Our "20 Year Project". We're looking forward to building our brand new garden, year by year, from almost scratch. Apart from a few very small trees, our newly acquired tract is currently only a bare stretch of grass. So starting July 23rd, 2007 when we take possession it's "on with the show" ..... and please come back often and watch us grow!
Saturday, May 31, 2008
The Latest Haul ... Rocks, Rocks and More Rocks ... In Fact, An Infinite Number of Rocks
For anyone wishing to build an English rock garden, I guess my job is one of the best to have.
All day long I am in and out of construction sites all over Ontario's Golden Horseshoe. And with construction sites comes digging; and with digging: rocks!
Every day I pick up a rock or two or three, throw them on my truck's drop bed, then hide them in our firm's yard here and there, until I have a chance to go around with the van and haul them home.
Above are the rocks I have scooped from many sites over the last couple of weeks.
A few are from under the Queen Elizabeth Way, from the new football stadium at McMaster University, from a quarry on Hamilton Mountain and even one from Ralph Bennett's block where new homes are going up.
This week my game was up! Knowing I am building a rock garden, our shipper asked me if I was the one hiding the rocks all over the yard. I thought no one had noticed!
Well, I better go out and build more retaining walls on the berm today ....
Sunday, May 25, 2008
Bed of Pink
Just planted tonight in the foreground is today's find, a Rose of Sharon plant. We have zero clue what colour it will be.
We were travelling on a side road in the Niagara today when we spotted a few dozen of them at the end of a driveway with a sign advertising them for five dollars. No one was around, but taped to the stand was a plastic margarine container with a sign, "Place your money in here".
So we did and now she's "home"!
We were travelling on a side road in the Niagara today when we spotted a few dozen of them at the end of a driveway with a sign advertising them for five dollars. No one was around, but taped to the stand was a plastic margarine container with a sign, "Place your money in here".
So we did and now she's "home"!
Another Project for Another Day
Our resident Queen Kijiji found this flag pole at an extraordinary good price, so back it came this morning tethered to the roof of our trusty old van.
Now the tough choice: being highly visible from the Queen Elizabeth Way with its millions of annual passersby, do we display the Canadian flag or the Canadien flag?
Now the tough choice: being highly visible from the Queen Elizabeth Way with its millions of annual passersby, do we display the Canadian flag or the Canadien flag?
Our Latest Garden Decoration ~ A Beacon in the Garden!
Scruff in the Perennial Garden
... and then there's Ruffy ....
Saturday, May 24, 2008
Our Rhodies are Blooming!
The Pulsatilla Flowers are Going to Seed
Our Chaenomeles Japonica Still in Bloom!
Another Wonderful Inheritance at its Best!
Monday, May 19, 2008
It's a "Chaenomeles Japonica"
One of the small bushes we inherited with the house was terribly neglected and almost dead when we moved in. It was at the top of the hill, against the back wall, high above the water table. When we arrived it was begging for water. Most of its branches had dried up and withered.
We pruned it right back and by the end of last summer were awarded with new shoots.
Look what happened this spring!
On May 10 I went up the hill and found it was thanking us with these beautiful flowers. I took this picture in the hopes we would soon identify it.
Today Mar found it in a new garden book we had purchased.
We pruned it right back and by the end of last summer were awarded with new shoots.
Look what happened this spring!
On May 10 I went up the hill and found it was thanking us with these beautiful flowers. I took this picture in the hopes we would soon identify it.
Today Mar found it in a new garden book we had purchased.
Our Ever-Growing Collection of Garden Decorations
It's becoming more and more fun to walk through our garden paths and visit all of our new friends and toys. (Yup, I'm losing it!)
This was the funniest. When I got home on my birthday, Mar asked if I had put a new gnome in the garden. Nope.
We tried to figure out who it might have been; perhaps Don & Gloria, or maybe Cindy.
But it was too coincidental, being my birthday.
Suddenly it dawned on me ... being something I WOULD DO, it must have been my own kids. Sure enough, when they walked in the door for supper they had undeniable smirks on their faces. Michael and Ali had planted the little guy during the day when everyone had been out.
Mar, (or Ms. Queen Kijiji in these parts), found this on the site yesterday, for sale in Ancaster. It is ceramic and its hands form a feeding tray for bird seed.
Up it went this morning and it looks like it has been there forever.
Don and Gloria presented this beautiful metal garden ornament to me when they were over for a barbeque last year.
Since then, it has graced the hearth next to the fireplace, but today the time had come for its rightful place in the garden. I found the perfect location where no one can miss it!
Me be the Garden King!!!!
(Even if I don't know the names of most plants!)
And let's not forget our litle boy and girl, all cleaned and painted.
They have a perfect place leading into what will become our Little Pine Forest .... a bunch of mugo pines planted, and to be planted, to grace both sides of that stretch of winding garden path. (Hey, some of the garden has to be maintenance free!!!!!)
This was the funniest. When I got home on my birthday, Mar asked if I had put a new gnome in the garden. Nope.
We tried to figure out who it might have been; perhaps Don & Gloria, or maybe Cindy.
But it was too coincidental, being my birthday.
Suddenly it dawned on me ... being something I WOULD DO, it must have been my own kids. Sure enough, when they walked in the door for supper they had undeniable smirks on their faces. Michael and Ali had planted the little guy during the day when everyone had been out.
Mar, (or Ms. Queen Kijiji in these parts), found this on the site yesterday, for sale in Ancaster. It is ceramic and its hands form a feeding tray for bird seed.
Up it went this morning and it looks like it has been there forever.
Don and Gloria presented this beautiful metal garden ornament to me when they were over for a barbeque last year.
Since then, it has graced the hearth next to the fireplace, but today the time had come for its rightful place in the garden. I found the perfect location where no one can miss it!
Me be the Garden King!!!!
(Even if I don't know the names of most plants!)
And let's not forget our litle boy and girl, all cleaned and painted.
They have a perfect place leading into what will become our Little Pine Forest .... a bunch of mugo pines planted, and to be planted, to grace both sides of that stretch of winding garden path. (Hey, some of the garden has to be maintenance free!!!!!)
Our New Fern Garden
I've always felt a garden with an area sporting ferns looks regal. (Notwithstanding my love for steamed fiddleheads, butter and pepper ...)
Last year we bought some perennials from Melinda in St. Kitts and the ferns she threw in for free looked so scraggly I didn't give them much of a chance for survival.
We potted the fronds in some rich, dark potting soil and put them in a corner against the back wall, forgetting about them until this week.
Lo and behold! I was walking by them and up they were sprouting!
So today another area of garden was sectioned off with rocks, the fronds were planted, the new little garden was filled with red bark multch to help keep the soil moist, and we'll soon see what we have along the side fence.
Wondering how they reproduce, I went surfing. This is what I found:
1. A sporophyte (diploid) phase produces haploid spores by meiosis;
2. A spore grows by cell division into a gametophyte, which typically consists of a photosynthetic prothallus
3. The gametophyte produces gametes (often both sperm and eggs on the same prothallus) by mitosis
4. A mobile, flagellate sperm fertilizes an egg that remains attached to the prothallus
5. The fertilized egg is now a diploid zygote and grows by mitosis into a sporophyte (the typical "fern" plant).
I have ZERO clue what that means, but if my ferns spread, I will know they are having sex and those five points are happening in our garden!
(Hmmm ... I wonder if these are the fiddlehead variety?)
Our Home now has Protection, Peace, Calmness and Spirituality!
It seems everywhere Mar and I travelled throughout Cape Cod on our recent honeymoon, we saw stars decorating homes and or garages.
Everytime I saw one it gave me an inner feeling of peace and well-being, and felt that displaying those stars was "the right thing to do".
The more I saw, the more inquisitive I became, but no one could give me an answer why so many were displayed on homes in every town.
How many are displayed on the Cape? Who knows, but one day, on the twenty minute or so drive to Sharon's restaurant, from Dennisport to Yarmouthport, we counted fourteen, so there must be thousands or more just on the Cape!
One day at the Christmas Store in Hyannis we found a huge display of them, in all kinds of colours. Ah ha! Asking the saleslady what it was all about brought the most unbelieveable and kind response. She said she knew it had a special meaning, that she had seen it on display at another one of her stores. Asking me to wait a few minutes, she went to the office and had the other store fax her the info!
Here's a retype of what was faxed to me from the other branch store:
-------------------------
On many older American barns, particularly German farms, a large decoration in the shape of a star was mounted on the face of the barn. These were called barn stars. Sometimes they were just aesthetic, but sometimes they represented the trademark of a specific barn builder.
Barn stars go back to at least the 1820s in Pennsylvania and were most popular after the American Civil War. The colors had significance with Amish and Pennsylvania Dutch barn paintings. These folk art designs, many of which were star shaped, were painted directly onto each end of the barn, and date back to the 1850s.
In modern times, barn stars have come to be known as signs of good fortune and luck.
Colors and their meanings
Black:
Protection, also used to blend or bind elements together
Blue:
Protection, peace, calmness and spirituality
Brown:
Mother earth, also can mean friendship and strength
Green:
Growth, fertility, success in things and ideas that grow
Orange:
Abundance in career, projects and matters needing an added push
Red:
Emotions, passion, charisma, lust and also creativity
Violet:
Things that are sacred
White:
Purity, power of the moon, allows energy to flow freely
Yellow:
Health in body and mind, love of man and the sun, connection to the God
----------------------
And so we picked blue and our Cape Cod Barn Star, mounted today on our back wall, will bring us protection, peace, calmness and spirituality! That, plus it adds to the back wall .....
Everytime I saw one it gave me an inner feeling of peace and well-being, and felt that displaying those stars was "the right thing to do".
The more I saw, the more inquisitive I became, but no one could give me an answer why so many were displayed on homes in every town.
How many are displayed on the Cape? Who knows, but one day, on the twenty minute or so drive to Sharon's restaurant, from Dennisport to Yarmouthport, we counted fourteen, so there must be thousands or more just on the Cape!
One day at the Christmas Store in Hyannis we found a huge display of them, in all kinds of colours. Ah ha! Asking the saleslady what it was all about brought the most unbelieveable and kind response. She said she knew it had a special meaning, that she had seen it on display at another one of her stores. Asking me to wait a few minutes, she went to the office and had the other store fax her the info!
Here's a retype of what was faxed to me from the other branch store:
-------------------------
History of Barn Stars
On many older American barns, particularly German farms, a large decoration in the shape of a star was mounted on the face of the barn. These were called barn stars. Sometimes they were just aesthetic, but sometimes they represented the trademark of a specific barn builder.
Barn stars go back to at least the 1820s in Pennsylvania and were most popular after the American Civil War. The colors had significance with Amish and Pennsylvania Dutch barn paintings. These folk art designs, many of which were star shaped, were painted directly onto each end of the barn, and date back to the 1850s.
In modern times, barn stars have come to be known as signs of good fortune and luck.
Colors and their meanings
Black:
Protection, also used to blend or bind elements together
Blue:
Protection, peace, calmness and spirituality
Brown:
Mother earth, also can mean friendship and strength
Green:
Growth, fertility, success in things and ideas that grow
Orange:
Abundance in career, projects and matters needing an added push
Red:
Emotions, passion, charisma, lust and also creativity
Violet:
Things that are sacred
White:
Purity, power of the moon, allows energy to flow freely
Yellow:
Health in body and mind, love of man and the sun, connection to the God
----------------------
And so we picked blue and our Cape Cod Barn Star, mounted today on our back wall, will bring us protection, peace, calmness and spirituality! That, plus it adds to the back wall .....
Sunday, May 11, 2008
Our Nifty Perennial is Identified! Is This Cool or What!
Yesterday we posted a couple of pics of a beautiful perennial we inherited when we bought our home last year. It is flowering profusely this week.
We had no clue what it was and asked if anyone knew.....
This morning we received this wonderful reply in our mailbox from another gardener with her own garden blog.
Neat! Neat! Neat! I wish Gram, (who consistently took blue ribbons at the St. Lambert Horticultural Shows), could see this modern way of sharing gardens. She would be amazed.
Here's the E-mail we received:
------------------------
Hi Marilyn and Mike
I was visiting your blog, via Blotanical, and you were asking the name of a plant. I couldn't find any place to reply to your messages, but wanted to tell you that I think your plant is an anemone or pulsatilla. Have a look at a post on my blog, http://craftygardener.blogspot.com/2007/04/some-blooms-at-last.html and see if you agree.
Linda aka Crafty Gardener
The Gardener Side
Sow Then Grow
------------------------
Thank you so much Linda! Our flowers are definitely a match.
We had no clue what it was and asked if anyone knew.....
This morning we received this wonderful reply in our mailbox from another gardener with her own garden blog.
Neat! Neat! Neat! I wish Gram, (who consistently took blue ribbons at the St. Lambert Horticultural Shows), could see this modern way of sharing gardens. She would be amazed.
Here's the E-mail we received:
------------------------
Hi Marilyn and Mike
I was visiting your blog, via Blotanical, and you were asking the name of a plant. I couldn't find any place to reply to your messages, but wanted to tell you that I think your plant is an anemone or pulsatilla. Have a look at a post on my blog, http://craftygardener.blogspot.com/2007/04/some-blooms-at-last.html and see if you agree.
Linda aka Crafty Gardener
The Gardener Side
Sow Then Grow
------------------------
Thank you so much Linda! Our flowers are definitely a match.
Saturday, May 10, 2008
Our Azalea Needs Help!
Our azalea has flowered in its first year, but I think it needs help ... the soil is probably the wrong ph. ... so went to Canadian Tire for azalea and rhodie food today ... there's a new "to do " added to the gardening list!
But! How's THIS for an azalea!!!!:
This is Mar standing beside an azalea we saw in Cape Cod two weeks ago, while on our honeymoon.
But! How's THIS for an azalea!!!!:
This is Mar standing beside an azalea we saw in Cape Cod two weeks ago, while on our honeymoon.
Does Anyone Recognize this Flower?
The Tulips are Up! The Tulips are Up!
Our Cherry Tree is So Beautiful in Full Bloom This Week it Can't Stop You from Smiling Inside!
Wow! It's May 10th Already .... Time to Get Gardening Again!
Mar and I returned from our Cape Cod honeymoon last Monday, so the poor garden had not even been raked and cleaned from a very snowy winter.
The cleanup was done piecemeal during the week, so this is the first weekend we've had to start other gardening projects.
Our new little, neglected cement boy and girl garden statue was inherited this week so after a long week back at work it was a nice 'n easy project to look forward to.
We think we'll freshen it up every spring with a coat of a new colour. Canadian Tire had this blue grey begging to be bought on their refused paint table this afternoon. After a wire brush cleaning and a new coat of paint they look new again!
Now where will they sit this year .....
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New Word Coined by Gardening Author
"Hortgasm" - A hortgasm is what a garden fanatic has when sighting a particularly beautiful specimen. ~ James Dodson, Beautiful Madness, Penguin Group, 2007
Great Source for Japanese Maples and Bonsai
Alan Trafford
* Tel (905) 309-1697
* E-mail atrafford@hotmail.com
* Also maintains stall every Sunday at Jordan Market, Jordon, Ontario
* Tel (905) 309-1697
* E-mail atrafford@hotmail.com
* Also maintains stall every Sunday at Jordan Market, Jordon, Ontario
Great Source for Perennials!!!!
Cindy Ripley
6 Nursey Lane (No Kidding!)
Fonthill
905-892-5598
cindyripley@hotmail.com
Best call or E-mail for an appointment
We bought 45 plants for $30 on July 10/07.
That has to be the best price anywhere!
She has them growing in her garden, plus has pictures of all, so great way to choose your own.
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
6 Nursey Lane (No Kidding!)
Fonthill
905-892-5598
cindyripley@hotmail.com
Best call or E-mail for an appointment
We bought 45 plants for $30 on July 10/07.
That has to be the best price anywhere!
She has them growing in her garden, plus has pictures of all, so great way to choose your own.
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
Botanical Gardens
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- A Bumblebee Garden
- An Eclectic Garden
- An Iowa Garden
- Bliss
- Chitweed
- Gardening for Health
- Girl Gone Gardening
- GuppyStorm's Garden
- Kerry's Garden
- Life in the Highlands
- Morning Glories
- Mr. Brown Thumb
- My Grandpa's Garden
- Rhododendron Society of Canada, Niagara Region
- Rosemarie's Garden
- Sweet Home and Garden Chicago
- Takoma Gardener
- The Balcony Garden
- The Gorham Garden
- Through the Hedge
- Top 100 Gardening Sites
Blog Archive
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2008
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▼
May
(22)
- The Latest Haul ... Rocks, Rocks and More Rocks .....
- Bed of Pink
- Just planted tonight in the foreground is today's ...
- Another Project for Another Day
- Our Latest Garden Decoration ~ A Beacon in the Gar...
- Scruff in the Perennial Garden
- ... and then there's Ruffy ....
- Our Rhodies are Blooming!
- The Pulsatilla Flowers are Going to Seed
- Our Chaenomeles Japonica Still in Bloom!
- Another Wonderful Inheritance at its Best!
- It's a "Chaenomeles Japonica"
- Our Ever-Growing Collection of Garden Decorations
- Our New Fern Garden
- Our Home now has Protection, Peace, Calmness and S...
- Our Nifty Perennial is Identified! Is This Cool or...
- Our Azalea Needs Help!
- Does Anyone Recognize this Flower?
- Time for a Second Coat!
- The Tulips are Up! The Tulips are Up!
- Our Cherry Tree is So Beautiful in Full Bloom This...
- Wow! It's May 10th Already .... Time to Get Garden...
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May
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