightly offset to one side so you can get at edges with the wheels getting in the way
I was able to (slowly) mow almost everything I didn't want down close to the edging. There were places I couldn't get at. That's where the hedge trimmer came out. I was able to cut down the weeds and grass right up against the edging.
More importantly, I was able to slide the narrow hedge-trimmer blade between the daylilies and cut off the wild blackberries near ground level. In a couple of days the cut stuff will turn brown and I will know what to rake out. That will let me see which weeds and canes I missed for another go with the hedge trimmer. The battery was running down and needed recharging anyway.
The riding mower was set at 3" height (there is a path of pavers and I didn't want to chance hitting one with the mower blade) . Now that most of the weeds are cut down that low (and I can see where the pavers are), I can use the small electric mower set at 1" to cut them down further. Then I will will cover all the non-daylily area with permeable black fabric to kill the weeds by next Spring when the daffodils want to emerge.
I covered it with solid black plastic a few year which worked OK except rain pooled on depressions and mosquitoes grew there so I kept having to poke wholes in it. THe permeable fabric will solve THAT problem.
The transplanted flower seedlings seemed a bit beaten down by the sun, so I watered them again. It is amazing how much water dry soil needs sometimes. The first watering a couple days ago had an inch of water pooled on the top before it soaked in. Even then, my moisture meter today showed it was dry 6" down. So another full inch of water on them.
And I put up a shade cloth for them. The pole beans provide some dappled shade in the morning, and a couple of trees provide late-afternoon dappled shade, but mid-day is full-on sun. So I stuck a a couple of 6' stakes in the ground and clipped a shade cloth on them. Covers most of them. By complete lucky coincidence the seedlings that want the most sunlight aren't covered.
I wish I had more pictures to show. I forget when I'm doing gardening stuff. Too-focussed, LOL! If the transplanted seedlings survive the shock, I will have pictures to show in a few days.
I have a dozen Balsam flowers and a few Maltese Cross to plant. I have a few places I can put them, but haven't decided where yet. I think about that tomorrow.
2 comments:
You throw yourself into your gardening. Me? I snipped a few cuttings of a lavender plant, stuck them in soil and crossed my fingers! And I only put in that much effort because experience has shown that wallabies don't eat lavender. I took 30 cuttings. I wonder how many will still be alive at the end of August, which is when I understand they may have developed sufficient roots to be transplanted into pots. I'll be thrilled if it's as many as 10! LOL
Megan
Sydney, Australia
Your gardening efforts make mine look silly...LOL!!!
I need a whole day just to think about what I should do out there...but most of my plantings are in pots on my patio...and this year there is mostly only flowers and a few tomato and herbs...have not had an inground garden. for many years. I have been transplanting some of the hardier perennials, and will do more in late summer.
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