before my reflexes could trigger the shutter. Such are the disappointments that come hand-in-hand with these many glorious photos. Maybe next year. Or the year after.
Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
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Sunday, June 27, 2021
2021 Manhattan EMG Garden Tour
ProfessorRoush seems to have slipped comfortably back into his continuing role as the unofficial photographer of the Extension Master Gardener's Manhattan Area Garden tour, albeit with a break during the skipped tour last year due to the pandemic cancellation of the Tour. I won't comment here on the folly of canceling a GARDEN tour in a time when more of the population would have attended then ever, but that's all rain clouds and opportunities missed. Most importantly, I had planned to share in this blog what I thought were the 6 best photos from this year's tour, however, as usual, I'm failing miserably. It's fairly easy, among 609 photos taken in 4 hours today, for me to weed out all the pictures with identifiable people in them since I shouldn't/can't post people without permission. And my best intentions to catch a bee in the act of nefarious nectar collection went awry several times today; it was cloudy for most of the tour and the camera shutter speed just wasn't up to catching them as a still life.It is more difficult than I anticipated to choose the best from the 50 or so daylily pictures and the various vignettes of gnomes and garden ornaments and from the delightful plant arrangements that were everywhere. Ego aside, many of the pictures are quite good, despite the overcast and early start to the day. My goal of posting six photos became a battle to narrow down from 50, and then from 20, until I settled on these 8. Well, on these 9 if you count the last wanna-be. Who, anyway, could resist this bronze heron sculpture at the K-State Gardens in the middle of the created wetlands? Every photo here is unedited, just as I took them. Normally I would have cropped them for the blog, maybe removing some of the blurred green space at the top of the picture of the fancy echinacea at the left, and perhaps reducing their size, but I thought you'd like them in all their vivid detail. Point and click if you want to see them larger. I apologize, in advance, for the multi-megabyte nature of this blog entry, but most these days don't have the limitations we used to have on download speed, do they? I hope not.
before my reflexes could trigger the shutter. Such are the disappointments that come hand-in-hand with these many glorious photos. Maybe next year. Or the year after.
before my reflexes could trigger the shutter. Such are the disappointments that come hand-in-hand with these many glorious photos. Maybe next year. Or the year after.
Thursday, June 24, 2021
Earth's Bounty, Garden's Beauty
ProfessorRoush hasn't blogged, he knows, for quite a while during this busy June, but while the blog may suffer, the garden is never far from my mind. Nearly every morning and evening I'm there, watering or worrying, watching and waiting. Watering the new plants, and sometimes old, as we settle in to a very dry summer. Worrying about that struggling new Rugosa hybrid and watching diligently for the first Japanese Beetles. Waiting for the daylilies to bloom, for the rain to come, and for the heat to break.
It's been hot, friends, hot like late July, far too early now in June to see the ground crack and the forsythia wilt. And a month since significant rain, a drizzle here or there, dried on the cement before I can don my shoes. I water strawberries and tomatoes, petunias and pots on regular rotation, pouring hope onto the soil carried gallon by gallon from the house to the garden. But nothing grows at temperatures over 100ºF. Tomatoes don't bloom, daylilies drop buds, and the roses, oh the roses, pout like the garden prima donnas they are. The garden is static, in summer stasis, waiting on cool September to save it.Still, there is beauty in the garden, and bounty to find. Some plants, like the Prickly Poppy (Argemone polyanthemos) at the right, defy the heat, producing these impossibly delicate blossoms in defiance of the searing sun, the poppies of heaven, set down on earth. Here is the beauty for me to behold, a wild weed given a home for my pleasure and a grocery for the ungainly bumblebees wallowing in the petals. That bumble in the top photo, a plump glutton of industry, is surely going to please his friends, bearing baskets of pollen to feed the hive. The luscious blackberries in the second photo, they're for me, first, and then perhaps Mrs. ProfessorRoush if any of the purple pleasures survive the walk to the house. It's a dicey thing, showing up at the house with stained empty hands, purple mouth, and a smile, one's life spared only by inches and whim. But that the photo of the blackberries makes you want to reach into it and fill your hands, doesn't it? Imagine how good they were out in the garden, fresh off the bramble, warm and juicy, the taste of sunshine in every drupe. Any just jury would stay my execution on the promise of a future handful.
It's been hot, friends, hot like late July, far too early now in June to see the ground crack and the forsythia wilt. And a month since significant rain, a drizzle here or there, dried on the cement before I can don my shoes. I water strawberries and tomatoes, petunias and pots on regular rotation, pouring hope onto the soil carried gallon by gallon from the house to the garden. But nothing grows at temperatures over 100ºF. Tomatoes don't bloom, daylilies drop buds, and the roses, oh the roses, pout like the garden prima donnas they are. The garden is static, in summer stasis, waiting on cool September to save it.Still, there is beauty in the garden, and bounty to find. Some plants, like the Prickly Poppy (Argemone polyanthemos) at the right, defy the heat, producing these impossibly delicate blossoms in defiance of the searing sun, the poppies of heaven, set down on earth. Here is the beauty for me to behold, a wild weed given a home for my pleasure and a grocery for the ungainly bumblebees wallowing in the petals. That bumble in the top photo, a plump glutton of industry, is surely going to please his friends, bearing baskets of pollen to feed the hive. The luscious blackberries in the second photo, they're for me, first, and then perhaps Mrs. ProfessorRoush if any of the purple pleasures survive the walk to the house. It's a dicey thing, showing up at the house with stained empty hands, purple mouth, and a smile, one's life spared only by inches and whim. But that the photo of the blackberries makes you want to reach into it and fill your hands, doesn't it? Imagine how good they were out in the garden, fresh off the bramble, warm and juicy, the taste of sunshine in every drupe. Any just jury would stay my execution on the promise of a future handful.
There is, too, in the garden at many corners, feasts for the soul, saving sights for sun-seared eyes. My gentleman rabbit comes calling, a cheerful lily over a concrete shoulder. Blanc Double de Coubert, jealous of the angelic pristine poppy, attempts a second bloom cycle, not quite as white, but more fragrant and visible against the dark green foliage. Panicled hydrangeas begin to bloom, Russian sage forms a mound of airy blue, and everywhere grasses stretch to the sky.
Sunday, June 13, 2021
Lavender Days and Rabbit Plagues
Yesterday was Garden Day in ProfessorRoush's world; a full hot day in the sun to relish the feel of sweat and sore muscles and honest labor. I cleaned the garage and weeded and watered and mowed and trimmed and mulched and took a break to help a friend load some estate sale dressers and just generally spuddled around from morning to supper. I stayed hydrated and didn't mind the heat at all. And yes, "spuddled" is a word, my new favorite word, an obsolete southwest English word according to Wiktionary, that means "to make a lot of fuss about trivial things, as if they were important." Removing that extra-long holly branch from the path, throwing away old baling strings that I saved for when I needed them (which is never), and combining partial bottles of Grass-B-Gone spray, all of those and more were spuddling at its best. I did take time to admire my short row of lavender however, a 10 foot row of several varieties that thrive in the full sun of a raised limestone-edged bed. They take absolutely no care or thought from me; every winter they stand stiff and brittle, dead from tip to bottom, and then all those dead stems come alive in June and produce luscious light blue flowers with that awesome scent of savory sugar clear through the heat of July. The bees are flocking to the lavender (photo at left) in masses these days, feasting on the tiny bits of pollen clinging to each flower. The iron chicken that stands among them finally looks like it belongs, a hen among a lavender forest.This morning, I was quickly reminded how lucky I am to have a garden at all, a triumph in the face of furry pestilence that seems more prevalent this year. I knew that there were rabbits about, an occasional admiration for the tiny bunny living in the front garden or a glimpse of the far-off larger bunny in the grass near the lower garden, but I had not realized the sheer numbers of the horde that has descended here. Looking out the window at breakfast, I spied this lone brave lagomorph in the freshly cut lawn, but after watching a few moments longer, I realized this bunny wasn't a bachelor, but a trio, all within a few feet. Can you spot them?In the photo at the left, I've blown them up and added arrows to help you find the half-hidden one behind the iris at the bottom and the long ears of the one hidden in the prairie grass above. None of these three are the baby bunny that I know lives in the front. And now I'm wondering what kind of idiot ProfessorRoush is, because it probably is not one, but several baby bunnies in front too. What exactly am I running, a garden or a feeding farm for rodents?Thankfully, the rabbits don't bother the lavender, and, truthfully, I seldom recognize any bunny damage beyond some nibbling on the first few daylily shoots that venture out in Spring. They may be out there plotting to kill off my favorite baby roses, but it's more likely that I benefit from all rabbit manure than they damage something important. I won't begrudge them their short brutal and timid lives, because I know the coyotes and snakes will clean up the garden before winter. It's a simple fact of gardening life; where there is a garden, there are rabbits, and where there are rabbits, there are predators, be them wild or man. Or wild professors.
Sunday, June 6, 2021
Plant Pets and Plant Zoos
'Hope for Humanity' |
People treat plants like pets! Of course! ProfessorRoush treats plants like pets! I nurture them, I feed them, and I water them; I'm thrilled when they grow and perform well and I'm disappointed when they crap in their beds. An epiphany, like so many others, right before my eyes the entire time. Here I am, veterinarian and gardener for a lifetime, and I've never realized that so, so many of my plants are pets. The rose, 'Hope for Humanity', pictured above and at left, blooming so perfectly red and bountiful, is a favorite of my treasured plant pets. So is the 'Blizzard' mockorange below, covered in white and perfuming the garden. And the fringed and crazy 'Pink Spritzer' peony, a wild Klehm creation, seen at the feet of the mockorange and in the closeup at the bottom of this blog. Inside the house, a collection of different Schlumbergera and a few pet orchids make up the indoor garden.
'Blizzard' Mockorange |
'Pink Spritzer' |
Plants as pets. Gardens as menageries. Maybe not so socially-conscious, but satisfying and educational at every turn. That's my style.