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| Dead/dried Forsythia blossoms |
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| A promising display snuffed out |
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| These once were daffodils |
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| These used to be irises |
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| Even the daylilies are in shock |
Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
![]() |
| Dead/dried Forsythia blossoms |
![]() |
| A promising display snuffed out |
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| These once were daffodils |
![]() |
| These used to be irises |
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| Even the daylilies are in shock |
Yesterday, I also did the craziest thing I've done in the garden in ages. While purchasing the straw at a local garden center, I couldn't resist the swan call of these two plants, a Crimson Sweet Watermelon, photo at left, and the Ball 2076 muskmelon pictured below.
Normally, I plant these from seed sometime in June, but they begged me incessantly to take them home. I checked the 10 day forecast, saw no nighttime temperatures below 42ºF, and so decided that this year, if by some miracle they survived, I might be able to beat the local markets for homegrown melons and thus not be too late to gain Mrs. ProfessorRoush's admiration and gratitude. Previously, by the time my seed grown melons are ripe, she has already bought several at the local markets and is sick of them, leaving me dejected and without praise.
Some of the straw went to mulch the garden all around the melons; at least the ground around them will stay nice and moist and cool all summer and I'll be able to avoid weeding among the vines. If I'm lucky, the straw will also make it harder for the rabbits to find these melons.
As I've noted before, frequent noxious exposure has conditioned me to moderate my response to the sight of a snake and I was calm and collected as I spotted the snake and got the clear picture above. As I went in for a closer shot of the head, however, the snake moved with ninja-like reptilian swiftness and I found myself looking at a coiled, ready to strike, four foot long snake from about 2 feet away. Mildly startled, I produced this moderately blurry image from an elevated position of spontaneous levitation. The snake was not moving, but I certainly was. Or perhaps the image is just blurred from my heart rate, which went from 60 to 200 faster than an Indy 500 race car. My primitive brainstem doesn't seem to care that my highly evolved human cerebral cortex knows this snake is nonpoisonous.
ProfessorRoush has a favorite iris. Hand's down, no question about it, a definite favorite. I grow all colors and types of irises. I maintain approximately forty different varieties that still survive my neglectful gardening. I'm partial to the purples like 'Superstition', so deep they are almost black. I fancy the bright sky blue irises such as 'Full Tide'. I love the soft pink refined splendor of 'Beverly Sills'. But it is bicolored and vivacious 'Edith Wolford' that holds my iris heart.
'Edith Wolford' was a 1984 introduction by the late Ben Hager,and she has received all the top American Iris Society awards including the Dykes Medal of Honor (1993), the highest award given. Hager was the owner of Melrose Gardens in California, and he also hybridized the above-mentioned 'Beverly Sills' (1985 Dykes Medal of Honor). 'Edith Wolford' is the perfect contrast of soft yellow standards and gentle blue falls. Her beard is a brighter yellow, a beacon to the insects who would steal her pollen. She even occasionally reblooms. 'Edith Wolford', however, does not always photograph well since cameras tend to make the soft blue falls more purple than they really are. For example, the top picture on this page was taken on my "good" Canon camera, and the picture at the right was taken on my iPhone. Both are a little purple-tinged, although the top picture does more closely capture the quality of the canary-yellow standards.
As an example, I resolved a few years back to limit the annual maintenance of my two mixed daylily and iris beds to the simple technique of mowing them once in the Fall or late Winter. As you can see from the picture at left, the resultant bed has a nice clean look that took about 10 minutes to create at the end of the last growing season. Please go ahead and ignore the variably-sized limestone edging that keeps the prairie fires out of my beds. Doesn't it look like a knowledgeable and dedicated gardener has been hard at work clearing this bed of plant debris? I did not, as recommended in numerous books, take some nice hand scissors out to carefully and individually trim the iris into angled fans, nor did I remove the previous foliage from the daylilies. I simply mowed off both at a height of 3 inches with a mulching, riding lawnmower (gasp!). This resulted in a nice 2-3 inch layer of chopped mulch that matted down nicely and didn't blow to the next county over the winter.
As you can see from the 2nd picture, the result, pictured during early daylily season in the middle of a hot summer, leaves little room for complaint, at least by me. I get two solid seasons of bloom, iris and daylily, out of this bed, plus a little third bloom season due to some daffodils that pop up and cycle before the daylily or iris foliage is evident. Yes, it is not a varied shrub border, but I have those in other places and they bloom in their own time and space. No, I wouldn't do this to a formal rose garden. My daylily and iris beds are intended only for full colorful climax at the height of summer. It is also important to know that I have not yet seen any disease nor detriment to the practice. In fact, the disaster of the late Flint Hills freeze of 2007, which reduced the majority of my irises to soggy and very dead plants, will likely not be repeated as there is not much green growth yet to freeze. KSU's advice in 2007 to "not-cut-back" the irises after the freeze, which I now believe was a mistake, will be moot for me in the future; I don't have any iris foliage at this time of year to freeze.