lily
The Transplant
There is a patch between the curving drive and the yard, on the north side, where Rex's dogs used to reside. The dogs, Trixie and Elmo, passed away years ago. Last autumn, Betsy flew out of LaGuardia with a box of bulbs, roots, stolons, and rhizomes in her carry-on. She planted them here, among the old dog pens. This spring we sold the chain link pens to a woman tending goats, or was it pigs?
As it turns out, this is a very prolific location, maybe the most fertile in the yard. The plants that grow here are a hodge podge of Lamium, Creeping Charlie, Jewelweed, Milkweed, Bellflower, Virginia Wetleaf, and smattering of Lambsquarters, clover, grasses, and other weeds. These surround the remaining dog house, one that is hard to part with because it was so lovingly crafted to resemble the human house it shared land with at Rex's old place.
This is the canopy of a single Jewelweed, Impatiens capensis. I say canopy because it is built like a tree and is beginning to shade out the transplants.
Just look at the size of that stem, maybe three or four inches in circumference. To the right is a Maximilian sunflower, Helianthus maximiliani, carried to Brooklyn from southern New Mexico, and now to Minnesota. To the left is one of two Bleeding Hearts, Dicentra eximia, holding their own under the shade of the giant Jewelweed.
The Milkweed, Asclepias syriaca, grows strong here and like common Milkweeds everywhere, it appears rather randomly wherever it prefers. I suppose that's what makes it a weed to the farmer or landscaper. I hope gardeners appreciate it. I've seen some spectacular specimens in yards here -they are quite sculptural, exerting considerable presence. We are planning on a wildflower meadow over the septic drain field and will likely transplant some of these to that location.
Each lily transported from Brooklyn have made this home. They are all doing quite well, as they had in Brooklyn (people's sticky or damaging fingers aside). I may miss the bloom, or part of it, as I will be away in New York City for a presentation in late July and then in Vermont for the first part of August teaching my course Landscape Into Art.
When I am there I will pot up some rather large specimens that could not be, nor should have been, crammed into a box. Roots trimmed, watered heartily, I will leave them for the week while I am in Vermont, and then, on my return to Brooklyn, pick them up for the return trip to Minnesota. I do not look forward to this drive, haven't for years now, but the plants, their care, and the stowaway creatures that will make the van a home for the trip will make it a more interesting ride.
Lily Pad
You might find a frog on the side of the porch. It happens.
But would you expect to find one inside a day lily?
Hiding spot, feeding hole, great place to meet the opposite sex?
Do you leap in a single bound or climb the stalk, waiting for the flower to open it's doors?
And do they know the doors close after dark?
Lily Pad
You might find a frog on the side of the porch. It happens.
But would you expect to find one inside a day lily?
Hiding spot, feeding hole, great place to meet the opposite sex?
Do you leap in a single bound or climb the stalk, waiting for the flower to open it's doors?
And do they know the doors close after dark?
In The Yard
Never Trust A Weed
I've planted some pansies; I can't say I've ever done this before in my gardens. What is happening? These here in pots that were empty.
The lilies are up, no surprise as the garlic is also up -including the elephant garlic I've planted around the garden.
Never trust a weed. Never.
Smothering Potentilla indica, everyhere. A garden swan song.
A Sunday For Gardens
As it was, last Sunday. And as I've mostly been tucked away in an office building for finals, or at the studio during my last days of tenancy, I have not been outside, but I can see -it's been gorgeous for gardening. The struggles of agriculture have allotted me a renewed appreciation for the flower garden. Vigor and tenacity are its hallmarks -mostly. I'll always grumble about the cat shit and trash (napkins!) in the garden, but I've come to see that as part of city gardening, not its better part, but part nonetheless.
The old brass lamp lady has found a new place to call us to the garden.
Angelique.
The shrub rose got out of hand, huge before its time. I cut it, no mercy. This is usually done in March.
Its thorny remains. No no need to have a rose bush shading out the perennials. In fact, under this rose is the only place weeds reliably grow in the front yard garden -nothing else gets established.
As it is the sunlight conditions are changing rapidly with the growth of the Zelkovas; three years since their arrival, they have changed everything on the sidewalk and garden where most plants were picked for full, hot sun. (Photo from a less sunny day)
Since I was concerned about the lily's tolerance for transplant I made sure to dig far and wide, transplanting the soil as well as the plant. Did you know that garlic is a lily?
Angelique, the second.
Then we went to Greenwood, for lunch, dogwoods, cherries, and others.
Good Morning
The day after the storms was so nice, so cool, breezy and pleasant, we had to have our coffee out of doors. The lilies are in bloom -all of them. The landlady surprised me, as I had my head down pulling the smartweed and dayflower, with a good morning. I didn't even know to whom I replied until I looked up. Then the landlord, who breathed "there he is -the gardener." What's going on here, I thought. And then I enjoyed the lilies.
I pulled him off the fennel that I had harvested a few days earlier, at the beach farm. These swallowtail caterpillars like feathery foliage -like carrots or queen anne's lace, but also parsley and maybe cilantro. I've none of this in the garden so I put him on the cosmos -the most feathery I we have. Seems not to his taste as he whirled and whirled around the hundreds of leafy choices, never choosing any, or so it seemed.
I think of people carrying eggs in spoons.
I've moved the sidalcea this year to be nearer the sun now that the zelkova street trees nearly shade out the entire front garden. Happy is the green wasp, nestling into the mallow like a cat to nip.
I don't recall picking these lilies -a little garish for my taste, but their scent is great, and hidden from pickers on the backside of the poor patio, under the yew tree, smothered by phlox and aconitum greens. Walk by -all you get is the scent.
Summer Fire
Late Lily Blooms
Questions
Star And Chorus
Late Lily
Lilies and Roses
Early Morning Asclepias
The Cosmos
The last of these lilies.
Echinacea taking off where all else had died -the dead zone.
The beans are growing vigorously.
And our first brandywine flower turns to fruit. There is order in the universe.
Love A Rainy Night
ooh ooh.
We pulled some old iron pot stands out of storage.
The painting of the house has begun this morning. Turns out, the man with the paint brush told me, that he's only painting one side of the house -the side that faces our side garden. Apparently, the only reason he is painting the building at all is because the landlady has some leftover paint from his painting of her building. So one side will be painted. He seems reluctant to mess with our plants, and I understand that.
Allium sphaerocephalon and some lilies. Alliums should've been staked long ago.
Bees love the borage.
Sidalcea malviflora (yes, the partygirl).
Morning coffee and deadheading.
Goings On In The Side Yard
The basil making minor strides to overcome the height of the borage.
The alyssum, literally an explosion, tolerates our mild foot traffic.
Gaura blooming well.
Lily today.
