greenhouse

Landscape drought damage requires long lens on camera…

With the worst drought in Texas history and 80 days with temperatures over 100, plants and people and pets are struggling this summer.

It’s 10 degrees cooler here today — 92 instead of 102 — and we have gusting wind cooling things down as well. Sadly, there are a half dozen wildfires in the Central Teas area around us. We’re safe for now, but 500+ people have lost their homes — burned down to the ground, 2 people have died, and today’s winds are spreading the fires ever further. 25,000 acres have burned. This is the back side of Katia. Instead of the rain we so desperately need that is flooding thousands of other people, we got wildfires. We’re praying for everyone in the path of these terrible fires.

While we are safe from the fires, we are at the mercy of the drought. But with a LOT of hand watering to supplement because we are under water restrictions, the garden looks o.k. overall. The secret? The long shot!

My mother-in-law was visiting two weeks ago and wanted some photos of our house and the gardens. I took lots of long shots, and realized as I looked at them that I rarely post photos like that. And it’s one of my great disappointments when reading other garden blogs — I really want to check out the big picture.

So here are photos of everything in the garden — showing of the bright and colorful and much too far away to see the dead and dying plants.

Come take a stroll around the garden with me…



These plants in the front bed are highly xeric and doing pretty well considering they were planted this spring and have endured this drought while trying to get established. There are dying narrow leafed Zinnias and Euryops and adwarf yaupon holly, but you can’t see them from here.

Yellow Esperanza (Yellow Bells) on the right are native to Mexico and very hardy. They are used to the heat.

The veggie garden needs protection from bunnies and our dogs, hence the fence INSIDE the other fence that keeps the deer out!


This is along the path in our woods that leads to the fenced back yard. This is where we feed birds and water the deer, squirrels, foxes, bunnies and mice! With this drought, we have 3 birdbaths and countless little bowls scattered around to provide constant drinking water for anything that needs it. With less blooms, hummingbirds really need our feeders this year, too.

The play scape, the cutting garden, the greenhouse and the xeric rock path.

The back corner of the yard got a few new plants this summer along with an old, worn out bistro table and chairs and a stunning Filamentosa yucca for a focal point. Even rusty metal furniture looks good from far enough away!


All ready for a long winter’s nap …

Last week’s cold weather scare sent many gardeners (including me) scurrying for sheets and towels and shoving plants up against the house.

And of course it did not freeze. Not even close. But that’s the nature of, well…Mother Nature.
Because I heard the freeze warning late in the day, there was no way to get all the plants into the greenhouse, especially the big monsters that I simply cannot budge.
So, today I got some help to move the giant pots to get the hardest part of the move situated. Then I spent most of the day putting in the rest of the children…I mean, plants…
The biggest challenge is using sun-lovers to provide enough shade for more delicate plants that spend their summers under the part-time protection of the back patio and the cabana. So plants have to be carefully placed so as not to scorch or get leggy. Then there’s the issue of enough room for me to get in there and reach back windows and have some space to work.
This is the work space – just enough for repotting, cleaning up plants and preparing seeds.

The daily watering starts again now — with the cooler weather, these plants have gone up to 3 days without water around the back patio area. In the greenhouse, it will be too warm yet during the days to let most of them go more than a day.

With a forecast of 60s for the low tonight, they are sleeping with the windows and door open tonight. The cold front arrives tomorrow – 58, and next week we’ll be in the low 40s at night. Then the plants will be very glad to be in the greenhouse with the heater on.

Let the winter begin! Are you ready?

By |2016-04-14T02:40:11-05:00November 11th, 2010|Blog, freeze, greenhouse, Sharing Nature's Garden, winter|0 Comments

Before and after…

…well, just before.
As I watched my segment on Central Texas Gardener, I realized just how much gardening I’ve done in 6-1/2 years! And I thought it would be interesting for those of you who watched my garden tour to see what it really looked like when I started. So, above you see stumps, weeds, brush.
Some scrawny-scrubby cedar trees dotted the yard.
And this little square of limestone just stuck on the edge of nothing was the vegetable garden… full of what 3 or 4 dying tomatoes. And isn’t that exposed pool equipment a nice addition to the ambiance?
So, I gutted it. Took out all the crap — which, by the way, was everything. Leveled it and brought in topsoil.
Because the original owners placed the house so far back on the lot and then limited the size of the usable backyard by putting the fence really far back. So, anticipating the possibility of a future greenhouse and veggie garden, I added fencing and moved the fence forward to capture more back yard.





If you want to see more of the “after” you can catch the Central Texas Gardener show with my garden in it here.

Letting my fingers and my imagination do the walking…

It’s thawed here, and today was a beautiful, and warmer-than-normal Texas winter day.

While waiting for the cloudy and cool morning to burn off, I sipped hot tea (with a slice of my Eureka variegated lemon in it) and devoured seed catalogs.

I had several different catalogs that came in the mail and then I went searching for the websites of some of my other favorite sources, like Botanical Interests, Burpee, and Tomato Bob.

Several orders for veggies, cutting flowers and perennials are now processing away across the country.

When the sun came out I was itching to plant things. And even though I have seed packets I could have used, I didn’t have seed starter mix, or a plan!

(Being German, I gotta have a plan, don’t ya know?!!)

So for tomorrow, I have a plan: Meet garden blogging buddy at garden center, let myself buy 1 or 2 (only) plants, and get some seed starter mix and innoculant and whatever other seeds they might have that I didn’t already buy!

When the other packages arrive in the mail, I’ll draw a plan for the cutting garden and the veggie garden. Then I can start sowing seeds in little pots in the greenhouse where I can keep them nice and toasty warm.

And this year, I swear I will NOT jump the gun and plant them outside at the earliest possible moment. Instead, I will err on the side of CAUTION, and plant them a safe amount of time after the last danger of frost has passed.

Nope, no more playing around trying to fool Mother Nature for me. After the last year we’ve had, it’s clear to me that she isn’t messing around!

How about you? Ready to cry “uncle” to Mother Nature?

P.S. You might have to hold me to that “not jumping the gun” thing!

By |2017-11-29T23:27:35-06:00January 18th, 2010|Blog, greenhouse, plans, seeds, Sharing Nature's Garden|0 Comments

Ah ha — garden guest uncovered!

Ok…this post is from Tanner.

I’ve been trying to help my mom decipher the garden salad bar thief mystery.
I keep snooping around…
looking…
sniffing…
barking…
and, yes, eating.
Today I finally led her to the best clue. She was sneaking up on me, hoping to find me doing something mischievous (who, me?).
And I had my nose deeply buried in the grass, chomping on a little snack.
What did she find when she came over? Rabbit turds! Yumm-o.
She was grossed out, needless to say, and shoed me away for further inspection of the clues.

So, now she can set about fixing some of the gaps under the garden fence and keep that little bunny out of the salad bar.
I mean, if she put up that fence to keep ME from eating tomatoes, and I LIVE here, then no rabbits should be allowed in there to get what I can’t have.
Don’t you think that’s only fair?
I’ll be on careful watch now to make sure the bunny doesn’t come back in the yard, either.
That’s my job, after all!
I’m a good boy. That’s all for my post today, now I’ll turn it back over to Mom!
— Tanner
Mom, here. Ok – I decided everyone needs to come out of the greenhouse before next week’s trip to Indiana. Here’s the last photo of the plants all nestled in their winter beds.

A few plants are happily blooming in the warmth of the greenhouse, like this hibiscus.
Bougainvilla
Geranium
Dutchman’s pipe in full, fragrant bloom.
In addition to the tropical plants, now all the veggies have to go into the veggie garden. So I have been composting and planting and digging out grubs today.
Took a lunch break, but now I have to get back out there. We’re supposed to have chances of rain, glorious rain, from Sunday through Thursday and I want to make sure the veggies are ready for it.

Should I, or should I not?

Ok.

It’s the 5th of March. It’s going to be 83 today and the lowest forecasted temp in the next 7 days is 50.

I’m leaving town for spring break for 6 days at the end of that 7-day forecast…

Plants in the greenhouse are VERY hot in the afternoons and require a lot of care to keep them cool — like hosing down the whole place and wetting the gravel at least once a day.

Our “official” last chance of frost is March 21st.

What are the chances that some freakish front with frost decides to frown upon us if I DON’T take the plants all out before I go?

What are the chances that the plants BOIL in their own skin if someone forgets to open up the greenhouse or isn’t around to cool them off?

Decisions, decisions.

Then there is this wind. Probably 30mph at least – I’m afraid to bring some of the plants out because they will get beaten up. I think they will need temporary homes up on the patio where there is windbreak. Which means moving furniture to make room for them…and then moving them yet again later.

Gardening is a lot of work.

(I know, I’m a master of the obvious. I’m just cranky about it because I would so rather be planting than hauling.)

So, should I, or shouldn’t I?

By |2016-04-14T02:44:39-05:00March 5th, 2009|Blog, frost, greenhouse, Sharing Nature's Garden|0 Comments
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