A Bee in the City

adventures in an urban garden

One more (maybe not actually very) brief garden update 8 July 2009

…and then hopefully a bigger post, say, finally that photo post maybe.  It had been so beautiful here after all the dreary weather that I’ve spent much more time outside enjoying it than indoors typing at my computer!  (Yesterday it was extremely rainy again, but I started this post two days ago.  Today is cloudy and sporadically rainy, though right now it’s just crisp.)

I harvested my first “wild blueberry” (lowbush blueberry – it’s not really wild if it’s in a garden, is it?) this week, and was very excited about it!  I planted a lowbush blueberry at my old garden, but I got something off about the cultural requirements – possibly too much sun, possibly the wrong soil, I don’t know for sure – and it never produced a single berry.   There are very few of them on the one bush, and none on the other one, but given that they were both still in their nursery pots at flowering time and that blueberries often don’t produce berries till the second year or beyond, I am pleased to have any berries at all.  I had never had wild blueberries till my first visit to New England and they’re something that still charms me after all these years living here.  The taste is so different from the “cultivated” blueberries.

Some of the peas look to be yellowing.  Unfortunately they started to do so after I’d already harvested the last peas I think are forming on those plants, so I don’t know as I’ll get to save seeds from those plants.  Others of the pea plants look just fine, though.  ‘Golden Sweet’ is still putting out pods regularly (I’m definitely keeping that one around in future years and future gardens!), and some of the other cultivars are putting out smaller numbers.  The fava/broad bean plants all still look healthy as of now.  Today it is quite cool, in the low 60s with a strong breeze, and it was the same yesterday (plus regular downpours and some thunderstorms), so I’m a bit surprised the peas would pick now to quit, but so it goes.  The beans that are up to flowering size are mostly putting out flowers like mad, and super early bean ‘Yellow Arikara’ still has cute little pods forming on its plants (I haven’t seen it put out any more flowers this week).  It’s interesting that most of the purple-podded beans seem to also have purple stems and flowers that are some shade of purple.  The first scarlet runner bean has reached the top of its five foot pole.  It’ll probably loop around back down another one; that’s what they usually do. The scarlet runner beans haven’t started flowering yet; I don’t know if they’re waiting for a string of sunny days, or…

The peach-leaved bellflower ‘Telham Beauty’ has put out a fresh flush of blooms after all this rain, even though I didn’t deadhead it.  The coral-flowered penstemon is still making the bumblebees go crazy (and still putting out a rather unbelievable amount of flowers and buds), and the gaillardia ‘Tokajer’ is proving quite popular with the smaller native bees. (The latter two plants are new this year.  So far I’ve been quite pleased with both, and the bees don’t seem to mind their tendency to flop over on my windy site [they were both already starting to bloom by the time I planted them, so they didn’t have as much of a chance to adjust to the windy site, which perennials often do by not growing as tall as they would under less windy circumstances].)  The cup plant budded up quite abruptly and its big buds look like they will bloom soon.  The sweet alyssum I seeded in myself has finally begun to reach flowering size, and some of the plants have their pretty little white blooms now.  (Still no annual candytuft blooms as far as I’ve seen; typically they start to bloom around the same time.)  The sweet alyssum cultivar that the nursery carried this year smelled like honey, as the white ones seem to always do, but it was a total dud with the bees, who just LOVED last year’s nursery cultivar. So I’m happy to finally have sweet alyssum flowers that they actually like.  (As I’ve posted here before, since sweet alyssum is quite cold-hardy for an annual, I always start out with nursery seedlings and seed in my own sweet alyssum to take over with their blooms as the nursery seedlings get straggly in early summer.)  Elsewhere in the world of direct-seeded annuals:  The nasturtium seedlings (oh, how many there are now! with leaves in so many beautiful colors!) are growing fast with all the rain, and the love-in-a-mist has budded up with it.  The clarkias are still putting out new flowers (though not as many as a week ago), but the annual poppies, corncockle, and baby blue eyes seem to be about through.

Today I planted the two perennials I bought at the nursery on my way home on Monday, a second sea holly – this one with psychedelic lavender-y stems – that I planted near the original (which has been in my garden since my first year here, two years ago), and another anise hyssop.  Sea holly and anise hyssop are two more plants that the bees go crazy for.  Just make sure that you buy hybrids that aren’t sterile.  One reason I like going to nurseries is to see what plants the bees are attracted to – both to find new plants they like, and to see which cultivars are most popular of plants with numerous cultivars.  With the perennial salvias, for example, there are some cultivars they definitely prefer to others.

That was a small bit of planting (though they were in big pots so it took a while to dig the holes!), but since I last updated, I’ve done heaps of other work in the garden.  I’ve transplanted some things that seemed unhappy or that I just thought could be happier elsewhere, and I’ve planted a lot.  I planted the rest of the tender(-here) salvias and agastaches, the lemon verbena (I eventually gave up on the farmers’ market having it this year and bought one at the nursery; it’s a good thing I did, as nobody has plants there as of today, and nobody ever did bring lemon verbena – this is the first year I can recall in my eight years going to this market that nobody sold it), the little celosia plants (a dwarf variety that will never get much taller than it is now), the variegated Felicia, the last tomato (‘Black Cherry’), the flowering tobaccos that I bought in Select Seeds’ sale to plant in the front garden (two ‘Mirabilis,’ one ‘Bella,’ one lime-flowered, one ‘Crimson Bedder’ – the last two are significantly shorter than the others; ‘Mirabilis’ is a mixed-color cultivar, and I received one white one and one that’s a medium pink fading to palest pink – the rest of my flowering tobaccos are in back, which is where I’d always planted all of them till this year), the last petunia ‘Rainmaster,’ six hardy lavenders, three echinaceas (the ones that have been in my garden for two (2 of them) or one (1 of them) years now are heavily budded with the first bloom about to open), three gauras, a Santa Barbara daisy (not hardy here, and something I’ve never grown before, but it came in a mixed plant pack that was super cheap so I thought I’d give it a try; it’s in the fleabane genus, which tends to be another one that bees adore), and… other things.   I also finally planted the poor gladiolas; I’d been afraid they’d rot in the cold, wet soil, and waited for a warm, sunny day, but unfortunately now the soil is cool and wet again!  I’d hoped to also finally plant the poor dahlias, but ran out of time.  I did most of my work over the long holiday weekend.

I also finally planted that gorgeous handmade pot that I got as a gift earlier this summer.  On the two ends (it’s sort of rectangular), I planted the two tender-here sweet violets that I bought expressly to put in the pot, and in the middle, I put the yellow rain lilies (AKA Mexican lilies, as they are native to the Yucatan).  Potted rain lilies are supposed to do well in cactus mix, so I edged the pot with regular potting soil for the violets and filled the middle with cactus mix.  The violets are so thrilled about their new home that they’re creeping into the center of the pot and cascading with abandon down the edges of the pot, nearly to the ground already!   I also, also finally brought out the tuberoses that had overwintered in their pots in an eastish-facing room, figuring once it was warm and sunny it was finally good weather to bring them out.  The room had been getting sun finally (on our rare sunny days) in the early morning and evening, and to my surprise, the tuberoses had already sprouted in their impressively dry pots (they hadn’t been watered since they finished flowering inside shortly after our first frost).  I put them in a sunny patch in the back yard and the sprouts have quadrupled in size just in the last few days. (The glads and dahlias had/have also sprouted in their paper bags)

Yesterday I finally planted some of the beans I hadn’t planted before for the same fear as the glads – that they’d just rot in the cool, wet soil.  I’d intended to plant them all, but a downpour started so heavily so abruptly that I was soaked in the time it took me to run up the stairs to the porch with the seed packets and things, run back down, and crouch to plant the handful of seeds that I’d been holding, their tag having already been stuck in the ground.  In the past I’ve grown mostly green beans, wax beans (which I suppose some people consider interchangeable with green beans), Roma beans (which I tend to think of as a marriage between a green bean and a shelling bean), and shelling beans, but this year I’m trying some dry bean cultivars, which I haven’t done in ages. In some countries dry beans are all that are grown, and there are some dry beans that are still quite popular here in New England, especially ‘Soldier’ and ‘Cranberry’ (the latter of which some people use as a cultivar name, others as a particular shape of dried bean with multiple cultivars).  I planted some ‘Soldier’ this year.

Slug predation of my bean seedlings has been so, so bad this year that I put more seeds of each cultivar in than I normally would, assuming some of them will be lost to slugs.  It’s too bad birds don’t much like the front garden since it’s so noisy with traffic and pedestrians, as they’ve been eating a fair portion of the slugs in the back garden.  In happier news, though, I regularly see ladybugs in the front garden now.  The aphid population has definitely been more sharply declining.  I also saw a winged insect eating a green aphid.  I think it was an antlion, but I’d have to check in a book to be sure.  It looked so ferociously cool sitting perched atop a leaf, holding an aphid in its front legs, the bright green aphid so stark against its black legs and body.  I’m always telling other gardeners here to have patience when a pest with natural predators comes – that there have to be a certain number of the pests before the predator(s) will come, as otherwise it’d just be a waste of time, you know?  But gardeners here see their plants being attacked and just can’t not do anything, so very often, they just go ahead and spray.  Be they organic or not, sprays still tend to kill insects rather indiscriminately.  I wish more gardeners had the patience to wait for nature to take care of its own. As the book I’ve been reading points out (and which both I’ve heard and experienced many times before), insects tend to attack the weakest plants first, and “solving” it just by spraying doesn’t do anything about whatever underlying problem brought the insects in in the first place.  (In fairness to slugs, though, they really DO seem to attack plants indiscriminately!  I suppose there’s something different about their strategy at least in part because they aren’t insects and because they can’t fly like most pest insects can.  By the way, did you know that slugs spend the majority of their lives underground?  For all the destruction they can visit upon plants, they also create tunnels, helping to aerate the soil just like earthworms.)

 

A day of work / Growing season 2009 so far 4 June 2009

I worked so long in the garden yesterday, maybe 3 1/2, 4 hours.  I got so much done.  This is what I planted in the ground:

  • The 2 6-packs of gazanias
  • The rest of the ice plant 6-packs (maybe 8 or 9 plants?)
  • 1 6-pack of white zinnias
  • 1 more 6-pack of mixed calendulas
  • 2 6-packs of mixed marigolds
  • 1 large Jerusalem sage
  • 1 large Scottish bellflower (actually also native to parts of the Northeastern US)
  • 1 large knautia
  • 1 moonflower
  • 2 more Swan River daisies
  • 2 more Asarinas (AKA summer snapdragons)
  • 1 white-flowering Salvia greggii
  • 1 Greek oregano
  • 1 rue
  • 1 more lantana ‘Trailing Lavender’
  • 1 more African blue basil
  • 1 more Felicia
  • 1 Bidens
  • more I’m forgetting, I think

That makes 59 plants, if I counted right.

This is what I did in pots:

  • planted the last pot in the “big pots” project (sowed a whole bunch of root crops)
  • planted one window box with 3 of the tender geraniums
  • planted one window box with 3 of the fuchsias
  • transplanted the hanging-basket fuchsias into new hanging baskets that are at least twice the size (maybe more) of the old ones (turns out they were already root-bound, so it’s no wonder they were drying out so fast)

I had wanted to do the last big pot and to plant one more large bag’s worth of potting soil, and that’s what I did.

This is what I transplanted from one spot to another (i.e., they were already planted in the ground and I moved them to a new spot in the ground):

  • 3 of the 4 stocks
  • 1 of the 2 Cape mallows
  • 1 of the calendulas
  • 1 of the signet marigolds
  • the other Salvia greggii (this one has a sort of purpley-magenta flower)
  • the French sorrel
  • this Australian plant whose name I forget
  • probably something else I am forgetting

I got the 6 white zinnias, the 6 (more) calendulas, the 12 marigolds, and the moonflower at the farmers’ market yesterday.  While there, I also got a red-veined French sorrel, a 4-pack of bunching onions, and a pot of cat grass for my cat (the last of which is living on a window sill now).

This was the first time in a while where I actually accomplished every single thing I wanted to do in the garden that day.  I was so pleased with how much I did.

I checked on all the sowed pots today, and Baker Creek’s European salad mix has two tiny seedlings that look to be the same plant, and Renee’s Garden Asian baby leaf salad mix has four even tinier seedlings that also appear to be the same plant (though not the same as in the other pot).  The three sowed big pots show no sign of life yet.  The tomato ‘Polish Linguisa’  (the tomato I’ve got in the fourth big pot, and one of two heirloom tomato plants I bought from the nursery instead of growing myself) seems to be growing robustly despite having some sort of unknonw insect infestation on it.  The tomatoes in the ground in the crop area also seem to be doing decently, and the cucumbers seem to be doing great.  I added a little metal trellis for the cukes earlier this week.  The chiles seem to be doing decently; not growing fast yet, but putting out new growth (it’s been so long since I grew chiles!).  More peas have flowers every day, and it appears that every single fava/broad bean plant is now flowering.  The runner beans and edamames (soybeans) are coming up nicely, and the plantings of various cultivars of purple-podded beans are growing quickly.

I’ve been taking stock in my head today of the successes and failures so far in growing season 2009.  Here are some of them:

Successes

  • The peas and fava/broad beans have been doing really well.  We’ll see if this actually yields plenty of pods before hot weather strikes, but for now, they’re doing excellently.
  • Having a net to grow the peas on in my windy garden this year has worked much better than last year’s growing them on poles.  (However, next year I will switch to a net with finer netting, as I think that would work even better)
  • Likewise, the planted beans seem to be growing nicely so far.  (But then, beans almost always do that for me.)
  • The pansies and violas (planted as quite young plants) have done excellently.
  • I read a lot about aphids after they decimated my first batch of indoor seedlings, and while most things indicated that the only way to discourage aphids once they’d started eating was to kill them, one source indicated that aphids hate wind and that this is a way to do it.  As I’ve mentioned here before, I use a fan for an average of an hour or two a day on indoor seedlings to discourage damping off and help strengthen the seedlings for life outdoors.  After reading about this, I started using the fan on the indoor seedlings for the whole time the grow lights are on.  It really seems to have helped this second batch.  I still see an aphid here and there, so they’re still around, but they’re much, much less virulent than before, and they have not killed a single seedling this go-round.  (Did you know that some aphid species can be born already pregnant?  I read that years ago and it’s always stuck with me.)
  • Starting easy-care annuals from seed directly in the front garden has worked excellently again.  The corncockle has joined the baby blue eyes in bloom over the course of the week, and I can see many more annual seedlings working their way up to mature plants.
  • Ice plant (the annual kind), which I’ve never grown before but was recommended to me by another local gardener last month, is doing super so far as an edging for the hottest part of the garden.  It’s loaded with blooms (and, being ‘Margarita Mix,’ they are of all different colors, sometimes singly toned and sometimes two-toned) and appears completely unfethered so far by heat or lack of rain.  Its cheery big blooms on the squat little plants, edging the stairs to the front door, make me smile to see.
  • The irises!  Oh, they are glorious this year!  Topping them with compost in the spring really helped boost the bloom count, and I’ll do the same next year.

Things I’ll Do Differently Next Time

  • Not mail-order fruit bushes until I make sure I can’t get them locally.  While the blueberries are adapting OK, they’re still smaller and weaker than what I would have been able to get at a good nursery – especially one of them which has fewer canes than I’d expect in a mature plant.  It’s better to get a fruit bush that’s already mature than to save a bit of money mail-ordering.
  • Be more vigilant about checking for pests on my indoor seedlings!  I need to keep in mind that bringing plants in for the winter means there could always be pests hiding out, waiting for their chance to attack fresh young growth, even if it’s been a few months since the windows were opened.
  • Use the hoop house/wind tunnel starting right away.  (I got it partway through the spring so I couldn’t do so this year.)  I think it would give me more of an edge on the growing season.
  • Sow the mesclun earlier in the spring!
  • Sow the eggplant seeds in biodegradable pots.  I’ve not tried to grow eggplant from seed before and it’s not gone well at all.  Aphids got the first batch, and I believe that my testing the soil for water needs (by poking my finger into the soil) got the second batch, as it was only after all but one was dead that I read that eggplants have extremely sensitive root systems, so much so that apparently any disturbance of their roots can weaken or outright kill the plants.
  • Sow kohlrabi outside instead of starting it indoors.  The seedlings were tasty salad garnish, but they never bulbed up.  Apparently this is common for kohlrabi started inside, as it gets too sensitized to warmer temperatures.  [This, like the eggplant tidbit, is something I read in Tozer’s books (mentioned in my last entry).  I really do recommend them for other dedicated crop growers.]
 

Indoor plant update / New-to-me products I’m trying this year / Welcome back, Stella Natura 23 January 2009

Indoor plant update

The aphids appear to have completely killed the pineapple sage.  After decimating it, they moved on to a potted bulb garden I got for Christmas, where they have been feasting on the tulips and crocuses.  The tulips have beautiful blooms despite the aphids, but the crocuses have yet to bloom.  They’ve also (much to my lack of surprise) been feasting on the tweedia, which as I mentioned here a month or two ago, is a member of the milkweed family – and aphids love (love, love, love) to munch on milkweeds.

After I failed to notice that the gotu kola and lantanas had gone dry, they wilted.  I’ve continued watering them, but so far I have not seen any signs of recovery.  The lantanas were sharing a pot with the Aztec sweet herb, which has been thriving despite the dry spell.  It actually appears to have grown despite my inadvertant lack of care.

Two plants have been doing better indoors than they did outdoors (!) – the cestrum ‘Orange Zest’ (which fully recovered after dropping all its leaves, presumably from shock, when it was brought indoors last autumn) and the snail vine. (I got ‘Orange Zest’ from Select Seeds last year, but they appear to have stopped carrying it.)

The amaryllis ‘Vera’ and ‘Ferrari’ have fully opened their  first set of blooms, and ‘Vera’ is currently opening her second set.  ‘Ferrari’ looks to follow suit soon.  The ‘Chinese sacred lily’ paperwhites have leaves, but no buds yet.  (I did pot them up late though.)  I’ve yet to see a single bud on the amaryllis bulbs and paperwhites I oversummered in a closet.

New-to-me products I’m trying this year

I’ve already added some new-to-me products to my garden plans this year.  My nursery just started carrying Cow Pots (that’s the brand name they’re being sold under there), which are peat-like pots but are made from sustainable cow manure instead of deeply unsustainable peat moss.  I’m planning to start some of my most sensitive-to-transplant seedlings in those instead of in seedling trays. I just discovered while writing this post that they have a website – CowPots.

I’m also trying Southern Exposure Seed Exchange’s higher-quality wooden plant tags after I have had so much difficulty in the past two years with the cheap ones available at the local nursery.  They break easily, they fade easily, etc. etc.  I’m hoping the new ones will work much better, as is claimed, because the higher quality (understandably) comes at a higher price.  Additionally, I bought a marker from SESE that’s supposed to be less prone to fading than the one I got at the local nursery.

I’m also strongly considering trying Lee Valley’s “Self-Watering Propogator Set,” which you can see online over here.  I’ve found their other seed-starting supplies to be the best I’ve ever tried, and am curious to try starting some particular types of seedlings in the environs that seem to be provided by this particular set.  I have yet to definitively make up my mind, though.

Welcome back, Stella Natura

After using the Stella Natura biodynamic gardening calender for years in my old, beautiful garden, I went without it for the past few years.  This year I’ve purchased a copy and am planning to re-integrate its biodynamic advice into my gardening plans, especially since they are so ambitious this year.   In addition to being a guide, the calendar also contains articles and other information.  You can visit their website here, which includes a sample article (and some information on what biodynamics is, for the confused).

 

Winter comes to the garden / Indoor plant update / The yearly inundation has begun 18 December 2008

[I wrote the majority of this on the 6th, but forgot to post it.  My apologies!]

Winter comes to the garden

We’re supposed to get our first real snowfall overnight and tomorrow.  This morning at dawn it was 21 F in the garden, the coldest morning yet, with frost covering the highest percentage of surfaces yet – not just the leaves fallen, crumpled and dead, into the garden, but also the roof next door, and cars at the curb, and much more.  I’m impressed with how much is still trying to grow.  Just in the front garden, which is frequently buffeted by strong winds and is right by a wide street:

  • Many of the autumn-blooming crocuses (some of which are still blooming [!], and others of which have already put out their leaves
  • Cover crops!!  (More below.)
  • The yellow single hardy mum
  • The hardy lavenders
  • The silver thyme (very marginal here)
  • The lisianthuses (annual here)
  • The perennial scabiosa ‘Butterfly Blue’
  • The horehounds
  • The two euphorbias, both the succulent and non-succulent one
  • The bellflower
  • More I’m sure I’m forgetting

Today I did more preparation for winter in the garden, pulling up the large number of stakes, scattering the fallen leaves more evenly around the cover crop area*, moving the potted (and now almost or completely dead, depending on the mum) mums away from the front stairs, and disconnecting and moving the hose.  The hose had little bits of ice at the spigot that fell to the asphalt (welcome to the city) like little clear jewels as I struggled to disconnect it, and after I disconnected it, it dripped a little and stopped.  As to the stakes, it was interesting to me that some of the vines collapsed when I pulled them up and others stayed at least somewhat up in the air, self-supporting thick tangles of vine.  I imagine a stiff wind or a heavy snow will knock them to the ground soon enough, though.

*I was so pleased recently to discover a vivid green plant growing in the crop area and, upon bending down to peer at it, realizing it was a sprouted and decently grown cover crop!  Upon moving the fallen leaves around, I discovered numerous other sprouts at various stages of growth.  It had been a comparably warm couple of days, so I guess the soil warmed up enough for them to sprout and start to grow.   I’m quite relieved that my late cover crop sowing was not in vain after all.

Indoor plant update

The indoor plants are doing quite variably.  I’ve been happy to discover that the gotu kola seems surprisingly easy to take care of, despite the fact that I have yet to find a single piece of information on overwintering it inside in cold-winter climates.  It’s the easiest plant to water because it tells me when it needs it as surely as if it could talk.  If it needs water, it collapses as surely as a punctured balloon, and when it’s had enough water, it springs right back up as if the balloon had been reinflated.  Usually I give it enough water, but once so far I haven’t (even though it was as much as I usually give it, I guess it was drier than usual), and upon seeing it still deflated, I gave it a second dosing and, happy, it sprang back to perky life.

Meanwhile, the pineapple sage has a new issue – it’s become infested with aphids.  I didn’t even know it could become infested with them, as they were never an issue outside. I am suspicious that they came in with the tweedia, which is a milkwood family member, as milkweeds are famous for their propensity for aphid infestations (and the tweedia is infested too). I don’t really know what to do besides hope that the tiny spider who runs around the main plant table and the wall beside it kills them, because I don’t like to kill anything, not even aphids, and it’s my biggest issue with overwintering plants:  In summertime, even if there’s an infested houseplant my solution is simply to take it outside till nature sorts out the problem, and so in wintertime, without nature’s help I am stymied.

The lemongrass is doing excellently, even sending up new stalks, but the rosemaries are doing horribly, making me wonder once again why I ever bother trying to overwinter them.  I can’t remember ever successfully overwintering one indoors.  One very mild winter one survived outside, but that’s been my only success with rosemary.  I don’t know if it’s because I always live in homes with forced air (winters in climates like mine tend to be bad to rosemaries) or if I just don’t have the knack for overwintering them.

The many (many, many) scented and zonal geraniums are up and down at whims, as so often seems to be the way with me and geraniums:  They put out new leaves in patterns that are, to me, mysterious, and drop their old ones, or an entire stalk, and then put out new leaves yet again.  The fuschias and tender sweet violet (sharing a pot) seem to be doing well as long as I remember to check the pot regularly for dry soil, and the lantanans and sweet Aztec herb (the latter of which I also haven’t found a peep about overwintering indoors), which also share a pot, have recovered from near death just after I took them inside and are robustly healthy now, sending out new shoots in addition to beautiful shiny new leaves, and the lantana closest to the window, ‘Samantha’ (the variegated-leaf, yellow-flowered one), is even about to bloom!

The datura ‘Charles Grimaldi’ dropped its old leaves but has put out new ones (daturas are prone to aphid infestation, so though I haven’t actually spied an aphid on it, I wouldn’t be surprised if they’ve moved onto it too), and the snail vine is doing much better indoors than it ever did outside this summer, twining for the sunny window on vigorous new growth.  The cuban oregano (a common houseplant in cold climates, though I planted it in the ground this summer) has, like the datura, dropped its old leaves, but has also put out new growth.  The bay leaf tree, which has been at pretty much the same growth above-ground since I planted it in a large pot late last spring (I think the back yard just isn’t sunny enough for it), seems to be doing about the same indoors so far as it did outside. (I specified ‘above-ground’ because bay leaf trees tend to do their early growth underground, which is why it takes a couple of years for a bay leaf tree even to be salable in nursery markets, often offered in gallon pots with just a few inches of above-ground growth because they have so much root growth per inch of above-ground growth – and I haven’t poked around its roots since I planted it, so I don’t know if its roots have continued to expand even as it hasn’t grown much above-ground.  Unfortunately for nursery owners, this tends to make bay leaf trees poor sellers to people who don’t know much about them.  I noted that they were one of the main things left in the greenhouse at the nursery at the end of the season, just sitting there waiting for somebody who knows about them to realize how well they were doing.  They were even putting out beautiful new above-ground growth in the warm, humid, sunny greenhouse, but the tops still looked tiny.)

The yearly inundation has begun

Every single year, right around 1st December – just like clockwork – the yearly inundation of seed, plant, and spring-planted bulb catalogs begins.  Especially seed catalogs.  I have gotten several catalogs already, even though there are still things growing in the garden!  Still, I know that soon the garden will likely lie dormant, with just the hardiest semi-evergreen and evergreen things still growing – like the lavender, standing tall – and it will be lovely to sit with a mug of herbal tea, alternately staring out at a snowscape and looking through catalogs, daydreaming.  So for now, I’m collecting them in their own little pile, biding my time till the dreaming takes over.

Indoor plant update as I’m finally posting this on 17th Dec.

The aphids have gotten worse on the pineapple sage, though they seem to be primarily attacking one stalk, which seems to be the weakest stalk (yet more credence for the idea that pests tend to gravitate towards plants that are already weakened/damaged/whatever in some way).  There are still some aphids on the tweedia as well.  I got out the paperwhites and amaryllises that I’d oversummered around the time I wrote most of this post, and have been watering them about once a week.  The (seven) paperwhites are resprouting, one at a time, but the three amaryllises have yet to do so.  I also potted up ‘Vera,’ one of the two amaryllises I got this autumn, and she’s got one bud so far, and got an early Christmas present of the amaryllis ‘Ferrari’ – though there was no color specified with the tag, I correctly assumed it was vivid red – which also already has a bud.  I also got a little bulb garden as an early Christmas present, and that has some leaves so far but no buds.  I have one more amaryllis and some more paperwhites (a different kind, that the label calls ‘Chinese sacred lily’), but I’ve yet to pot those up.

Snow and ice (written at time of posting)

After flurrying some earlier in the winter, it finally snowed a little around the time I wrote most of this post, and then – after tremendous heavy rains that lasted three days last week – it snowed, iced, sleeted, and rained yesterday.  The garden now has a light covering of snow, though it’s melting somewhat on this above-freezing day.  My last patch of fall-blooming crocuses is still going, five buds poking out through the snow (that are open when it’s sunny in the garden, it’s just that the front garden gets very little sun in winter compared to summer).  Amazingly, some other things are still growing through the snow as well.