Showing posts with label weeds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label weeds. Show all posts

Sunday, June 28, 2015

A Bit-of-Everything Update

Firstly:  I FINALLY GOT A JOB!!!  Seven months! Egad.

I haven't gotten much done in the way of yardwork or gardening for the past couple of months, because my asthma and allergies have been kicking my ass so severely that I've basically been couch-bound for two months.  But I'm back to it, and have a few small things to share:

In May, I found this little (1") Golden Orb Weaver spider
in my yellow roses.  I call her Margaret. She's now got a
4" legspan, and has made her home in one of the archways
on my front porch.  

Exactly a year ago, I did a post on some weeds I found in my yard - after the
last bout of severe allergies kept me on my ass for two months and my yard
had gone to hell while I wasn't looking, in fact, which is where I'm at again. I
I found the Mystery Weed again, and this time took photos and looked it up
online:  it's Pigweed (Amaranthus retroflexus).  

Plants at work: Scilla violacea and a Jade Plant.  And a wee
brass Ganesh, the remover of obstacles. 

My 'Romantika' Clematis climbing the post on the back
porch.  Behind it you can see Raven's Garden, which is
just a freaking MESS.  The Morning Glories and Cypress
Vine have completely ignored the back fence and wire lines
 I gave them to climb on, and have made a little mound on
top of the strawberries I planted there.  The Cosmos are
doing alright - you can see a couple of them (orange) behind
the Clematis.  More on that soon. 


Meanwhile, I've got a LOT of work to do in the backyard.   Like I said, I've been sick for two months and everything has just gone to hell.   Yesterday I spent about three hours pulling weeds by hand in the backyard.  Today I'll mow, prune up the trees, and see about getting those flower vines off the ground, or at least also onto the fence where they're supposed to be.  I also have to clean up my tomato plants - they all fell off the stakes while I wasn't looking, and had patched out into the yard and made a great big, tangled, tomato-y mess.  I ripped them off the ground yesterday while I was weeding around them, and just threw them back into the vegetable garden, hehe.  

Updates soon. 

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Friday, August 15, 2014

An Update On the Front Garden

Yes! The weather is finally cool enough at night and in the mornings that I can really start working in the yard again. Let's hear it for an early fall, folks!

☆。★。☆。★ 。☆ 。☆。☆ ★。\|/。★ CHEERS ★。/|\。★ 。☆。。☆ ☆。 ★。 ☆ ★


In case anyone thought I was dead or for some other reason wasn't interested in gardening anymore (if anyone is, in fact, actually reading this blog and also giving a crap), here are a couple of pics

Before:

SEPTEMBER 2013




APRIL 2014

Last September, I cleared out most of the Yarrow that persists in taking over the entire front garden.  As you can see, only seven months later, it was already filling in - and four months after that (i.e. yesterday) it had grown into what looked like the corner of an abandoned lot. 

I'm sick of doing that every year. 

Seriously, you guys, from here on out, as far as Texas goes,* I'm all about little-to-no maintenance. 
And so:  


Yesterday evening, just before sunset (when the temperature was a balmy and cool...um...92ยบ), I ripped out ALL OF THE YARROW.  Things to know: 
  • I'm planning to put another rose bush on the east (left, in the picture) side of the garden to balance out the big white/yellow one on the west (right) side
  • This time I'm going to keep after the damned garden with the hoe and make sure the effing Yarrow doesn't get a foothold again.  
  • The statue belongs to my recent roomate, who has moved out of state, and left it here until such time as she can figure out how to ship it to herself without it costing an arm and a leg.  Meanwhile, many thanks to my neighbor's boyfriend, who saw me struggling to get the thing onto a dolly last night and very kindly wheeled it to the garden and propped it up in place for me with his man muscles. 
  • Bermuda grass actually goes semi-dormant in the summers here, because of the heat.  It'll green up again when fall truly hits. 
  • Did you know Irises could talk? They say OH MY GOD WOMAN DIVIDE US ALREADY!!




* Um...nothing.  



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Friday, June 27, 2014

Legal Weed

Look who's still alive!  Lots of LIFE happening lately, and also lots of SUMMER, so, not much going on in the yard/gardens. A quick recap of the last couple of months goes:


  • learned to tune up/repair my lawnmower via YouTube videos
  • Something (not one of my dogs) dug up my Sweet Autumn Clematis vine and the whole thing died
  • Discovered that the weed in the back yard that I knew was bothering my dogs' skin is none other than Ragweed.  *HORROR MOVIE MUSIC PLAYS IN BACKGROUND* 
  • The grass, weeds, and intentional plants that I tend are doing really well this year, since we've had a decent amount of consistent rainfall this year, and my "lawns" are doing great.  The front is...alive!  The back is 6" high at all times, fluffy, soft, and 90% weeds.  I don't care, as long as it's green. Except for the ragweed. 

So the other day while mowing (with the weed eater, since although my lawnmower is now functional, it's out of gas, derp), I came across a weed I have never seen before in my ten years of living in this house, and my thirty-three years of living in Austin.  I took to the internet today to try and identify it, and ended up drawing you a picture: 




1. Ground Ivy (Glechoma)     

Low, creeping, prolific, and covered in small whorled burrs that blanket your dog like little angry traps that spring when you snuggle him later.  I've found them to be easily controlled by scalping the crap out of them with the weedeater on a regular basis. (As per this whole post: your mileage may vary). 

...the plant, not the dogs. Weed eaters don't control dogs at  all. 








2. Dichondra
Teensy and beautiful, to my eye. They spring up and proliferate in shady areas with moist soil, and I let them do that all they want, because they fill in areas where I can never grow anything else. Plus they're cute as hell. 







3. Creeping Buttercup (Ranunculus)
The first time I saw this I thought it was some new horrible form of Ground Ivy.  I don't have much; the healthier and more diverse my lawn is, the less I see Creeping Buttercup.  It's itchy.









4. Wood Sorrel (Oxalis)
NOT CLOVER.  Clover is this.  There are many species of Oxalis, but this one is mine.  This shit is the reason the HOA hates me. It's ubiquitous, fast-growing, covered in @$!%&!~@! stickers, and too low to hit with the lawnmower.  Regular scalping with the weed eater keeps it in check, but the second the grass withers in extreme heat this stuff takes off like crazy.  WE HATES IT, PRECIOUS.






5. Henbit (Lamium)
Henbit is a type of Dead Nettle - "dead" indicating that it has no noxious chemical sting like Stinging Nettle or Bull Nettle.  It's safe to touch.  And I think it's pretty, when it's not stringy and overgrown.  This is one of the weeds I let grow in shady areas if it wants to, though it usually doesn't, for long.
   






 6. Lamb's Quarters (Chenopodium)

Big, strong, and easy to pull up when it's about a foot high.  Earlier than that and the stem just snaps at the ground.  Later than that and you need farm equipment to get it up. Fortunately it doesn't seem to spread much, at least not in my yard. It's also got big, strong roots that are perfect for breaking up hard, dry soil - which is why you tend to see it more in barren areas.  It's got a job to do. 

    







7. Western Ragweed (Ambrosia)
Holy shitsnacks, y'all.  I first became aware that my dogs seemed to be allergic to this stuff last year, when I had maybe one or two of them in the yard.  I pulled them up. This year, I got dozens, so I mowed them over - regular mowing will disrupt and eventually wear out and kill 99% of the weeds I've encountered. Not this crap. It replicates exponentially the more I cut it down, and now I have a fucking CARPET of this shit.  More extreme measure to be taken over the coming weekend.  Daisy's reacting to it (and the fleas, which have gone INSANE this year) so badly I'm afraid the Animal Services people are going to confiscate her any day now, the poor love. :'(





8. Japanese Stiltgrass, or Annual Jewgrass (Microstegium)
I was highly dismayed to discover that this was a particularly noxious invasive plant, high on watch lists around my area.  I love this stuff!  I have it all over the east side of my property where nothing else will grow, and it's beginning to take over my backyard, too.  And I was GLAD it was, because it's SO pretty and green and soft.  I learned today that it'll get up to 3' high if I let it - I've always mown it into a soft, plush carpet, and it stays that way.  I want to keep it, but...? 





9.   ?????

SO WHAT THE HELL IS THIS THING???

Anybody?

It was about a foot and a half high at time of death (by weed eater). Each little star-shaped cluster of leaves had a little cluster of tiny, tiny yellow flowers in the center.  There was a pale area near the center of each cluster, kinda like in the picture.  It was really pretty, and also really scary-looking, because, is it a Magical Winning Lottery Ticket Bush, or is it SATAN???

[Edit:  it's wild Amaranth!] 




And Now A Word From My Lawn's Sponsor 
(that would be me)...

By and large, I let weeds be weeds.  As long as they're not hurting anybody, not toxic to my dogs, and not taking over and growing out of control.  Like I said, regular mowing keeps the ones I don't want to have around down, and it does actually proliferate things I do want more of - like the Japanese Stiltgrass (mournful sigh) and the variety of small, native grass-like things that are together finally replacing my nasty-ass Bermuda Grass (planted by the builders in 2004, ugly as hell, terrible at this climate, and yet another plant my dogs and I are allergic to).

The main reason I let most of them alone is that MONOCULTURE IS UNHEALTHY.   A typical "ideal" suburban lawn, a smooth, green, swath of a single type of grass, is a monoculture.  Maintained year by year lawns deplete the soil beneath them of all the nutrients they need to survive, leaving behind the rest to build up and slowly deaden the soil underneath, requiring massive amounts of chemical intervention to keep them going (hint: this is why they rotate crops).  For healthy soil, and healthy plants and grasses, you need a diverse range of plants in any garden scape, be it a lawn or a garden bed.  I'd much rather have a sea of Whatever Will Grow in which every plant is healthy, green, and plush.  A diverse lawn, with its varying water and nutrient needs and its varying root depth, promotes healthy, nutrient-rich, well-aerated soil chock full of beneficial bacteria and insects.   It also holds moisture better, retains soil and prevents erosion, and breakdown of used plant material feeds neighboring plants and trees.

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Monday, May 13, 2013

Uh...whoops.

Hey, guess what!  I quit smoking!  :D

Of course, the downside, is that I'm not going outside regularly, and therefore not keeping a daily watchful eye on the plants in my backyard.  It also doesn't help that after not gardening for two years, I'm no longer in the habit, it seems, of walking the gardens like I used to, inspecting for insect damage, water and fertilzation needs, fruit and flower progress, etc.

So some things have been a little under-watered, and have suffered for it.  My poor Bougainvillea has nearly uprooted itself reaching for the sun - and you'd think I'd have noticed that, since I pass it every single day on the way in and out of the front door, you know?

Anyhow, things are progressing a bit:




The "vegetable garden", looking not as healthy as it could, due to watering issues - although the two tomatoes and the pepper have just BOOMED as far as size goes.




















There's even a tomato!



One!















A few more on the "Juliet" cherry tomato plant.  Like eight or so.














Early on, I dropped something onto the Juliet tomato plant and broke off a branch.  Curious, I planted it oustide the veg garden behind the patio (where I keep all my weeds), and it's actually growing!















And here we have the very wee-est Serrano pepper ever.  It's about the size of my pinky fingernail.















Lastly, a strawberry plant bereft of strawberries - they all dried out and had to be removed from the plant.  Here's hoping it flowers again.

I moved the Bougainvillea from the front, to the back porch here where it'll get more sunlight.  Hopefully this new placement will also prompt me to water it more often.

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