These ARE the prairie mornings I live for. Cool summer mornings after warm summer days equal fog. Fog equals serenity and quiet, protection from searing sun, and slow contemplative moments stolen from hectic days. The sounds of the far off highway are stilled and construction on a nearby house has yet to recommence. Bird still rest, happy to remain grounded rather than fly against the moist and heavy air. I wander happily on mornings like this, isolated from the greater concerns of the world and listening to the smaller joys within, happy to live for a second in the moment. On workdays a relentless clock stays tied to my mind, holding me back from complete release. These foggy starts are even better on weekends, when nothing is waiting or undone that can't be started later.
Mornings such as these, the prairie waits. There is no sense of foreboding in the dense humid air, no haste to act. There is only calm and peace, dew condensing on thirsty grass, upright purple Verbena matching the somber mood of the moment. There is no hurry here, no rush to meet the end of summer. The grasses will change slowly, alerted to Fall by onset of these cool nights, chameleons forming the rusty colors that will be September's prairie. The forbs will form seed and droop to deposit future life into waiting earth. Prairie fauna withdraw, each in their own way, hibernation or migration, death and rebirth, cocoon or burrow.
Ding and Dong, the donkeys, did not violate the calm this morning with greeting brays, but walked over quietly to accept apple slices. They are kind morning companions, solid and steadfast, content amidst the grasses and wind. Dong was sleeping as I approached, stretched out on a bed of matted prairie grass, while Ding kept watch. I wished for a moment that I were Donkey, surrounded by plenty and living in the sunshine and fresh air, no plans, needs met, worries unborn. But the fog lifts, the demanding clock calls, and I cannot be Donkey for more than a moment, a fine stolen moment of ease.
Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
Tuesday, August 5, 2014
Sunday, August 3, 2014
Slithering Surprise
"Take out the garbage." "Water the hydrangea." "Refill the bird feeders." My mind was busy running down a list of things to get done as I walked out the garage door and down the steps at sunrise. As I turned back around to fill the pail with birdseed, I noticed that I had walked right by this little guy, who was waiting in ambush just inside the door for his morning rodent.
I'm proud to say that my self-restraint at sudden snake appearances has evidently reached a new level of control. This time, for perhaps the first time, I did not spontaneously levitate, shout, or run. I merely said "Hi, little guy," took the iPhone photograph above, and walked back past him to get the good camera.
Seeing that Mrs. ProfessorRoush was awake and taking care of Bella, I told her to come out the garage door to see something "neat." She followed me back outside, took one quick glance, and pivoted back inside so fast she left a scorch mark on the concrete, all while fixing me with a cold stare over her shoulder and telling me never to do that again. It was an impressive bit of ballet. Lesson learned; Mrs. ProfessorRoush requires morning coffee before she is ready to deal with snakes.
I took another few pictures, ignored the snake's impertinent and rude tongue gestures, and then gently swept this cute little Common Garter Snake (Thamnophis sirtalis) off the edge of the driveway into the lilacs. I hope he's learned his lesson and catches his rodents outside in the rocks in the future, saving me from further marital discord or spousal displeasure.
I'm proud to say that my self-restraint at sudden snake appearances has evidently reached a new level of control. This time, for perhaps the first time, I did not spontaneously levitate, shout, or run. I merely said "Hi, little guy," took the iPhone photograph above, and walked back past him to get the good camera.
Seeing that Mrs. ProfessorRoush was awake and taking care of Bella, I told her to come out the garage door to see something "neat." She followed me back outside, took one quick glance, and pivoted back inside so fast she left a scorch mark on the concrete, all while fixing me with a cold stare over her shoulder and telling me never to do that again. It was an impressive bit of ballet. Lesson learned; Mrs. ProfessorRoush requires morning coffee before she is ready to deal with snakes.
I took another few pictures, ignored the snake's impertinent and rude tongue gestures, and then gently swept this cute little Common Garter Snake (Thamnophis sirtalis) off the edge of the driveway into the lilacs. I hope he's learned his lesson and catches his rodents outside in the rocks in the future, saving me from further marital discord or spousal displeasure.
Friday, August 1, 2014
Pretty Prairie Lass
One of last year's additions to my garden was this pretty pink-toned shrub rose named 'Prairie Lass'. I have two bushes of this rarely grown Griffith Buck rose and I've been waiting for them to get tall enough and old enough for me to form some opinion.
'Prairie Lass' is a 1978 introduction that I obtained from Heirloom Roses in 2013. This double (25-30 petals) rose blooms in clusters that open bright pink with darker stipples and then fade to very light pink. Flowers open fully to form a flat to slightly cupped final form and they stay on the bush a long time as they age. 'Prairie Lass' doesn't seem to be a continuous bloomer, but rather reblooms in moderately profuse flushes over the summer. The picture at the left, taken July 27th, is the third full bloom of this summer and it is nearly as full as the first on these two young bushes. There are other times these bushes have been without a single bloom. The individual blooms are small, about 2.5 to 3 inches in diameter here.
I would rate the fragrance of 'Prairie Lass' as slight to moderate. The bush is quite healthy, with no yellowing or leaf drop from fungus now in the fourth month of warm weather. I found 'Prairie Lass' to have few thorns. Internet sources say that it may reach 5 feet tall in time. Unlike many of my roses, there was no dieback at all of 'Prairie Lass' last year in our harsh winter.
So, should you grow 'Prairie Lass'? It seems to be a nice rose and bush and is healthy enough to keep a place for it in a collection of Buck roses. But I don't think it is a rose that will ever make a garden visitor gasp in surprise. Nor will anyone likely become ecstatic over the fragrance or the individual blooms of this rose. In the end, my recommendation would be to seek it out if you're a Buck rose nut (like me), but otherwise don't put extra time into a search for this rose. And, as Mrs. ProfessorRoush would point out, it is just one more pink rose among thousands.
'Prairie Lass' is a 1978 introduction that I obtained from Heirloom Roses in 2013. This double (25-30 petals) rose blooms in clusters that open bright pink with darker stipples and then fade to very light pink. Flowers open fully to form a flat to slightly cupped final form and they stay on the bush a long time as they age. 'Prairie Lass' doesn't seem to be a continuous bloomer, but rather reblooms in moderately profuse flushes over the summer. The picture at the left, taken July 27th, is the third full bloom of this summer and it is nearly as full as the first on these two young bushes. There are other times these bushes have been without a single bloom. The individual blooms are small, about 2.5 to 3 inches in diameter here.
I would rate the fragrance of 'Prairie Lass' as slight to moderate. The bush is quite healthy, with no yellowing or leaf drop from fungus now in the fourth month of warm weather. I found 'Prairie Lass' to have few thorns. Internet sources say that it may reach 5 feet tall in time. Unlike many of my roses, there was no dieback at all of 'Prairie Lass' last year in our harsh winter.
So, should you grow 'Prairie Lass'? It seems to be a nice rose and bush and is healthy enough to keep a place for it in a collection of Buck roses. But I don't think it is a rose that will ever make a garden visitor gasp in surprise. Nor will anyone likely become ecstatic over the fragrance or the individual blooms of this rose. In the end, my recommendation would be to seek it out if you're a Buck rose nut (like me), but otherwise don't put extra time into a search for this rose. And, as Mrs. ProfessorRoush would point out, it is just one more pink rose among thousands.
Wednesday, July 30, 2014
The Earth Laughs in...Milkweeds?
Almost every gardener has surely read or heard the famous quote of Ralph Waldo Emerson, "Earth laughs in flowers," lifted from his 1847 poem Hamatreya. Most of us equate this line with a calm and loving Mother Earth, gently expressing her warmth and love. Within the context of the poem, however, the Earth is laughing at the silliness of man, who believes he is master and owner of the Earth, but who will nonetheless end up beneath the earth, pushing up daisies. Whatever his good qualities were, Emerson was also a cynical old fart.
The tallgrass prairie laughs at me, I suppose, also in flowers, but they are the flowers of milkweeds. This area of my pasture (see, there I go, believing I'm the owner instead of a temporary part of the scenery) is the area we used in construction of the barn, first to pile all the dirt from the excavation, and later scraped clean again as the dirt was used to fill in around the foundation. Somewhere, deep in the soil of the prairie, an infinite number of milkweed seeds must be waiting, biding time until the stubborn grasses give ground.
This milkweed is Common Milkweed, Asclepias syriaca, a member of the Dogbane family and poisonous and inedible as forage. I've always viewed it as a two-foot-tall weed in my pasture, tolerated by me because of its usefulness to monarch butterflies, but it does have some other positives. A couple of years back I found it was growing in the K-State Native Plant Garden and didn't recognize the magnificent five foot tall, very fragrant plants. I was embarrassed when the director told me what it was. Seriously, a mass of Common Milkweed has the same affect as an Oriental lily on the air in its vicinity, but the milkweed fragrance is far sweeter and somehow less smothering. I've also learned to my surprise that Asclepias syriaca is a perennial. If I'm going to be laughed at anyway, I need to allow a few of them to grow in MY garden. I might as well make them feel welcome if they're going to be lurking around anyway.
I hope Ralph Waldo Emerson (why do we always use his middle name...how many other famous Ralph Emerson's are there anyway?) doesn't mind me calling the garden, "MY garden." I may be borrowing the soil and sunlight and rainfall and the air, but I maintain nonetheless that the garden is mine. I arranged it, I defend it against all marauders floral or faunal, and when I go beneath it, it will soon also cease to exist. For a while, I suppose, to become a milkweed patch, but eventually the milkweed will lose too. This is the prairie, and on the prairie, the grasses always win.
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