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#1
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Keeping a Messy Garden
I have a friend who hacks her roses down to stumps every year. I just
cut off what looks diseased. I have blooms now and she doesn't even have buds. She spends hours scraping stuff out from under her shrubs, and cutting out parts of them that she "doesn't like the looks of.". I stuff leftover oak leaves and other yard garbage under all of them and never look back. They get lots of water and some food, and always look great. She calls an exterminator over any insects that show up in any numbers anywhere in her yard. I spray my roses with systemic insecticide, but leave everything else alone. If she sees a spider she kills it! I have those huge, bright green orb weavers and all manner of other spiders all over. I hardly remember to get the abandoned "cob webs" out of the corners of the windows and doors. She frets over cats, swears bumblebees are really carpenter bees, tells me the squirrells are ruining her garden, constantly rakes and bags any waste. I feed the cats, and love watching the squirrels and chipmunks. Every other year or so the big oaks at the back of the property drop millions of acorns, and I never pick them up. They rot right there unless the squirrels bury them, then they sprout. I mow the forest twice and that is the end of them most years. But the squirrels have a Fabulous Buffet, and never touch my roses! When the leaves fall, I shove them under shrubs, use them as mulch, anything but taking the time to rake and bag. If all the beds are overflowing, there is an area under the trees where I blow the leaves with the blower. Thrushes are always back there flipping up leaves as they do, looking for bugs. Voles and moles have built cities under there, but I plant my "must haves" in holes lined with scratchy rock, and they eat the roots of the unprotected weeds, not my precious plants. Yesterday I saw a BIG rabbit in the back, eating the abundant weeds in the patch of green that might pass for a lawn--from an airplane! The rabbits have never bothered my roses, gardenias, etc. A former owner planted liriope as a border EVERYWHERE, and I know I should have dug and divided it. But it is unstoppable! The rabbits do eat it, but who could tell? Because of the vole population, we have our very own Neighborhood redtailed hawk who patrols the area and perches in tall trees staring down at the messy yards. There are lots of sloppy gardeners in my neighborhood. Not much is neat, but everything is lush. Flora and fauna. The choice usually goes like this: there is just enough time to water deeply OR pull up weeds and bag them--or there is just enough time to rake and bag leaves OR spray or feed my roses--or "god those weeds look terrible but I just have time to cut some flowers for the table." It is hard to see why I should change my ways. For once, the lazy person is rewarded! |
#3
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Keeping a Messy Garden
I love this thread... I wish the other posters lived by me! My next-door
neighboors seem to be flower-phobic. They have an expanse of green lawn and a wide gravel driveway, which the husband sprays with weed-killer every couple of months. There's one old whisky barrel with a sad little rhody in it and a pot of fuschias on the back deck in the summer...and that's the extent of their plants. And meanwhile, my passiflora is reaching over the fence, racing the honeysuckle to get to the other side first. I try to train the vines back inward, but they do follow the sun, so it always looks like they're threatening the sterile domain next door with creeping, grasping fingers. The crocosmias and glads and daisies and dahlias that I've been encouraging along my side the fence are always poking their little heads through to the neighbors, and I've more than once encouraged them to pick any flowers that visit their side of the fence, but they never have. No worry about any of these spreading into their cement or gravel; they'd get sprayed if a single sprout were to appear. The sad thing is that they have twice the size lot that we do, but it's all given over to lawn and bare wooden deck. But in the summer, we sit on our tiny patch of grass and watch hummingbirds and butterflies at the flowers, and smell the lavender and phlox, and wonder how they can stand to sit on their very clean deck and only smell the waterproofing finish. M. -- B - - - - - - - - - - - - - Melinda Tennielle M10TVC15 (at) yahoo.com |
#4
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Keeping a Messy Garden
My garden is out in a field next to the trailer park I live in, and while I try
to keep the weeds and grass from growing over my Iris and other plants, I let the weeds and grass's and whatevers grow in the rest of the area that gets watered by me. I've even taken some chairs people had put by the dumpster and set them out in the area so I can sit and just relax out there. Yet a guy who moved into a trailer about 1.5 months ago and who I'd sware goes out with a ruler and checks how tall each blade of grass is on the postage stamp size lawn he has, has had the gall to say my garden is a trash heap! BUT, the roses left from the last guy are not blooming and right now I've got a load of Iris blooming, my canna are coming up and will be blooming by July/Aug., my ice plant is covered with flowers. He also griped that my yard is a mess, well it is, I've got bags of steer manure, potting soil, pots with seedlings of canna cosmos, Dahlias, and other plants and all the pots I've collected over the last 5 years and I've got the greenest Elm trees in the park too. So I'll enjoy my flowers in my "Trash heap" of a garden! -- In This Universe The Night was Falling,The Shadows were lenghtening towards an east that would not know another dawn. But elsewhere the Stars were still young and the light of morning lingered: and along the path he once had followed, Man would one day go again. Arthur C. Clarke "The City & The Stars" SIAR www.starlords.org Telescope Buyers FAQ http://home.inreach.com/starlord Bishop's Car Fund http://www.bishopcarfund.Netfirms.com/ Starlord's Personal Page http://starlord-personal.netfirms.com "Shiva" wrote in message s.com... I have a friend who hacks her roses down to stumps every year. I just cut off what looks diseased. I have blooms now and she doesn't even have buds. She spends hours scraping stuff out from under her shrubs, and cutting out parts of them that she "doesn't like the looks of.". I stuff leftover oak leaves and other yard garbage under all of them and never look back. They get lots of water and some food, and always look great. --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.465 / Virus Database: 263 - Release Date: 3/25/03 |
#5
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Keeping a Messy Garden
I fully understand your angst! I collect everyone's bags of raked leaves. We
live in Texas and live oak trees shed their leaves in spring. First come down these hard brown leaves (carbon). A few weeks later, the catkins come down (nitrogen). Free organic matter! My neighbor is still out at 7:39 pm vacuuming his leaves and catkins. He also has plants which are addicted to chemical fertilizers. I adore looking at the garden seeing the remains of everything I cut back and lay onto the ground. I cut larger pieces into 4 inch size pieces and lay them right where I removed them. I garden because I have to. I bleed green. Some people are anal about it. I'm anal that I have to have every plant known to Texas! We all have our ways. On Sat, 19 Apr 2003 15:22:28 GMT, (Shiva) wrote: I have a friend who hacks her roses down to stumps every year. I just cut off what looks diseased. I have blooms now and she doesn't even have buds. She spends hours scraping stuff out from under her shrubs, and cutting out parts of them that she "doesn't like the looks of.". I stuff leftover oak leaves and other yard garbage under all of them and never look back. They get lots of water and some food, and always look great. She calls an exterminator over any insects that show up in any numbers anywhere in her yard. I spray my roses with systemic insecticide, but leave everything else alone. If she sees a spider she kills it! I have those huge, bright green orb weavers and all manner of other spiders all over. I hardly remember to get the abandoned "cob webs" out of the corners of the windows and doors. She frets over cats, swears bumblebees are really carpenter bees, tells me the squirrells are ruining her garden, constantly rakes and bags any waste. I feed the cats, and love watching the squirrels and chipmunks. Every other year or so the big oaks at the back of the property drop millions of acorns, and I never pick them up. They rot right there unless the squirrels bury them, then they sprout. I mow the forest twice and that is the end of them most years. But the squirrels have a Fabulous Buffet, and never touch my roses! When the leaves fall, I shove them under shrubs, use them as mulch, anything but taking the time to rake and bag. If all the beds are overflowing, there is an area under the trees where I blow the leaves with the blower. Thrushes are always back there flipping up leaves as they do, looking for bugs. Voles and moles have built cities under there, but I plant my "must haves" in holes lined with scratchy rock, and they eat the roots of the unprotected weeds, not my precious plants. Yesterday I saw a BIG rabbit in the back, eating the abundant weeds in the patch of green that might pass for a lawn--from an airplane! The rabbits have never bothered my roses, gardenias, etc. A former owner planted liriope as a border EVERYWHERE, and I know I should have dug and divided it. But it is unstoppable! The rabbits do eat it, but who could tell? Because of the vole population, we have our very own Neighborhood redtailed hawk who patrols the area and perches in tall trees staring down at the messy yards. There are lots of sloppy gardeners in my neighborhood. Not much is neat, but everything is lush. Flora and fauna. The choice usually goes like this: there is just enough time to water deeply OR pull up weeds and bag them--or there is just enough time to rake and bag leaves OR spray or feed my roses--or "god those weeds look terrible but I just have time to cut some flowers for the table." It is hard to see why I should change my ways. For once, the lazy person is rewarded! |
#6
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Keeping a Messy Garden
Shiva,
Yours sounds like a wonderful garden! There are much better ways of spending ones time than pulling every weed and spraying every bug. Some of the other comments reminded me of a peice I read some time ago: God's View on Lawns Imagine the conversation the Creator might have with St. Francis on the subject of lawns. GOD: Frank, you know all about gardens and nature, what in the world is going on down there in the U.S.? What in the world happened to the dandelions, violets, thistles and the stuff I started eons ago. I had a perfect no maintenance garden plan. Those plants grow in any type of soil, withstand drought and multiply with abandon. The nectar from the long lasting blossoms attracts butterflies, honey bees and flocks of songbirds. I expected to see a vast garden of color by now. All I see are patches of green. ST. FRANCIS: It's the tribes that settled there, Lord. They are called the Suburbanites. They started calling your flowers "weeds" and went to great lengths to kill them and replace them with grass. GOD: Grass? But it is so boring, it's not colorful. It doesn't attract butterflies, bees or birds, only grubs and sod worms. It's temperamental with temperatures. Do these Suburbanites really want grass growing there? ST. FRANCIS: Apparently so, Lord. They go to great pains to grow it and keep it green. They begin each spring by fertilizing it and poisoning any other plant that crops up in the lawn. GOD: The spring rains and the warm weather probably makes the grass grow really fast. That must make the Suburbanites very happy. ST. FRANCIS: Apparently not, Lord. As soon as it has grown a little, they cut it---sometimes two times a week. GOD: They cut it? Do they bale it like hay? ST. FRANCIS: Not exactly Lord. Most of them rake it up and put it in bags. GOD: They bag it? Why? Is it a cash crop? Do they sell it? ST. FRANCIS: No sir, just the opposite. They pay to throw it away. GOD: Now let me get this straight. They fertilize it to make it grow and when it does grow, they cut it off and pay to throw it away? ST. FRANCIS: Yes, sir. GOD: These Suburbanites must be relieved in the summer when we cut back on the rain and turn up the heat. That surely slows the growth and saves them a lot of work. ST. FRANCIS: You aren't going to believe this Lord. When the grass stops growing so fast, they drag out hoses and pay more money to water it so they can continue to mow it and pay to get rid of it. GOD: What nonsense! At least they kept some of the trees. That was a sheer stroke of genius, if I do say so myself. The trees grow leaves in the spring to provide beauty and shade in summer. In the autumn they fall to the ground and form a natural blanket to keep the moisture in the soil and protect the trees and bushes. Plus as they rot, the leaves are compost to enhance the soil. It's a natural circle of life. ST. FRANCIS: You'd better sit down Lord. As soon as the leaves fall, the Suburbanites rake them into great piles and pay to have them hauled away. GOD: No way!! What do they do to protect the shrubs and tree roots in the winter to keep the soil moist and loose? ST. FRANCIS: After throwing the leaves away they go out and buy something called mulch. They haul it home and spread it around in place of the leaves. GOD: And where to they get this mulch? ST. FRANCIS: They cut down the trees and grind them up to make mulch. GOD: Enough!! I don't want to think about this anymore. St. Catherine, you're in charge of the arts. What movie have you scheduled for us tonight? ST. CATHERINE: Dumb and Dumber Lord. It's a real stupid movie about... GOD: Never mind, I think I just heard the whole story from St. Francis! |
#7
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Keeping a Messy Garden
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#8
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Keeping a Messy Garden
I agree with your philosophy! I always chuckle when I see my neighbor getting a
delivery of expensive mulch to spread under his trees when he just finished raking out all his natural leaf mulch! BT "Shiva" wrote in message s.com... I have a friend who hacks her roses down to stumps every year. I just cut off what looks diseased. I have blooms now and she doesn't even have buds. She spends hours scraping stuff out from under her shrubs, and cutting out parts of them that she "doesn't like the looks of.". I stuff leftover oak leaves and other yard garbage under all of them and never look back. They get lots of water and some food, and always look great. She calls an exterminator over any insects that show up in any numbers anywhere in her yard. I spray my roses with systemic insecticide, but leave everything else alone. If she sees a spider she kills it! I have those huge, bright green orb weavers and all manner of other spiders all over. I hardly remember to get the abandoned "cob webs" out of the corners of the windows and doors. She frets over cats, swears bumblebees are really carpenter bees, tells me the squirrells are ruining her garden, constantly rakes and bags any waste. I feed the cats, and love watching the squirrels and chipmunks. Every other year or so the big oaks at the back of the property drop millions of acorns, and I never pick them up. They rot right there unless the squirrels bury them, then they sprout. I mow the forest twice and that is the end of them most years. But the squirrels have a Fabulous Buffet, and never touch my roses! When the leaves fall, I shove them under shrubs, use them as mulch, anything but taking the time to rake and bag. If all the beds are overflowing, there is an area under the trees where I blow the leaves with the blower. Thrushes are always back there flipping up leaves as they do, looking for bugs. Voles and moles have built cities under there, but I plant my "must haves" in holes lined with scratchy rock, and they eat the roots of the unprotected weeds, not my precious plants. Yesterday I saw a BIG rabbit in the back, eating the abundant weeds in the patch of green that might pass for a lawn--from an airplane! The rabbits have never bothered my roses, gardenias, etc. A former owner planted liriope as a border EVERYWHERE, and I know I should have dug and divided it. But it is unstoppable! The rabbits do eat it, but who could tell? Because of the vole population, we have our very own Neighborhood redtailed hawk who patrols the area and perches in tall trees staring down at the messy yards. There are lots of sloppy gardeners in my neighborhood. Not much is neat, but everything is lush. Flora and fauna. The choice usually goes like this: there is just enough time to water deeply OR pull up weeds and bag them--or there is just enough time to rake and bag leaves OR spray or feed my roses--or "god those weeds look terrible but I just have time to cut some flowers for the table." It is hard to see why I should change my ways. For once, the lazy person is rewarded! |
#9
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Keeping a Messy Garden
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#10
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Keeping a Messy Garden
On Sat, 19 Apr 2003 10:29:41 -0800, Melinda Tennielle
wrote: I love this thread... I wish the other posters lived by me! My next-door neighboors seem to be flower-phobic. They have an expanse of green lawn and a wide gravel driveway, which the husband sprays with weed-killer every couple of months. Eeeyyu, I hate this look. [...] And meanwhile, my passiflora is reaching over the fence, racing the honeysuckle to get to the other side first. I try to train the vines back inward, but they do follow the sun, so it always looks like they're threatening the sterile domain next door I love my neighbors on the south. When I had the new bed put in , I wanted to grow some roses right up against our shared chainlink fence. Some are big 'uns, so I knew they would spill over eventually, and some are climbers, and, well, that's kind of the point of climbers. So I met the female half over the fence and showed her photos of what I had in mind. She said she liked my choices, so I went ahead and planted. There is ivy on the fence that we both agreed to pull and both took half-hearted stabs at pulling, then left it alone. In the end, I decided it will look pretty as a backdrop for the roses, so I'll TRY to keep up with it just to the point that it won't strangle the roses. This lady is very laid back. She once watched voles (or something) pull some of her hostas right into their holes, POP, Bugs Bunny style, no you see 'em now you don't, and she actually laughed. She uses Permatil in her planting holes now. |
#11
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Keeping a Messy Garden
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#12
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Keeping a Messy Garden
Shiva wrote:
What an interesting take on things. Could be. For my part, I notice that this kind of, shalll we say, "controlling" ("tight-*ssed might offend!) behavior tends to be exhibited throughout the lives of those to whom it comes naturally. Very Virgo, you know? G I'm only half kidding. Hey! I'm a virgo! *grin* However, I love sprawling abandon with multihued beds without any dirt and/or mulch to be seen because of the grooundcover. I really don't weed except for the stuff that tends to get invasive such as chickweed. We have seven birdfeeders in the yard and love to sit out on the patio watching the multitude of birds come and go. My latest project is to figure out where I'm going to put the ladybug house up that I just got mailorder. To make a purchase of, say, a piece of furniture or clothing, she must drag around to ALL stores and agonize over every choice. That bores me so, I am more apt to order something directly from an online shop, sight unseen. I actually ordered an armoire that way. To her way of thinking, it should have been the wrong size, cheesy looking, etc. But it was perfect. I was not punished for my slapdash ways, and I could tell she was both amazed and irritated. I hate to shop. Well, except for bookstores and garden shops. The WWW has made my life wonderful. I want a book, I order it online. Most plants I order online these days as I can get exactly what I want that way. Best of all, I can be out in the yard enjoying it all while UPS delivers my purchases. On the flip side: I bought a front exterior light on a whim, and I really am spacially challenged. It needed to be a size bigger. Too lazy to take it back, I put it up anyway. So now if you look close, you can see the hole made by the first one off to one side. Probably why I have light strips in boxes in the master bedroom that I bought on a whim for the master bath, decided i really didn't like them and haven't yet gotten a round tuit to returning them. This was probably almost a year ago. I do have the receipt in my hand bag now at least. *laugh* Susan s h simko at duke dot edu |
#13
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Keeping a Messy Garden
On Mon, 21 Apr 2003 11:07:33 -0400, "Susan H. Simko"
wrote: Hey! I'm a virgo! *grin* Hee! You mean you don't act the same as 1/12th of the rest of the world's population? However, I love sprawling abandon with multihued beds without any dirt and/or mulch to be seen because of the grooundcover. I really don't weed except for the stuff that tends to get invasive such as chickweed. We have seven birdfeeders in the yard and love to sit out on the patio watching the multitude of birds come and go. Clearly your sense of the Joy of Life has overpowered the stars, grahhshoppah! My latest project is to figure out where I'm going to put the ladybug house up that I just got mailorder. This sounds damned near unbearably cute. Which mailorder? And when can we see it? Probably why I have light strips in boxes in the master bedroom that I bought on a whim for the master bath, decided i really didn't like them and haven't yet gotten a round tuit to returning them. This was probably almost a year ago. I do have the receipt in my hand bag now at least. *laugh* As long as we are moving in a positive direcetion we are doing fine! I hear that changes in later life to "as long as we are moving ... at all! s h simko at duke dot edu |
#14
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Keeping a Messy Garden
Shiva wrote:
Hee! You mean you don't act the same as 1/12th of the rest of the world's population? Nope. I act like Susan. The s.o. claims the mold broke afte rme as the world couldn't take more than one without coming apart at the seams. Clearly your sense of the Joy of Life has overpowered the stars, grahhshoppah! Oh yeah. I'ld never get very far with a formal garden with a colour scheme. Witness my trip to Witherspoon's to get another Pristine and coming home with Granada because the colour caught my eye. Glorious, riotous colours are my delight. I also don't like things laid out just *so*. It's too artificial to my eye and because of that tends to take away some of the enjoyment for me. Not saying I don't like it in other people's gardens but I don't want to live with it day in and day out. This sounds damned near unbearably cute. Which mailorder? And when can we see it? It is unbearably cute. Just like my toad houses under my bushes that no one notices unless I choose to tell them. *grin* Anyway, I ordered it from http://www.bestnest.com I think one of my neighbour's is having horrors over the "invasion" of ladybugs I am going to bring on when I put it up. When all of you can see it depends upon me getting back to tackling my test server. I refuse to cop out and put the photos up on my current site as then I will have no motivation to get this other server done. As long as we are moving in a positive direcetion we are doing fine! I hear that changes in later life to "as long as we are moving ... at all! My family has a history of keeping going until we drop. My g'father had a large garden that he kept every year up until his death at 88. I truly believe you're as young as you want to be. My mom is very young for her age and does remarkable stuff despite her physical disabilites. I get in trouble with my friends in PA if we make plans to go out and I don't bring her with me! Susan s h simko at duke dot edu |
#15
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Keeping a Messy Garden
"paghat" wrote in message news You're doing it my way. The nature-phobic gardening you describe as your friend's method seems to be very common. I used to deeply wonder how it could ever have come about that anyone could love flowers but hate nature. I've come to the conclusion that the majority of gardeners are motivated by a fear of the natural world & a need to so completely tame it that it is no longer fearful. A minority of gardeners have the opposite approach of trying to duplicate something of nature. Here's one of my past-rants on nature-phobic gardening: Lawn Loonies & Envirophobia-- http://www.paghat.com/lawnloony.html I had to laugh at the page on moles. I live next to a wooded area and everyone in the neighborhood has moles. I came to the conclusion a few years ago that life would be better if I accepted the fact that there will always be moles. I have reduced the amount of lawn I have for the moles to destroy. That makes more room for all the plants that I just have to have but don't know where I am going to put them once they are home. Today the weather was warm but overcast -- perfect for digging and dividing perennials. I decided that one of the azaleas I moved last year was indeed dead so I got the shovel and decided to dig it and replace it with a big clump of daylilies that had become too bid for its site. I plunged the shovel into the ground, pushed with my boot, and applied leverage to free the azalea. The plant popped right out and when I looked down I had a large dazed mole in the shovel! I had to look twice as I was totally amazed to see that I had removed both the dead plant and a completely intact animal in a single effort. The mole looked dazed. It barely moved. My first reaction was to drop it and cut it in two with the shovel. I put it on the ground and poked it lightly with the shovel. It let out a pathetic squeal. I couldn't bring myself to kill it so I just picked it up with the shovel and tossed it a couple of feet into the wood. It laid there for a few minutes. When I checked back later it was gone. I thought that anyone could kill a mole, but only an intelligent being could lean to live with them. |
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