Showing posts with label Spring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spring. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Seed Sprouting

Today is the first Saturday in March 2015 – daylight savings time kicks in this weekend and I am looking forward to a sunshine-filled weekend!

Yesterday my latest purchase from Lee Valley Tools arrived – sprouting boxes for seedlings, the size of which will fit beautifully into my kitchen window. I spent a little time last night getting them all put together and later this morning (after the guys came to investigate and discuss the work that will be needed to deal with the challenge that the last window to be installed presented – more on that in another blog post to follow) I went and purchased a couple of bags of sea soil (to amend my vegetable beds) and a bag of potting soil to get my spring veggies started indoors.

They are made of some sort Styrofoam and weren’t difficult to put together – pretty interesting construction, to be honest! 


The idea is that instead of having to worry about direct watering while the seeds are getting going, under the soil plugs there is a water leaching mat that will draw water up from a reservoir base.  There are even little gauges with which to measure how much water is in the base!  Clear plastic caps cover and heat the apparatus like a greenhouse would.

With the new Garden Window in the kitchen, my plan is to get things started indoors now and then, in late April when all possible frost is done, to move everything outside into the raised beds.

So… now I have to figure out what I want to plant!!


With love across the waters…

Sunday, March 15, 2015

Taking Stock

Some days are good ones.  Some days? Not so much.  I have been finding, lately, that the good ones are on my weekends. This is generally due to the fact that I am completing things at home - something that leaves me feeling contented.  The last few weeks and weekends, things have been coming along very nicely: The Mushroom Fence is done. The Kitchen Floor is done (though the trim still needs to be put on.) The Great Window Project is mostly done. The Two Trees Removal Project has been completed. 

My focus this weekend has been the back yard. The trees I spoke of above were the pear tree and the small juniper that looked like a bonsai tree. I first cut down and sectioned the pear – some small rounds were added to my wood-stove stock of firewood – to be burnt next winter. I then cut down the juniper.  The root systems were then dug out and all of that debris is now sitting in a small pile to one side of my yard awaiting my “removal” plan – whatever that may be. I do have to make shift to get an accumulated pile of debris to the dump, but the back yard is waking up and spring waits for no-one.

All gone - now, to back fill that hole and
move the raised bed!

Two Trees Debris!

Once the Juniper was out of the way, I moved the small raised bed I’d placed near the oil tank in that spot and back-filled it with dirt from the pile accumulated when the Mock Orange was dug out for the fence. I’ll miss the mock orange, but only for its scent when in bloom. They really are lovely shrubs but need to be managed – and I need shrubs and plants (and trees) that don’t need constant management.

In any case, that bed is pet-access-proofed, and waiting to be amended with sea soil and bone meal in readiness for tomato planting.  It will be a lovely hot spot for tomatoes and peppers to be grown!

When I was out getting seeds, I also bought some small trellis-y things made of cedar and have stuffed them into the flowers-only bed (near the green cone composter) and planted Sweet Pea seeds. I have a whole bag of bulbs that need to go in there – which will be one of today’s things to do. I’m going to try and make it colourful in the spring and aromatic in the hot of summer.  I have a high-scented Peony, and some high-scented Lilies that I will be putting in.  As long as I ensure the soil is well fed, there shouldn’t be any problems.

Trellises in place

I also moved my Bean Trellis to its new “2-year” spot.  It now sits along the Mushroom Fence (where it will receive loads of sunshine) and I also finally found a use for the 8”x8” decorative Angelus blocks I pulled out of the house when I dismantled the faux mantle in the living room.  I have lined them up, three on each side, on the outside edges of the bean trellis and will plant my beans in them.  That should serve a couple of purposes – one, it looks like a miniature raised bed (almost like I actually planned it out!) and two, it will raise the plants up off the ground and hopefully make it a little harder for the wood bugs to get to the tender bean leaves at ground level.

The new spot
I just need to give some thought to what I want to do with the ground-space between the sides... Hm.

When the Mushroom Fence was going in, one of the Blueberry Bushes got smushed.  I mean flattened.  I’m pretty certain I wasn’t going to get it to live – so I removed and replaced it this weekend.  I also bought a nice healthy looking Rosemary plant and put it into one of the great pots I had tomatoes planted in last year. I *think* that has herbs in all of the planters on the patio now – Rosemary, Thyme, Sage, Oregano, and Chives.

I still have loads of clean-up to do – that giant pile of dirt DOES have a use ahead of it – I need to purchase a little bit more lumber and hardware and then will be putting in the LAST of the raised beds – where I had the Health Kick tomato last summer. That will more than likely be NEXT weekend’s major project.  I need to measure the space properly and then look through the lumber I have ferreted away here and there before I decide what to put in.  This bed may end up being 2”x8” instead of 1”x8” construction – the thinner boards will need to be replaced sooner and I am kind of wishing I had just bought 2”x8”s for all of the other beds in the first place.  Ah well – it is all about learning, right?

Well, I should really get dressed and get out there – the rain isn’t going to hold off forever!


With love across the waters…

Saturday, January 17, 2015

The Continuing Adventures of Mushroom Fence

Mushroom Fence has been at it again…

This past week was a busy one at work – we had a Monstrous Monday that was followed up by a Terrible Technology Tuesday, and then a Woefully Wicked Wednesday… yes, I am allowing my dramatic side a little free reign here.

Anyhow, suffice it to say that the first half of the week was challenging.

Thursday I had a really great interview for a job I have applied for (still within the company I work for) and then Friday, though long, was really just a day to be gotten through.

As the week was going on, I knew there was fence activity afoot – but until Friday morning I really had no idea just how much.  I get out of bed when it is dark, am quite often leaving for work while still dark and then getting home when dark.  Imagine my surprise on Friday morning (when I had a later start) and I looked out into my back yard to see, well, PROGRESS…

My Good Neighbour Rob was out having his morning cup of coffee and finishing off framing in the forms in order to pour the retaining wall!

I got home around 7 last night and so didn’t see how it all turned out, but when I went out today, well, it looks wonderful – and lo and behold – the fence is almost done!

Anyhow, here is the progress thus far:


Initial stages - line set and old fence down


Jasmine checking out the progress
Old fence pile
First section in place!
Forms built, concrete poured and posts in place!
Second section and a GREAT privacy gate!!

Tomorrow looks to be a clearer day, and, if so, I’ll have to get out there myself and get a dog poo patrol of the yard done, and then maybe get the small fir-like tree dug out so I can move the pile of dirt over to where I will put the final raised bed… This year I will put the tomatoes in there and plant peas and beans in the side bed… the garlic is coming along nicely and so I just have to figure out my “what else”… Carrots, lettuce… I am definitely going to do Russian Blue potatoes again… Ah… thoughts of spring!



With love across the waters…

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Rainy Days in Spring

I have a theory: Gardeners NEED rainy spring days. 

I know we need them to water our plants, lift the water table and keep things lush and green... but in the earliest days of spring (and yes, it really is only the 15th of March here, so not actually officially spring) I think the rainy days are meant to actually help the gardeners themselves.

This weekend is a perfect example.  Had I had sunshine (or even, lets face it, just overcast but no rain) all weekend long, I would accomplish nothing in the house.  No laundry, no cleaning, no income tax preparation, no paperwork... nothing except making my kitchen floor dirtier.

So I am trying to be grateful for today's rain because it means I can get some other things done this weekend. Rain today means laundry is in the washer, that I will deal with some paperwork (when I stop procrastinating) and that I will clean inside the house - maybe I will even wash the kitchen floor instead of just tracking more mud all over it!

With love across the waters...

Friday, March 14, 2014

Defiant Acts

"Gardening is the most therapeutic and defiant act you can do.  Plus you get strawberries:" ~ Ron Finley

I love the feel behind this statement - well, both of these statements, really... Though I won't necessarily get strawberries (I don't plan to plant any, but just because it isn't part of the plan today doesn't mean I won't find somewhere to put some eventually..) I am, though, most defiantly acting in favour of spring!

To go back a few months, my yard had a hard winter - loads of deep and long lasting heavy snow, along with a February snow accumulation that meant that even as late as the beginning of this week there was snow in my back yard (though today all gone) and there is still a little in the front yard...

Taken about 4 weeks ago...
Last weekend I spent some of my Sunday on poo patrol as the snow was melting, I also pruned my apple, pear and plum trees...  There's a small pile of branches I need to dispose of, but nothing really huge to worry about there.  The trees were still lying fallow last weekend, but today when i was out I noticed that the plum tree is budding out all over - so last weekend was the absolute last minute I would have been able to do the pruning safely.

Today's project work was the back yard.  I made a trip to Art Knapp and then over to Slegg Lumber before heading home... While at Art Knapp, I picked up six raspberry plants, two blueberry bushes, a bag of peat moss and a bag of container potting soil.  At Slegg Lumber I picked up two cedar trellises and four . ten-foot long 1" x 2"s.

So here's this weekend's outdoors project list:

  • move the upper long bed box to a new location along the side fence
  • build a pea trellis using the old green lattice screen that was acting as a barrier to hide the old oil tank (thus the 1" x 2"s) and make a new bed to plant the pea trellis in
  • ready the garden beds for planting
  • plant peas, spinach, raspberries and blueberries
  • tidy up the garden shed
  • rake up the back yard (basically make it pretty) and make another poo-clearing pass over everything.
Once back from the shopping excursion, I realized there is more I will need, so I'll be out again tomorrow morning to collect the missing bits, but today I was able to accomplish a fair amount.

First item on the list had to be poo patrol. That done, I opened up the shed and pulled out my bistro set and got the concrete patio spring-friendly.  

By the end of the daylight hours today I had moved the long bed, dug out and readied the other beds, planted the raspberry and blueberry plants, and set up the trellises for their jobs... Tomorrow (after the Slegg Lumber run) I will set up one final small raised bed, build and install the pea trellis, plant the peas and spinach seeds and tidy the garden shed a little. If I have enough time, I'll also rake up the back yard & get the lawn ready for spring and over-seed with grass seed where there has been winter damages.

Once I finish off all of tomorrow's bits, I'll snap some pictures and show you where I am at this point in readiness for sunshine and warmth...

Next weekend I'm going to be putting out my drip lines and then I'll see about getting in there to tackle the front yard projects...

With love across the waters...




Sunday, November 24, 2013

Holy Crap - Where Did November Go??

I am dismayed that November is almost gone!

I've been playing catch-up with yard work and winter home and garden prep projects (and some visiting, truth be told) and November has breezed past me in a flash!

The bathroom renovation project is very nearly done... most of the floor mouldings are installed, most of the corner trim is also in - the few pieces that aren't now in are waiting until the bathroom window has been replaced - which (aside from the door) will, for me, anyhow, signal the end of the bathroom project.  I still have a little patching, painting and staining to do, bot those things I will take on as winter progresses and I am not feeling the mad push out be outside doing outside things while the weather still holds.

We have been having an utterly GLORIOUS autumn here.  Clear and sunny days (though the chill is now officially upon us) with cold and clear nights - leaving heavy frost on trees and leaves (and car wind shields) but the dry and the cold has also kept the streets (where I am walking Jasmine in the wee early hours of the morning) relatively ice free and so our walks are being accomplished in relative ease.

The yard has undergone (most of) its autumnal leaf denuding and I have raked said leaves up and placed them into my raised garden boxes for composting down and lovely rotting into the soil over winter. I have moved the bean trellis to a new location in preparation for spring planting, planted my garlic in a new spot this year (where my spinach was last year) and have had the winter tires put onto my car.

With the exception of having all of my winter wood burning supply in hand, I have been doing fairly well.

The wood started arriving yesterday (delivery was either two or three truck loads and I am anticipating five or six in total. I spent last night splitting a fair portion of the first chunk of wood delivered into halves and then this morning I stacked the halves into space between the two posts of my "car port" to allow for smarter wood stacking when the rest arrives, gets split (when I get to it) and stacked (again, when I get to it.) I have also split all but about 14 of the rounds that arrived yesterday and have started stacking it in my "wood area" to fully dry out so it can be burned when I am out of my current dry supply.

I put in about 3 hours of stacking and then splitting and stacking this morning.  My back started to protest (loudly) and I elected to take a break and come inside.  Good thing too - it was after 12:30 and I needed to deal with some laundry and also start the fixings for some meals that I am cooking today.

I am also starting a new job tomorrow - well, not a new job exactly, but the same job in a different branch - I was asked (by the regional VP) if I would cover someones maternity leave in a different branch.  There are all sorts of things happening in this area right now (and not all of them good) so thinking that this might be "writing on the wall" if you know what I mean, I agreed - with the request of a letter "guaranteeing" (inasmuch as a guarantee can be given or had) that I will have a job in this area at the end of this year.

This means that instead of a normal weekend, I have only today off and then start back to work tomorrow - so there is LOADS to get done today!

I have been taking a lot of pictures lately and will upload and show off some of the projects under way (and those nearly complete) soon.

In the mean time, with love across the waters...

Monday, April 1, 2013

Screening Soil

Today's project was to dig out where my initial vegetable bed will be, and then screen the soil dug out of the hole so that what was being placed back INTO the hole is less, well, rocky, than what was there initially. 

You may recall that initially the space I am using was home to that horrific sumac tree (yes, horrific) and a whole host of its off shoots. Last summer/fall I dug and dug and dug some more to get the runners and most of the initial stump dealt with and then in October Mum & Dad came up and helped me get the rest of the stump out.
 
Horrific Sumac with Pretty Clematis 
That was the project that involved my digging out (and then, yes, breaking) a perimeter drainage line and also making most of my back yard into what was a great a muddy mess for the fall and winter.


Sumac Stump with Punctured Perimeter Drain Pipe
Not content with just that, a few weeks ago I dug out most of the hump that was beside the pond (deepening which is another project for this summer) and flattened out that space so as to make the yard more inviting for lawn chairs and, once the grass grows back in, perhaps little nephew feet to play in the grass.
 
 
OK - back to the soil screening.  I had been looking to get my hands on something to screen the rocks out of my soil for quite some time - my brother came to my rescue (thanks Rob!) and loaned me the soil screen that he and his wife have.  It's pretty cool actually and some day I hope, very much, to be able to build something like this for myself - I am certain I will need it each year to screen out my compost AND screen more rocks out of my soil when I start working on the REST of my garden-related projects and space.  It is a pretty cool thing, with handles, and it rests on top of my wheelbarrow quite nicely to allow the needed stuff to sift through and the rocks to stay put.

"Tools" for today's project work included the screen (of course) my wheel barrow, a garden fork, a shovel and a damn skookum pair of work gloves.  Also in use was a hat and  LOTS of water to drink. Once I had breakfast and my coffee I was ready to get started...
 
I got right into it and, of course, forgot to take pictures while the project was "in progress" but the end result is a nice bed that measures 3'5" by 11'.  I have my lattice bamboo lengths stretched across it both to discourage pussy cats from considering it to be a bathroom and to discourage large black dogs who live in my house from using it as a motor-way for chasing the aforementioned pussy cats. I also outlined the bed edges with large rocks to keep my brain in mind of where I have screened soil and where I have not yet screened soil
 
Once blocked out with rocks, I direct-seeded some kale and spinach (likely too early for the spinach, but I will know in about a week if any of it sprouts) in the bed and sectioned off where I will be planting some beans.  We've been forecast to continue with the above zero temperatures and sunshine for the next week - though living in Canada I know that WILL change!
 
That bed dealt with, I took my small hand-held garden fork to my garlic bed and did some weeding. 
 
Garlic Bed - Pre-Weeding
Last but not least, I pumped up my bicycle tires and went for a short bike ride with Jasmine. It was just over 3 KM and I can promise you, I will NOT be getting onto my bike in the next three or four days - my sit bones are NOT happy with me right now!  Good thing that it is still a touch on the dark side for morning bike rides - maybe by the end of this week I can start getting a bike ride in a few mornings a week before work.  Jasmine will love that and I have to admit that I am looking forward to finally conquering the damn hill!

With love across the waters,

Little Changes...

I am starting to see spring wake my yard and trees. We've had almost a week of solid sunshine and warmer temperatures - AWESOME sight for the back yard gardener!
 
Celeriac

Rhubarb
Garlic


Lilac

Back Yard - Work in Progress

 With love across the waters...
 

Monday, January 28, 2013

Spring Cleaning and Bikram Yoga

You may be scratching your head and wondering how those two things can go together, but in the World of Erin there are many such strange pairs of things. In this case there is a natural parallel to these two things. 
 
It is nearly the end of January and though there is snow on the ground where I am, it is mostly melted in other spots and very soon we will be blessed with snowdrops (the flowers, not the flakes) crocuses, and daffodils outside. The arrival of the warmer temperatures and the longer and longer days (hooray!) puts thoughts to the projects outside and the cleaning and, well, airing out, that needs to be done inside after a long winter of closed doors and windows and recirculated heat and air.
 
My home is not overly dirty, but it is dusty with ash (a natural by-product from my wood stove) and since I have a forced-air furnace, there is also circulation of that ash and dust to all of the other rooms. In short, the house needs a damn good airing out and cleaning – but that won’t be tackled until the snow is gone and I have a warm (ok, I’ll settle for warm-ish – even 10*C would do!) day with sunshine outside to inspire open windows.
 
That will also, most likely, be the day that all of the window screens get a wash and get re-installed and that the front door screen gets put back on. 
 
Note to self, I seriously needs to wash all of my windows – so I will need to get my hands on a proper window squeegee (that would be an awesome scrabble word!!) and a decent (read: safe) ladder…
 
Spring cleaning is meant to let all of winter’s miasma and stale air out of the home, and to bring in the fresh clean joy of spring – along with clean new air.
 
To me, Bikram Yoga is like spring cleaning for the body, mind and soul.
 
A quick little bit of background: Bikram (or hot) yoga is a series of 26 Hatha Yoga positions and two breathing exercises that are practiced over the course of an hour and a half in a room that has been heated to a (stinking hot) temperature of 40*C with an approximate humidity measurement of 40%. In short, it is yoga done in a hot sweaty hell. The thought of practicing something I love (yoga) in temperatures that I hate (hot sweaty hell) wasn’t appealing to me at all – but I have a number of friends who have tried it and they swear by the benefits of it.
 
I did MUCH personal research before attending my very first Bikram Yoga class at Bikram Yoga Comox Valley. Bikram Yoga allows you to get the most out of your usual yoga practice. Since you are not starting from a “cold” position, your muscles loosen up much more quickly and you are less likely to injure yourself. There are some offsetting risks that need to be considered – Bikram Yoga practice can be dangerous for those with heart and/or blood pressure problems and there is, of course, a serious risk of dehydration – so being well hydrated before attending a class is a must. I have taken two bottles of water in with me – one to sip while in practice and one to guzzle when done. The need for water and electrolyte replacement is understandable when you realize just how much sweat can come out of your body during practice.
 
My first class was an awesome experience – I hadn’t taken a yoga class for roughly 3 years – I was on the Island of Jersey for my last class! I went with one of my girlfriends who had been to classes previously and I was way at the back of the room where, with my glasses off, I could look to the postures of the people around me so that I could adjust accordingly. The instructor (David Milanovich, also one of the owners) kept his eye out for me and made certain I was OK throughout the class – and in a room filled with 40+ regular participants, his attention to the detail of each student’s practice impressed me.
 
All in all, I had an amazing first experience with Bikram and promised myself that, when I could afford it (it is rather expensive) I would be back.
 
November of this year rolled around and - Woo Hoo – Island Daily Deals had a week special for Bikram Yoga Comox Valley – one week unlimited!! I bought my pass, planning to use it during my week of vacation in early December.
 
Well, I have been sick every month for the last three months – so that pass has been waiting and waiting for me to use it before it expires… I FINALLY made it in yesterday for the first of the three classes I will be able to attend this week. It was GREAT. I sweated out a ton of toxins, I am certain, and had loads of excess energy for the rest of my day. I am a little stiff this morning, but will be attending another class tonight and that should, hopefully, drain out some of that stiffness. I will be attending another class on Wednesday night and then my week pass will be kaput because none of the other classes offered through the week are ones I can attend because of my work schedule.
 
One of my dear friends, who also practices Bikram Yoga here in the Comox Valley attended a charity auction before Christmas with some friends – and one of her friends won a 10-pass gift certificate to the studio. That friend, knowing my friend practices, gave her the certificate – and since she and her husband already have their classes bought, she gave the gift certificate to me! So once I finish out this week, I can pare down to two classes a week for the next 10 weeks!
 
Next week I am seeing a Naturopath for the first time... I am seeing her to find ways to boost my immune system and general overall health so that I am NOT sick every month for another three months - so this spring I am looking forward to spring cleaning my home, my yard, AND my self.

With love across the waters,

Monday, November 5, 2012

On Being The Ant


Remember Aesop’s fable about the grasshopper and the ant…?

Once there lived an ant and a grasshopper in a grassy meadow.

All day long the ant would work hard, collecting grains of wheat from the farmer's field far away. She would hurry to the field every morning, as soon as it was light enough to see by, and toil back with a heavy grain of wheat balanced on her head. She would put the grain of wheat carefully away in her larder, and then hurry back to the field for another one. All day long she would work, without stop or rest, scurrying back and forth from the field, collecting the grains of wheat and storing them carefully in her larder.

The grasshopper would look at her and laugh. 'Why do you work so hard, dear ant?' he would say. 'Come, rest awhile, listen to my song. Summer is here, the days are long and bright. Why waste the sunshine in labour and toil?'

 The ant would ignore him, and head bent, would just hurry to the field a little faster. This would make the grasshopper laugh even louder. 'What a silly little ant you are!' he would call after her. 'Come, come and dance with me! Forget about work! Enjoy the summer! Live a little!' And the grasshopper would hop away across the meadow, singing and dancing merrily.

Summer faded into autumn, and autumn turned into winter. The sun was hardly seen, and the days were short and grey, the nights long and dark. It became freezing cold, and snow began to fall.

The grasshopper didn't feel like singing any more. He was cold and hungry. He had nowhere to shelter from the snow, and nothing to eat. The meadow and the farmer's field were covered in snow, and there was no food to be had. 'Oh what shall I do? Where shall I go?' wailed the grasshopper. Suddenly he remembered the ant. 'Ah - I shall go to the ant and ask her for food and shelter!' declared the grasshopper, perking up. So off he went to the ant's house and knocked at her door. 'Hello ant!' he cried cheerfully. 'Here I am, to sing for you, as I warm myself by your fire, while you get me some food from that larder of yours!'

The ant looked at the grasshopper and said, 'All summer long I worked hard while you made fun of me, and sang and danced. You should have thought of winter then! Find somewhere else to sing, grasshopper! There is no warmth or food for you here!' And the ant shut the door in the grasshopper's face.

It is wise to worry about tomorrow today.

Yeah – I always thought that the ant was a little bit sanctimonious – I would like to think that instead of shutting the door in the grasshopper’s face, she would  offer some food, but still – the moral of the story cannot be argued – prepare for tomorrow today.

I’ve spent the last couple of months playing at being the ant - harvesting, doing yard work and, most recently, getting the yard and garden beds ready for winter.  Today I gathered leaves that have come down and piled them over top of some of my garden space.  Next weekend I’ll do more of the same, only this time pile it up into the compost bin to let it gently rot down through the winter until, in spring, I can use it in my vegetable beds.

Garlic is planted & has set up shoots – I have mulched more leaves on top of that bed to keep them healthy and feed them come spring.

Canning is complete – I ended up with more than sixty jars of applesauce, pears and peaches and enough fresh apples and rhubarb to make up six crisps. I also made up plum jam (which is more like plum syrup) and rhubarb ginger jam. 



The last of my apples went to my brother’s home a couple of weeks ago where we ground and pressed apples to make juice - I came home with apple mash which was dug into the garden bed and a couple of gallons of the juice (both of which are gone now) it was delicious!

Putting the garden and yard to bed for the winter makes me think of the ant – getting ready for next year’s planned crops, gardens and enjoyment.  I will have a proper vegetable patch this year – fenced off and planted with things like beans, snow peas tomatoes, squash, courgettes, lettuces and carrots. When I was over on Jersey, my neighbour had an utterly brilliant way of growing courgettes and squash – she would buy a bag of soil, cut a hole or two in it, and plant her plants directly into the soil. These bags sat on her patio. At the end of the growing season, that bag of soil was used to fill and seed lawn or to augment garden beds. I figure I will do as she did and plant squash and courgettes in those and then cover the rest of my garden space with other items…

This coming year’s garden will be smaller – eventually I want to have a larger section of my yard – all the way back to my compost bin actually - fenced off for vegetables.  Being able to plant, grow, harvest, preserve and then, through the winter, eat the foods I have grown myself is my eventual goal.

For tonight, though, I will have a dinner of roast chicken and trimmings (stuffed with bread I made myself) and a yummy desert of baked apple and rhubarb crisp. If a grasshopper shows up at my door seeking food and shelter I won’t be slamming the door…

With love across the waters,

Monday, September 10, 2012

Things I Am Working On…

September feels like it is almost gone already (OK, maybe I’m being a little overly dramatic, it is only the 10th after all!) and I was just pondering what I have to show for the month so far…

Essentially, all of my “project” time has been spent working outside – the front and back yards are getting LOADS of attention this month in preparation for autumn and winter and, of course, for spring to follow!! I have cleaned up the front garden bed significantly – cut back the other rhododendron in a great big way – like I did to the other one. I also dug out a peony and some lilies (and a couple of irises) and gave them to a friend of mine to add to her garden space.

Moved the Clematis
I spent a couple of odd days digging out around the damn sumac tree stump and pulling out as much in the way of roots as I was able to. Space blocked off, I seeded some grass and replanted the roses at the end of that part of the flower bed and filled in the rest of the dirt around the stump.  I will be digging the stump back out again, but that’s because my Dad (who was up today with my Mum) is going to come back up in a couple of weeks’ time with his chainsaw and, provided I have a clear enough area for him to cut through, he’s going to help me get the sumac stump out once in for all.

Sumac Stump Removal - Part I
One of Three Wheelbarrow Loads
of Sumac Roots
YAY – no more sumac!!

As mentioned above, Mum and Dad came up for the afternoon and after a gorgeous lunch at a new place here in Cumberland (Mar’s on Main) we came back and did a little bit of stuff in the back yard together.  Dad dug out a fir stump for me and Mum and I harvested my pears – which were ready to come off the tree – they are now laid out on my freezer – it’ll take a couple of days for them to ripen and I’m going to need to get my hands on more canning supplies so that I can process them (I have jars and snap lids set aside, I just really need the canning pot, rack and hand-held tools to make things “simple” before I head off to Vancouver next weekend for training!

After Mum & Dad headed home I went back out into the back yard and dug up some of the flower beds I will be converting over to vegetable beds.  I moved a couple of the peonies out to the front yard as well as a few of the lilies that were bunched up in the back garden bed. When I was talking with my folks, I got great suggestions on what parts of the yard (and how) to convert over to vegetable space and so I decided to get myself moving with some of that.  Mum has given me a couple of heads of garlic for planting and so the beds I have started converting over will house the garlic – which I will be trying to get into the ground next Sunday before I head out of town for training for a week.

I’m thinking that through the winter and spring I may also try my hand at starting seeds inside the house with an aim to have things ready to plant when the weather warms up sufficiently to get them into the soil come spring/summer. I know I will need to start communicating with people up here who garden so that I know “when” to plant “what” but I’m thinking about things like (Oh God, here she goes with a list!)
·        Onions
·        Tomatoes
·        Cucumber / Zucchini
·        Green Beans (and OOH – wait until you hear the idea my Mum has for them!!)
·        Snow and sugar peas (along the wire of the fence that I will be putting up to protect the garden from Jasmine)
·        Rhubarb (already established)
·        Celeriac (also already established)
·        Jerusalem Artichokes (ditto on the establishment)

I’m not certain if I will try corn, but eventually I will also want to put in some raspberry canes and some blueberry bushes as well.

Green beans – you will LOVE this idea!  OK, so the green beans I will be growing need to have something to climb… I can’t remember the specific type, but when ready to harvest, usually the problem (especially with a very tall something for them to climb) is getting to the ripe beans. Get this: We’re going to move the green arched trellis from where it is over to the side of the patio – it will eventually become the arch-way for a gate into and out of the garden – but the trellis is PERFECT for growing beans on – how utterly cool is that!!!!

My pear tree was a total winner with the fruit production this year – I got a full freezer-top full of pears and am guessing I will likely get 18 or so jars of pears out of them.

All in all, September is looking like a damn productive month for me!

Alright, time for a hot bath (I have to admit, I’m a little achy with the shovelling and mattock-ing I did this weekend) a cup of tea and a good book…

With love across the waters,

Thursday, June 21, 2012

A Gardening Kind of Weekend

The weather two weekends ago wasn’t terrible – it also wasn’t hot and sunny… which means that it was a perfect weekend for being outside doing outside chores – the mundane ones AND the much more interesting ones.


This is my first spring and summer in my home and this year has been the learning year where the yard is concerned. When I moved in, on September 27th of last year, the Damson plum tree was in the full throes of harvest, the Granny Smith apple tree was in high growth and the yard was an overgrown jungle.  There was a pressed down path where I could creep quietly from the concrete patio to the back fence, but the Sumac had taken over, the weeds and grass were out of control and I had no idea what I was looking forward to.


Instead of digging everything out and starting with mud (which may have crossed my mind briefly before I considered Jasmine, mud and the inside of my house) I spoke with my parents and they wisely advised me to do very little in the fall and winter and start with an eye to “what would I like to keep” come the spring. 


Small side-bar here, I LOVE being in BC in the early spring – getting snowdrops (the flowers, not the cold flakes) in February beats the hell out of February in Ontario where all gotten is wet, cold, cold and wet!


In the front garden bed, Snowdrops and both purple and yellow crocuses were followed by pink and purple hyacinths and yellow and red tulips that reached about 2’ tall! Soon after that, bluebells followed - bachelor buttons hard on their heels. The bachelor buttons are nearly done and now there are flowers on the lilac bush out front, buttercups and white with purple flowers on the rhododendrons.  When the rhodos are finished flowering I will be getting in there with my secateurs to complete a brutal trimming – there are two of them and they are tall, stringy and weedy looking. You may recall I have removed a couple of trees and thought I had completely cut back and killed the wisteria that had grown up over the roof line and into the attic – but no… I looked out the other morning and the wisteria vines are starting to creep around the stump. Hm.  Now I need to make the decision as to what I would like to do about this – cut it back or train it up the stair railing and see if the damn thing blooms post brutal pruning.


The back yard was more the focus of that weekend’s out of doors activities…I got started on the usual pre-work activity of picking up any and all dog bombs happened first and then I mowed the lawn. Next up, I pulled the Giant Hogweed seedlings I had spotted & then pulled up the square patio tiles and dug out a whole PILE of sumac roots.  Sumac is a self-starter and sends out runners (much like strawberries) and the roots really need to be dug out if you want to try and prevent more from coming up.  I was all in after that and came in & had a shower and did some laundry.


Monday was a little more interesting… I cut down a stump, dug out the ferns (and re-planted one of them in a different place) re-planted a Hosta that had been placed into a container, moved some things around, pruned dead wood off of a shrub, planted the potted lilac that was just not growing happily (pot was WAY too small and the poor thing was root bound.)


I took a bunch of pictures and was all ready to upload them, but learned that my blog pictures file is almost and if I want to add more, I have to start paying for photo storage space... so now the decisions need to be made - should I spend the money on buying photo storage space, should I go back & start removing photos, or should I just start a new blog and start fresh...?  Hm. Decisions, decisions... what do you think I should do...?


Here's what I was able to upload...


With love across the waters,


re-arranged

Transplanted Lilac
Teeny tiny hosta!

Apples - pre cull... now there's 1

Bearded Iris

White-pink Peones

Deep purply-red Peones

transplanted fern

Really have no idea what this is, but it
sure is pretty!!!

Also no idea what this is - looks a little like pom-poms...

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Dandelion and Mud Season Pictures of Stuff Coming Up In My Front Yard

Just so you don't get the impression that its all about the digging out... here are some shots of things COMING out (and up!)

Rhododendron

Tulip

Lilac in Front Garden

Peony in the Front Garden

Coral Bark Maple

More Coral Bark Maple

I Am Re-Naming Spring.

I spent about an hour and a half outside today – most of it on my hands and knees digging up dandelions. 

Funny thing about that – dandelions always remind me of my Grandpa English.  They seemed, in summer, at least, to be the bane of his existence.  He and Grandma had a house and lot in the south end of Nanaimo & in the summer time Grandpa would try all sorts of things to get rid of those damn yellow flowers. When my brother and I would go stay with them, we would pick bouquets of Grandpa’s flowers for Grandma.

I didn’t think much about dandelions until I bought my house in Ontario.  The yards (front and back) had never had much attention, and so dandelions had run rampant.  I bought a hand tool – sort of looked like a very small crow bar – and over the course of the three summers I had the house, I spent a lot of time on my hands and knees digging up dandelions at the root. Hot, dusty, unpleasant work in the middle of summer in Ontario, but still rewarding when, finally, my last summer there rewarded me with a decently green lawn that WASN’T green because of dandelions.

I took possession of my house here in Cumberland BC in late September of 2011, and so, though there were some out, I didn’t think about them much.  To be fair, I was very busy with moving in, writing exams and then just plain trying to settle into a new job and a new home all in one small space of time.

Winter came and the yard fell asleep – dandelions included.

Its spring now and they are awake. 






I’ve seen only one in actual flower, but have spent a few hours outside now, on my hands and knees, thinking about my Grandpa English and digging them up at the roots.  Today’s gleanings removed two full buckets of them from the yard – there are lots more out there that will need to be pulled up...

I also actually pulled out my rotary mower and ran it over the back lawn to help even things out, and then finally took the big fan-shaped garden rake to the yard & put everything into the compost bin.

I’ll need to get my hands on some good quality grass seed (I’m in research-mode there) with which to re-seed and over-seed both the back and front lawns, but for now, the big push is going to be pulling out all of the dandelions as they start to really make their presences known.

One of the big springtime challenges I am having right now is actually dog-related.  I have a very uneven back yard and so, as material is available, I have been spreading out soil to even out the ground.  There are holes and dips and hills.  No big deal, really, but the dog-related challenge is that when it rains (as it tends to do a lot in spring) things become muddy and then Miss Jasmine is outside in it and tracks muddy doggy feet into my house. Muddy Foot prints run a specific line through my kitchen – and though I do wipe them up as much as possible, the challenge is that the floor needs lots of washing.  I’m thinking about maybe getting a Swiffer Wet-Jet – just so I can spot-mop when she comes in… and then do a full wash one a week or so…

A dog door into the utility room is fast becoming a necessity!

That will, of course, require the replacement of THAT door (and frame) and the installation of the aforementioned dog door – but doing that would also allow her to self regulate inside and outside all day when I’m at work.

Hm.

Maybe the next big house-changing project (after the front door has been replaced, of course) will need to be the mud-room door?

Spring is being officially renamed - it is now Dandelions and Mud.

With love across the waters,