Wednesday, August 26, 2015
Hummingbird Feeder
Here are some photos of the birds that came to drink from the hummingbird feeders this summer. First photos are of the hummers. Then there is a couple of the woodpecker, followed by the Western oriole or some books called it the Western Tanager. There are a couple of the red-headed house finches, too. I never though of so many different birds learning to tip the feeders just enough that the sugar water would drip out so they could drink it.
Monday, April 27, 2015
Building a Tree
Building
a Tree or Shrub
The first photo is of an Althea or Rose of Sharon bush or small tree. I took a seed from my mom's yard and raised or built this shrub. It has taken 12 years for it to get to the 6 feet it is now and covered with blooms as it was last summer. It has been a long, drawn out project but very satisfying. The second photo is of my cherry tree blooms this spring, followed by some apple tree blooms. I planted the cherry and apple trees about 10 years ago. I bought them from a local nursery when they were in 5 gallon pots, only about 3 feet tall and had slender small trunks. Now they are about 12 feet tall and the trunks are about 8 inches across. They are just now getting big enough to have lots of blooms and hopeful another crop of fruit as we got about 2 years ago. Last year the fruit froze during a late freeze. This year we lost the cherries but it looks like we might get some apples. The small pink flowers in the 3rd photo are of one of my favorite trees called a Redbud. There are several different verities at nursery's but there are wild trees over many states like Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Indiana and others. In the early spring they have tiny orchid shaped blossoms that cover the tree in this nice shade of pink. Later they grow large heart shaped leaves that make for good shade. In the fall the leaves turn a nice shade of yellow. They are easy to grow and I have one that I let grow fro a seed and kept in a pot for a long time making a nice container plant. The last photo is of one of my lilacs another favorite shrub. I have 4 lilacs. 2 came from the nursery in small 1 gallon pots and only about a foot tall. In the 10 years I have had them they are now fairly good sized and bloomed beautifully this spring. The other 2 bushes came from root cuttings I took off of my mom's lilacs. Lilacs spread rapidly and can get aggressive in the wrong areas but are easy to start new plants from. Remember never to prune your lilacs in the early spring. If you do you won't get any blossoms, prune them in late summer.
Many
people look at growing a tree as they would raising a child or caring
for a pet. They think they have to sweet talk the plant, play music
for it, pet it, give it special TLC. For some people this might be
the proper approach for growing trees or plants, but not for us
builders.
Don't
just plant that new tree or shrub. Build it. Any people seem to be
afraid of the idea of growing or raising a plant. Working in a
nursery I hear so many people complain that they can't raise
anything. People make comments saying they don't know why they're
buying a tree as it won't grow for them. I say, “Have confidence in
yourself.” Build that tree or shrub.
The
dictionary defines 'grow' as 'start to increase in size, develop, to
reach maturity, to expand.' To 'raise' is 'to cause to move upward,
to make greater in size, to build.”
To
Build! To develop or expand. Maybe we should stop thinking of growing
or raising plants but of building plants.
The
same people who say they can't raise or grow plants, frequently are
builders. These are people who are architects, and engineers, who
build homes, offices and bridges. Or they're mechanic who build or
repair cars, trucks, lawn mowers, or all kinds of engines. They can
be carpenters, who build or make furniture, and they may be
electricians who build or develop computers or cell phones. I can
grow a tree, but I would be as lost trying to build a computer as
builders would be growing a tree.
We
as people 'build' lots of thing including trees, shrubs, vegetables
and houseplants. So the next time you start to plant that new tree
think of it as a building project.
First
you excavate a hole and build a proper foundation by adding peat moss
and compost to the existing soil. Insert the tree into the hole in
the foundation. Add the right ingredients (a baker 'builds' a cake)
of lots of water, the required amount of root stimulator and maybe a
stake and tire straps if needed. You want the tree to develop at the
proper pace. To increase in size. You want to build this tree.
Remember,
this isn't one of those quick, one day projects like painting a room,
but an expanding, ongoing, never-ending project, like raising a
child. Over the years the tree will expand and mature because you
will add the required amounts of water, fertilizer, and mulch. You
can help the tree by the occasional fixing or removal of a branch
that forms wrong or doesn't look good. Your tree will require
cleaning and improvement just as your home, your car or computer
does.
Next
tine you are looking for a new project – give this a try. Build a
Tree!
Good Morning Glories
Good
Morning Glories
“Good
Morning, - Glory,” is one of my friend's favorite greeting, and
it's one of my favorite flowers. They are fantastic, easy to grow
vines that have masses of large, heart-shaped leaves and big, bright,
eye-catching blossoms that really do seen to shout out “good
morning.” I've spent many an early, summer morning with a good cup
of coffee or tea watching these delicate flowers unfold to the
sunrise, all the while knowing each one will be gone by
mid-afternoon. But not to despair, as there will be another group of
blossoms opening the next morning.
I
plant morning glories. I plant them in every corner, in every spot in
my yard that doesn't have something else growing there. I plant them
to grow on the fence along my back yard, and around all the trees in
the yard. They are a great sight planted around a mailbox along the
curb. I like to see them climbing the trellis near my back door. I
don't have a very big flower or vegetable garden by there are lots of
volunteer morning glories every where in my yard. I have mounds of
them around trees, bushes, and the large pots most of my veggies and
flowers are planted in.
As
a child I resented having to do any yard work but I quickly learned
to admire the fast growing vines with their large heart shaped leaves
and beautiful flowers. I was taught to grow it as a child and let my
son grew them when he was a small child. I consider it one of the
best flowers to introduce children to gardening. The seeds are large
enough for small hands to be able to hold and the child to see easily
and the plants grow fast enough that children can begin to understand
how they grow.
Last
summer I read everything I could find about morning glories and
decided to do some experimenting with them. I bought as many
different kinds as I could find seed for and planned to grow them in
the ground and in pots.
Morning
glories or Ipomoea come in several different colors. Heavenly Blue is
the all time favorite, it's flowers being four to five inches across,
and is a sky blue in color. There is also Scarlet O'Hara in red, and
Pearly Gates in white. The three make a beautiful red, white, and
blue showing for the Fourth of July. Other colors includes different
shades of pink and purple. If you don't plant seeds each year most
glories will throw back to the basic pinkish-purple color.
Morning Glory
vines are considered annuals, meaning they only last one summer
season. In the fall when you are pulling out the dead vines you will
see hundreds of little black morning glory seeds falling everywhere.
These seeds will usually sprout the next spring but don't always come
back to the color they were the previous year. To get a certain color
you need to plant from seed which is best done directly in the ground
or pot were you want the vines to grow. This should be done after all
danger of frost is past or they can be started in pots about six
weeks ahead of time in peat pots that can be put directly into the
soil of the flower bed without disturbing the roots. They can be a bit difficult to transplant so I just plant them where I want them. If the roots are
disturbed the plant won't do as well if at all. Seeds should be
planted ½ inch deep after being soaked overnight or for about four
hours to soften the seeds so they sprout better. I found it is not
necessary as some books and seed packs recommend that the seed shell
be scarified or nicked with a small file or fingernail clippers
before soaking. To do this hold the seed between thumb and forefinger
and nick the pointed end. Avoid damaging the rounded end as that is
where the baby plant embryo is located.
I
have had good luck with out soaking them, also, but it may take a day
or so longer for the first leaves to appear. Remember first leaves
will not be the heart shape of all other leaves so don't think it is
something other than a morning glory. First leaves are more round but
still larger than most first leaves of flowers. Give it a chance.
Morning
glories are called twiners, meaning they go round and round the first
upright support they come in contact with. They have growing tips
that are very sensitive to tell them where to climb. Strangely enough,
they usually grow in a counter-clockwise movement. If the tip finds a
horizontal or lengthwise object, it will try to avoid it and “feel”
for a vertical object to climb. And climb they do. They try to climb
on anything and everything but do best with a little help. Chain link
or open wooden fences work well, as do trellis, lattice work and even
chicken wire. Special nails or hooks with glue can be used on cinder
block walls and houses, along with a grid of criss-crossing string.
Or if you prefer glories make a nice ground cover if they can't find
anything to climb on. They grow very quickly, reaching twelve to
fifteen feet in a season. If allowed to climb up a tree you will see
glory flowers all over the tree confusing the neighbors as to what
kind of tree you have.
In
one of the books I read about glories it said that during World War
Two, in parts of southeast Asia, morning glories were used by the
British to camouflage ammunition dumps and gun emplacements to hide
them from the enemy. You can use them to screen unsightly garbage
cans or fences or your neighbors yard for a few months. In the
southern states the vines will last almost year round while in the
colder areas only during the warm months.
Remember
that morning glories don't like rich soil. Living in New Mexico I
already knew that they did well in our hot dry climate with its poor
sandy, soil. They should do well anywhere they do not get to much
water. I add a little compost from my compost pile, that is mostly
horse manure and kitchen vegetable trimmings, to the area where I want
to grow the flowers. But not a lot, as you would with most other
flowers, trees or shrubs. Don't fertilize, either, or you may find
you have long vines with wonderful leaves, but no flowers. The same
with watering your morning glories. They prefer low to moderate
watering, and will rot and die quickly if over-watered. Living in the
desert I have to water about every other day and sometimes everyday
if they are wilted. In many states if there is enough rain you won't
have to water them at all.
I
have never been overly bothered with any kind of insect pest on my
morning glories, which is great for all gardeners especially those of
us that are organic gardeners. No spraying, or bug picking. I did
have a friend who said she had some problem with powdery mildew in
humid weather. I have not encountered this problem here on the
desert.
If
you think you want to try morning glories, but don't want the vines,
I found several seed packets for plants in a dwarf or bush style.
They are usually pink, blue, or red with a white throat, and are
really showy in pots or hanging baskets. There is one vine
called a Moon Flower that is white and blooms at night with a sweet
odor.
After
you have planted your morning glories, sprinkle a packet of
portulaca, cosmos or marigold seed in close to where the glories are
planted These annual flowers will add more color and take about the
same care and watering as the morning glories do. One year I planted
sunflowers with some morning glories. The sunflowers provided support
for the vines and the blue and gold mixture of flowers were very
colorful at the end of one of our long summers when everything else
seemed to have weathered and dried out from the heat.
I'm
searching the seed catalogs for new verities and color for this year
and next. Hope you'll try a morning glory garden, too.
Sunflowers
I
used to work in a plant nursery and I frequently got asked what is an
easy flower to grow. A flower that kids can grow. A flower that will
attract birds. A flower that will bloom in late summer when
everything else is starting to die back. The answer to all those
questions is the Sunflower.
The
sunflower or Heliarthus is a true American flower. It is the state
flower of Kansas. Indians were raising it for the seeds long before
the Conquistadors came to America. Indians and early pioneers used
the petals to make a yellow dye for clothing. The Incas revered the
sunflower as a symbol of the sun. Not only are the seeds eaten by
people, animals, and birds, the oil fro the seeds is used in some
salad dressings, margarine and soaps.
The
most commonly grown is the Mammoth Gray Stripe that can reach ten
feet tall, and be eight to twelve inches across the flower head One
flower can have up to 1,000 seeds or more. (I didn't count them. I'm
just quoting from a book on annual flowers.)
Sunflowers
are usually grown from seeds as they don't transplant well as
seedlings. On checking the seed racks in several stores, I was
surprised to see how many different finds of sunflowers there were. I
found a whopping twenty different varieties, in all sizes and
heights, plus more are mentioned in books. Color ranged from the
almost white of Vanilla Ice, through every shade of yellow
like
Lemon Queen, Cutting Gold and Sunspot. There were shades of red and
rust browns, too. I liked the ones called Autumn Beauty, Sunset, and
Chianti. The orange of Tethona or Mexican Sunflower is an eye-catcher
in any garden even though the flowers are small compared to the big
Mammoth sunflowers.
There are, also, wild sunflowers in many areas of the United States that are considered by many people to be weeds. I let a few of these weeds grow in my yard as they take no care and the goldfinches love the seeds as they are small enough for these small yellow birds to eat. The seeds from the Mammoth sunflowers are too big for some small birds to eat. The photo at the top of this post is of a wild sunflower.
It
is best to plant them in the spring after the last frost. I usually
plant mine toward the mid or late April, but have planted seeds
around the end of June and had them bloom in the fall here where I
live in New Mexico. Several plantings will give a more continuous
blooming season. Although they can be grown in our native dirt, the
addition of some well composted soil will help. But not to rich or to
much fertilizer or you'll have big leaves and small flowers.
While
planting add some blue morning glory seeds with the big sunflowers.
The morning glories will climb up the sunflower big thick sunflower
stalks and make for pretty blue and yellow flowers together. With the
smaller verities of sunflowers, like Teddy Bear, drop in some
marigold or nasturtium seeds for a great contrast.
Keep
the seedbed moist until the seeds are several inches tall but
sunflowers are not as fussy about water as many flowers and may be
more forgiving about an occasional missed watering.
Do
keep a lookout for some of the birds that will dig up the seeds for
food. Cover the seedbed with a close meshed net if the birds cause to
much trouble.
Don't
be surprised to find your sunflowers attracting lots of bees. They
are especially popular with the bumble bees. I've spent many an
enjoyable time watching and photographing bumble bees on a newly
opened sunflower. Don't be afraid of the bees. As long as you don't
move to quickly or grab hold of one they won't hurt you. I've never
been stung by a bee in all my years of gardening. (Yes, I have been
stung by wasps. That is a whole different critter.)
I
grow sunflowers for the birds, as well as the bees and my own
enjoyment. It's fun to watch birds hanging onto a swaying sunflower
head and eating the seeds. If a sunflower head is to heavy and bends
over to much, I'll cut it and lay it on the ground so it's easier for
the birds to get to the seeds. Of course squirrels like the seeds,
too.
As
you watch your sunflowers grow and flower don't forget to cut a few
for flower arrangements in the house. A single flower by its self or
in a group can be stunning. Or try a couple with several other kinds
of cut flowers.
So
when buying your seeds this year add a package of sunflower seed. Try
a different variety, or two, or three, or four........
Wood Violets
Violets
One of my
favorite flowers is the wood violet. It may not be very big but it
certainly sends out a lot of very fragrant, heady perfume. Not only
do violets have this wonderful odor, they bloom and smell good in
winter in the southwestern states, and in early spring in other parts
of the United States. In fact I found my first one this winter on New
Year’s Day. One doesn’t expect to find flowers, let alone such a
wonderful perfume, from such a small, usually unnoticed plant.
There are
lots of different kinds of violets, or violas, which are kin to the
pansy, and they come in several different colors from white, and
yellow to light purple and dark purple. Wood violets seem to have the
sweetest odor of any I have smelled. I got my start from my mom and
she got hers from her mom, and that’s going back some fifty years
so I couldn’t say for sure which verity it actually is. They grow
rapidly from seed and are easy to start from division of clumps. Some
people think that violets can become a pest if not kept under
control. I try to keep mine in beds or containers where they won’t
choke out other plants that I want. Wood violets are larger than the
wild violets but not near as big as a pansy and are a deep purple in
color.
Violets
of all kinds do well in containers or pots. Wood violets, by
themselves, take very little care except for water in the summer.
They do prefer a bit of shade for part of the day as they are not
real fond of the hot sun of the southern states. A few annuals added
to the container, or bed of violets can add color and height during
the summer. Before
you plant your violets add some bulbs to the pot like windflowers, or
grape hyacinths that will come up year after year along with the
violets. They may not bloom at the same time but the violet leaves
will add verity to the container or flower bed that you plant.
Wood
violets make a nice cut flower for a tiny vase or with other flowers.
A pot of violets makes a great gift at any time especially for the
beginning gardener. I have heard of people picking violets and
candying them to make decorations for cakes and cookies, but have
never tried it myself.
I
have let my wood violets take over a small flower bed right by my
front door. I know that this wonderful little flower will greet me
and my visitors with a lovely sight and a profusion of perfume for
about 6 weeks each spring. Following the spring blooming period
violets put on lots of heart shaped leaves. These leaves look nice in
the flower bed, and can add interest to a bouquet of flowers.
Wood
violets might be the right flower for you to consider adding to your
flower collection.
Tuesday, February 17, 2015
Navajo Rugs
While I was at the Petroglyph National Monument Visitors Center there was a sale of Navajo Rugs going on. I couldn't afford any of these magnificent rugs. (I would never walk on one) Most are used to hang on the wall. One photo show a small weaving loom but no one was weaving while I was there. There was a Navajo man giving a talk about how the rugs are made and what some of the symbols on them mean. These rugs were brought here from the Hubbell Trading Post near Ganada, Arizona which is still in operation. It was first opened in 1878. These rugs averaged in price from $300 to $3000. Many were made in the last few years, but I did notice a few made in the 1970's. If you can find a rug made in the late 1800's or early 1900's you will pay dearly for it. Most are in museums as they should be. It is mostly the women that do the weaving but there are a few men getting into it. The larger rugs can take up to a year to weave. You can see a neighborhood of homes behind the visitors center in some of the photos as well as the Sandia Mountains in the distance. The last photos show the roof of a traditional Indian or Spanish patio with long strings of New Mexico Chili peppers hanging from them.
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