Flowerbeds in the Morning – Part 1
/I was out early on a morning that started out in the 70s – to do a little work in the front flowerbeds. I got sidetracked by some of the vegetation and did some photography before I got any work done.
There are a few clover plants. I leave them although I am often tempted to eat them. Supposedly they are edible from root to blossom! I’m letting them go to seed and hope that they’ll grow amongst the day lilies again next year.
The wild strawberries have grown better than usual this year. They cover the area near the down spout from the gutter. They’ve even crowded out the mint that used to grow in that space….and the horse nettles are not growing there this year either.
But the best discovery of the morning was that the day lilies are blooming…and the deer have not even nibbled in the area (in previous years we’d be on our second wave of day lily leaves and the bud stalks would be chomped)! I cut two stalks with open flowers and large buds to take inside.
Tomorrow’s post will feature the small critters I discovered….and managed to photograph.
Unique activities for yesterday:
Mowing the yard – finding a baby oak. The grass is growing fast with the combination of warmer temperatures and periodic rain. We waited a day or so since the last rain. The dew was dry by about 9:30 when we started. There is one place that stays wet in our backyard – where the extra water from our neighbor’s sump pump runs down the slope from their yard into ours. The grass is very lush there and – so far – seems to be thriving with the extra moisture and not too damaged by being mowed when it is wet. I noticed an oak seedling and pulled it out so I could photography it rather than mow over it. Part of the root did not come out of the ground, but the acorn did! If I were doing pre-school field trips, this would be an excellent specimen to share with the children.
Overall – my husband and I were mowing/working for about an hour. He did more of the mowing this time and I trimmed low hanging branches from the plum, maple, and tulip poplar. There is still one low branch on our cherry tree that I almost always manage to hit (with my head) and it is too large to cut without endangering the balance of the tree.