Wednesday, May 26, 2010
Seedings
May was a tempermental mistress this month-- from freezing cold temperatures, to sweltering heat waves and even a prediction of hail! Each day we read the sky, tested the air, and consulted the internet. Can we plant the sage yet?? The rosemary? The tomatoes? Well, the patience and soothsaying paid off and we've got tons of little guys sticking their heads up.
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Our enemies
As a gardener you have many enemies. Villains like deer, cut worms, slugs, frost and sometimes even the dreaded freewheeling neighborhood child.
Our enemies however, have been narrowed down to just two.
Meet our archnemeses.
1. The Birds
In the winter I relished hearing the mourning doves coo at sunset. I counted myself lucky to wake up to a cacophony of song and swooping every morning. Sometimes I'd even stand with my coffee at the window and think about putting up a special little bird feeder. All that has changed.
Within a week of planting our marigolds the birds had beheaded each and every one. Friends told me to be rational-- why would the birds snip the tops off of flowers if they weren't going to eat them? Then i saw a crow pluck off the last orange bloom right before my eyes. This meant war.
I believe these birds are purposely, and maniacally, sabotaging my garden.
First I concocted a spray of water and cayenne and doused each last stub of Marigold. No dice.
Then, I got crafty and decided to make tin foil trees. Birds dislike shiny things, noisy things, and anything that might in any way resemble an owl or any other bird of prey. With this criteria in mind I came up with these extraterrestrial looking things:
I planted a whole new set of marigolds, each with a little silver martian tree by their side. They seem to be marginally working. I also caved in and bought a silver pinwheel (turns out that's what pinwheels were originally made for! amazing, the things you learn online).
Since these purchases the marigolds have remained largely untouched. The lavender has been picked down to its bones and I am officially terrified to remove any bird netting from my little seedlings.
2. The Pine Tree
Meet the monstrosity that houses each and every one of the rascals that are destroying my garden.
Growing like some sort of she-demon out of our
neighbors backyard, this tree literally dwarfs our apartment building. It covers half our yard in perpetual twilight, rains pine needles day and night and makes it's presence known by poisoning all the soil within twenty feet of its trunk. There is a semi circle in our backyard where not even weeds will grow.
We raked up and shipped off dozens of bags of pine needles and carefully planned out our garden to take advantage of the one square of ground where sunlight is able to sneak past the omnipresent pine.
Currently, the thing has now grown up into our fire escape. I can tell you one thing, pruners will be unsheathed very soon.
Sometimes I feel very much like Sisyphus, only instead of hauling a large stone I'm hauling large bags of soil and eying every bird who flies by with a wild, plotting suspicion.
by: Asia
Our enemies however, have been narrowed down to just two.
Meet our archnemeses.
1. The Birds

In the winter I relished hearing the mourning doves coo at sunset. I counted myself lucky to wake up to a cacophony of song and swooping every morning. Sometimes I'd even stand with my coffee at the window and think about putting up a special little bird feeder. All that has changed.
Within a week of planting our marigolds the birds had beheaded each and every one. Friends told me to be rational-- why would the birds snip the tops off of flowers if they weren't going to eat them? Then i saw a crow pluck off the last orange bloom right before my eyes. This meant war.
I believe these birds are purposely, and maniacally, sabotaging my garden.
First I concocted a spray of water and cayenne and doused each last stub of Marigold. No dice.
Then, I got crafty and decided to make tin foil trees. Birds dislike shiny things, noisy things, and anything that might in any way resemble an owl or any other bird of prey. With this criteria in mind I came up with these extraterrestrial looking things:

I planted a whole new set of marigolds, each with a little silver martian tree by their side. They seem to be marginally working. I also caved in and bought a silver pinwheel (turns out that's what pinwheels were originally made for! amazing, the things you learn online).

2. The Pine Tree
Meet the monstrosity that houses each and every one of the rascals that are destroying my garden.
Growing like some sort of she-demon out of our

We raked up and shipped off dozens of bags of pine needles and carefully planned out our garden to take advantage of the one square of ground where sunlight is able to sneak past the omnipresent pine.
Currently, the thing has now grown up into our fire escape. I can tell you one thing, pruners will be unsheathed very soon.
Sometimes I feel very much like Sisyphus, only instead of hauling a large stone I'm hauling large bags of soil and eying every bird who flies by with a wild, plotting suspicion.
by: Asia
Friday, May 7, 2010
Day Two . Hello seeds meet soil .
one drizzly sunday afternoon, after many days of admiring our seedlings in the kitchen -it was time to get them grounded. so, we dug a little square for the mints (chocolate and spearmint):


and a corner for our bleeding hearts to neighbor rhonda, complementing her purples with chains of pink satiny purses.
dotted with yellow and purple violas in between.
then it was on to our empty beds and our soil.
oh our soil... a beautiful melange of blacks tans grays and reds. we squished it between our fingers until it blended to a creamy charred brown, and our fingers were frozen numb from the wet cold.

first we placed lady lavender, a seedling from union square green market.
and next our sun needy bee balm: microscopic seeds. to someday be herb plants with hot pink, red and white flower-bursts, irresistible to butterflies hummingbirds bumblebees and useful as a tea.
chives and parsley were the next.
each owning a patch of bed marked by a marigold.
we lined the edge of the large bed with 2 rows of lettuce seeds. and lastly sprinkled the edge of the smaller bed with chamomile seeds.
we topped the garden with mesh-screen squares to keep the birds from snacking on our work. and for now, that should bring you up to seed.....

by: Kelsey
and a corner for our bleeding hearts to neighbor rhonda, complementing her purples with chains of pink satiny purses.
dotted with yellow and purple violas in between.
then it was on to our empty beds and our soil.
oh our soil... a beautiful melange of blacks tans grays and reds. we squished it between our fingers until it blended to a creamy charred brown, and our fingers were frozen numb from the wet cold.
first we placed lady lavender, a seedling from union square green market.

and next our sun needy bee balm: microscopic seeds. to someday be herb plants with hot pink, red and white flower-bursts, irresistible to butterflies hummingbirds bumblebees and useful as a tea.
chives and parsley were the next.
each owning a patch of bed marked by a marigold.

we lined the edge of the large bed with 2 rows of lettuce seeds. and lastly sprinkled the edge of the smaller bed with chamomile seeds.


by: Kelsey
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)