Hi gardeners
Alliums |
I was outside
at 9 am trying to get all my hoses working so I could water everything I
planted the last few days. It was already miserably hot. We go from one extreme
to the other here, poor plants. I moved most of my houseplants outside over the
weekend too, and some of them needed water already.
So much to do
this time of year. I still have
cucumbers on the deck waiting to be planted. Hopefully I will get to them
tonight after it cools down. It’s sunny,
humid and 92 degrees as I write this. I have health problems that make working
in this heat really hard. I managed to get most things planted but there are
weeds everywhere, grass to be mowed and trimmed, bird feeders to be filled and
so much more to get done. May is always like this. I can’t wait to get to the
sitting on the deck part of summer.
Things are
really popping now. The lilacs are starting to bloom. They smell so good. The
magnolia, redbud, flowering quince and apple trees are in bloom. Sweet woodruff, alliums, mayapple and
camassia are blooming. Violets and star of Bethlehem are popping up in the
grass. The heat has done away with the tulips and daffodils. But the heat has greatly improved the growth
of the hosta.
The alliums
are pretty in bloom but by the time they start to bloom the foliage always
looks really bad, yellow and limp. It needs to be pulled out, but time is
scarce. That and the way they spread everywhere makes me not too inclined to
plant any new varieties, even though deer don’t eat them.
I had a
disappointment with a plant shipment this week and I am going to mention names.
I ordered from Springhill Nurseries, and one of the things I ordered was a
large flowered white clematis I wanted to train on the ramp railings. They
substituted a 3 in 1 butterfly bush, without notifying me. (It was 3 tiny
plants in one 2-inch pot, that’s how they get 3 colors in one “planting”). That’s not exactly comparable to a clematis
vine. Another type of clematis I could
see substituting, but not that.
And I ordered
early, when things were in stock, yet by the time they got to shipping for my
area evidently stock was gone. That’s happened
to me before with this and other companies, and I think companies should review
that process. People who order early should have what they order reserved until
it can be shipped to them instead of filling later orders first because their
shipping dates are earlier. Ok rant done.
Myths about watering plants outside
Gardeners
often wonder what time of day is best to water their gardens. The short answer
is when you have time to water them. Most plants don’t care when they are
watered as long as you get them water before they wilt. Morning, midday, or
evening can all be used to water plants.
If you worry
about watering plants midday when the sun is shining, because you were told it
burns the leaves of plants, try this experiment. Choose an established plant in
full sun. Water it, making sure you get water on the leaves. Come back in 24
hours and see if it looks burned. It won’t.
Plain water won’t burn leaves in the sun, just as it won’t burn your
skin when you get splashed standing in the sun.
Think about
it. How many times have you seen the sun come out right after a summer storm?
How many times have you seen dew on plants as the sun rises? Water droplets do
not burn leaves. When its very hot and dry a midday watering may cool plants
beneficially. Some plants in pots and small raised beds may actually need
midday watering in hot weather if you don’t want to kill them.
Now if you
were spraying soaps, oils, alcohols, fertilizers or pesticides with the water
you might have a problem. Some of these
might burn plants when applied in the sun. Read label directions. Or don’t apply
anything but plain water in the sun if the foliage will get wet.
It is wise to
water early enough in the evening that plants dry off before it gets dark. This
prevents the foliage from remaining wet all night, which can promote fungal
disease. Watering after dark, unless it’s drip irrigation, is probably not the
best idea either.
Drip
irrigation, or watering at the base of plants is good, but for most plants
overhead watering is also good. That’s how nature waters plants after all. The
leaves of many plants are designed to funnel water down to the plant’s base. Watering
at the plant base does conserve water better if that is a concern. For plants
like tomatoes and some other plants prone to fungal problems keeping water off
the foliage may help prevent those diseases, although it’s no guarantee.
If you have a
pot or container that’s very full of foliage, be aware that the foliage may
shed water over the side of the pot/container, rather than wetting the soil. This
can happen in a natural rain or overhead watering. These containers must be
watered at the base of plants- making sure water gets into the soil.
So – how often
should you water? Different species of
plants have different water needs. Look up your species and make decisions on
that. Weather plays a crucial role here too. If you get an inch of rain a week
most established plants in the ground probably won’t need watering. But check them often in dry weather.
Containers
need more watering than plants in the ground. That could be more than once a
day in some cases. If a plant is wilting and the soil feels dry, water it as
soon as possible. Be aware that in very hot weather some plants may wilt even
if the soil is moist. They just can’t take up enough water. They generally
recover overnight.
Remember
plants will also wilt if they are too wet and the roots rot. Containers must have good drainage, no
exceptions. Gardens should not be situated in flood prone or wet, poorly
drained areas unless plants are chosen that prefer those conditions.
Immediately
after transplanting plants need to be watered more frequently, even trees and
shrubs or drought tolerant perennials.
In hot, dry, windy weather check newly planted plants daily and water if
they look droopy and the soil feels dry.
You might
need more water in the long range if you water in the morning, because some of
that water is going to evaporate. But morning watering, evening/late afternoon
and midday watering are all fine for plants.
It’s a personal opinion, and most gardeners seem to choose a “side” and then
vigorously defend it. Water when you prefer to do so.
Plants for Butterfly Gardens
Butterfly on tithonia |
Plants that
attract butterflies are very popular right now. Gardeners generally love
butterflies (except for the few who actually damage our garden plants) and want
to attract more butterflies to the garden. There are some interesting and
beautiful moths that are also fun to watch. When you want to attract
butterflies, you need to provide both plants they sip nectar from, and plants
they lay their eggs on, called host plants.
You don’t
have to plant only native plants to attract butterflies and moths. While there are a few specialist butterflies
who only prefer one “host” plant (the plant they lay eggs on) many butterflies
accept several host plants and most visit a number of plants for nectar. Some
of our butterflies are themselves introduced species so they are flexible in
food and egg laying resources. When glancing through any butterfly and moth
identification guide, you’ll often notice that many of the plants that they
prefer to get nectar from or lay eggs on are non-native weeds or garden
flowers.
Many
butterflies prefer flowers that have flat surfaces, or that have short nectar
tubes although a few butterflies and moths are drawn to flowers with long
tubes. Butterflies and moths seem drawn to colorful, bright flowers like
yellow, orange, red and pink. Some also like purple or blue flowers. Night
flying moths prefer white flowers. Butterflies seem to prefer flowers in the
sun, although they sometimes visit shade flowers.
When you want
to attract butterflies and moths to your garden you should provide colorful
nectar flowers in large patches of the same color, rather than as individual
dots of color here and there. Host plants for caterpillars should also be in
patches. One large buddleia can provide
a good patch of color but for maximum attraction you’d want to plant a lot of
marigolds.
Scent in
flowers is not as important to butterflies as it is for bees. Some butterflies
and moths don’t eat at all as adults, some only sip at mineral enriched mud,
some prefer rotten fruit or sap, and some are even carnivorous. And even in
this advanced scientific world we don’t know what nectar plants and host plants
that some of the rarer species of butterflies and moths prefer.
A patch of
mud, especially with a little manure mixed in, and some soft fruit like a mushy
banana, a slice of melon, soft strawberries on a plate somewhere can increase
the number of species attracted to your garden.
But beware soft fruit can attract bees and hornets as well as flies.
Butterfly
feeders also exist in which you place sugar water like a hummingbird feeder,
but they are not that effective in attracting butterflies and will attract a
lot of bees, hornets and ants too. It’s probably best to stay natural and use
plants to attract butterflies.
If you wish
to attract butterflies and moths, you’ll have to decide if you are willing to
tolerate some plants that are considered weeds and that may not be very
attractive to the human eye. You can choose only pretty garden flowers but that
will limit what species are attracted. One idea is to let one area of your
property grow the weedy plants, maybe one that can be hidden a bit, and keep
the prettier plants in the garden.
There are
some plants that will attract the maximum number of harmless butterflies and
moths in a list below. Some may be both nectar sources for adult butterflies
and moths and host plants for caterpillars.
A good identification guide will often tell you if a rare species of
butterfly or moth has been seen in your county and what host and nectar plants
it prefers. You may be able to add these plants to your garden also.
Plants such
as cabbage, that might attract butterflies or moths, but those butterflies or
moths would be unwelcome, aren’t mentioned. No garden can probably add all
these plants but try to add as many of the listed plants to your garden as
possible. Remember patches of the same plant are better than singles. The
plants on the list below are mainly northeastern and midwestern plants, but
many are good for other places as well. They are not all native plants.
Butterfly nectar and host plants
Anise hyssop
Asters,
native species and cultivars
Baby’s breath
Baptisia
Bee balm-
monarda, all kinds- bergamot
Bearberry
Beech
Beggars
Ticks- bidens- any kind
Black eyed
Susans, rudbeckia species
Blackberries
Blueberries
Black cherry,
choke cherries
Black locust
Bog rosemary
(Andromeda glacophylla)
Boneset
Buddleia-
butterfly bush
Burdock
Buttonbush- Cephalanthus
occidentalis
Calibrachoa
(Million bells)
Campion
Catnip
Ceanothus sanquineus (wild lilac)
Cheese mallow
Clovers of
all kinds- gardeners may want some of the ornamental crimson/reds
Columbine,
all kinds
Crown vetch
Currants
Daisies of
any kind, wild and domestic
Dame’s rocket
Dandelions
Dill
Dogbane
Fireweed
Fleabane
Grasses-
native and non-native, bluestem, bentgrass, Bermuda, beardgrass, lovegrass,
panic grass and others – caution- many butterflies, skippers and moths that
favor grasses are pretty but are considered pest species.
Goldenrod
Gooseberry
Hawkweed,
orange and yellow
Hollyhocks
Honey locust
Honeysuckle,
native and non-native
Hops
Iris
versicolor
Ironweed
Joe Pye Weed
Knapweed
Knotweed-
small species of Persicaria or Polygonum not Japanese Knotweed,
which does attract butterflies but is banned in many areas.
Labrador Tea
Lambsquarters
Lantana
Leadplant
Lobelia
Lupines
Pearly
everlasting
Phlox, both
native species and domesticated cultivars
Pigweed
Butterfly on calibrachoa |
Plantain
Mapleleaf
viburnum
May apple
Milkweed-
Butterfly weed- Asclepias species
Mints of any
type
Mustard/rape,
Brassica kaber
Nettles
(Urtica species)
New Jersey
tea
Oaks – native
species
Oregano
Passionflower
Paw Paw
Prickly Pear
cactus
Privet
Purple
loosestrife (yes, many butterflies like it)
Purslane
Queen Anne’s
Lace
Redbud
Rockcress
Sassafras
Self-heal
Senna
(cassia)
Sheep sorrel
(Rumex)
Shrubby
cinguefoil (Potentilla) all kinds
Spicebush
Staghorn
sumac, other sumacs
St. John’s
wort
Strawberries,
all kinds
Sunflowers,
all kinds
Teasel
Tickseed
Tithonia
Toadflax
Thistles,
bull, Russian, all kinds
Vervain
Vetches, all
kinds
Violets, all
kinds
Wild plum,
Prunus americana
Willows
White pine
Wisteria,
native or Chinese
Yarrow- all
types
Zinnias
This is not a
complete list of all the plants that butterflies utilize. Many tropical plants put outside in summer
also attract them and many other annuals and perennial flowers get at least
some attention from them. A colorful
garden with a variety of species and letting the garden edges go a little wild
will do wonders to attract butterflies and moths.
Let’s Give Dame’s Rocket Permanent Legal
Status
It’s
late spring and the beautiful spicy sweet scent of dame’s rocket is wafting
through the evening air. It’s pretty purple, pink and white flowers are covered
with bees and butterflies. But I know on some webpage somewhere people are
being called to action against the lovely dame’s rocket. “It’s a noxious invasive plant” they holler,
“we must pull it all up- join us for a workday pulling this invasive plant!”
How
ridiculous this is. Dame’s rocket, Hesperis
matronalis, has been on this continent almost as long as European people
and as long as dandelions, stinging nettles, apples, earthworms and
honeybees. It was a cottage garden
flower that also served as an early source of spring greens and it was as
carefully planted here by early European settlers as roses, apples and
cabbages. This is one immigrant that fully deserves permanent legal status.
Stinging
nettles, Urtica dioica,
are ugly, and cause a painful rash to someone who accidently brushes against
them or tries to pull them. Their pollen is extremely allergenic. They get 6
feet tall and spread rampantly. They are considered to have medicinal properties
and that’s why they were carried over here by European settlers, just like dame’s
rocket. But unlike dame’s rocket no one seems to be on a mission to find and
destroy stinging nettles, except me. I destroy them every chance I get.
Dame’s
rocket looks rather like phlox, both the native woodland phlox and the phlox of
cultivated gardens. It is in the mustard family however and has 4 flower petals
instead of five like phlox. Its leaves are arranged alternately on the stem
rather than opposite each other as in phlox.
Dame’s
rocket is considered to be either a short-lived perennial or biannual plant. It
spreads by seed, which is produced in long narrow pea pod like structures. Dame’s
rocket is found in most of the Eastern half of the country, southeast Canada
and a few places further west.
Yes,
dame’s rocket escaped early gardens and popped up in unexpected places. You’ll
see the tall clusters of beautiful fragrant flowers in shades of lavender, pink
and white blooming along roadsides and ditch banks in late spring. Many a
gardener has stopped and collected some for their own garden. They bring beauty
to otherwise dull and disturbed areas.
If
you want to keep dame’s rocket in your garden, you’ll need to let plants go to
seed, then watch for and protect the young plants that pop up in late summer. These
are the plants that will flower next spring. The plants that flowered this year
will die. In my garden dames rocket moves around a bit, depending on where the
seeds fall. I do not find it invasive at all, it has never taken over the
garden.
Dame’s
rocket is loved by bees and butterflies. The larvae of many native butterflies
and moths have adapted to eating it and it is considered a good host plant for
several species. In Europe it is still a garden plant, and double flowered
varieties and other strains exist. So why is there such an animosity against it
by some in the “native only” crowd?
Dame’s
rocket isn’t poisonous, nor does it cause an awful stinging rash if you touch
it. It doesn’t spread disease or damage agricultural crops. Its only crime is
to occupy space that some misguided people feel should be occupied by other
plants, native plants. And here’s the funny thing about that. The places you
see dame’s rocket growing are not natural, undisturbed environments. They are
generally found in places already changed drastically by man and aren’t
crowding out native plants.
In
many disturbed areas native plants would struggle to grow and if dame’s rocket
wasn’t there some other more unpleasant invader might be. Apple trees also pop
up, sometimes along nature trails, busy freeways and parking lot and retention
pond edges. They occupy space that could be occupied by native trees. But have
you ever seen a campaign to eradicate these alien invasive plants?
I
love dames rocket and do what I can to keep it blooming here on my property. I
don’t judge plants by their country of origin, just by their beauty and
usefulness. I think the perfume industry
should look into turning the fragrance of dame’s rocket into a new scent, “eau
de alien” maybe. And for those who like spring greens try growing dames rocket
in the vegetable garden.
When someone urges you to take action
against dame’s rocket, simply because it’s occupying space they feel belongs to
some other plant, tell them to stop interfering with nature. Nature knows how
to heal damaged environments and provide for creatures in the web of life. Tell
them to go pull dandelions and stinging nettle and cut down wild apple trees
instead.
Skillet fried asparagus
Asparagus is
available in local farmers markets in May up to late June. It’s also easy to grow this vegetable in home
gardens. But asparagus is a little
tricky to cook. If you enjoy this spring
treat here’s a recipe to try.
Some
asparagus needs to be peeled before cooking.
If the stems are larger in diameter than a pencil they are probably a
bit tough and need to be peeled. To peel, simply slice off a thin layer of
outer skin with a paring knife up to the start of the tip area.
Ingredients
2 pounds of asparagus stalks
8 tablespoons butter
3 tablespoons soy sauce
1 tablespoon lemon juice
salt and pepper to taste
Peel asparagus and slice very thinly,
diagonal slices work best; slices should not be more than a 1/4 inch
thick. Par-boil slices by putting them
in a colander and dipping them into boiling water for 1 minute. Drain well and
pat dry with paper towels.
Heat butter in a frying pan with soy
sauce and lemon juice. When the butter is bubbling add the asparagus slices. Stir
and toss until they are crisp and the butter lightly browned. Will serve 4-6.
Some people look for a beautiful place.
Others make a place beautiful.
- Hazrat Inayat Khan
Kim Willis
All parts of this blog are copyrighted and may not be used without
permission.
And So On….
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