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For Winter Interest -Look up!

Winter Interets is supposed to be, especially  here in New England, the myriad of  objects d’art and well thought out plant choices we use in the garden to make our winter garden just as stunning to look at as the garden in summer.  But THIS winter, honestly… why did we bother?  ! WHO COULD POSSIBLY SEE IT??  You know I am a snow lover, but with the constant storms and low temps the snow pack has risen to unbelievable heights and the garden is all but lost under it.

I went out to take some pictures this morning because new snow had fallen during the night and before the sun comes out and melts it off the branches the world to me looks so calm,and so beautiful. The blanket of snow conjures up images of snow days off from school, sledding and hot cocoa, yet lest you think I have fallen off my rocker and cracked my head, I know when I fully wake up have coffe and the morning begins it will conjure up images of shoveling, crappy driving conditions and more roof raking.

As I was taking the photos it occured to me that what was in the lens was the tops of things. After 50 or more inches of unmelted snow cover in the past few weeks, here in my garden you can enjoy the lovely tips of the 2   chamaecyparis obtusa ‘nana lutea’ s  I planted so I could see their stunning yellow and green needles against the snow, and you can’t even see their cousin , the glowing golden chamaecyparis psifera’gold mop’ at all.

 Buried also are the hollies and winterberries whose bright berries should pop out against the white blanket that surrounds them, and also provide me with some bird watching too. Really you can’t see even one obelisk,  colored twig, or interesting branch structure, unless it was already more than 5 feet off the ground. So now I wonder,  how much more will I miss?  The stupid forsythia, plum  and other branches I could bring in to force into bloom are in the way back of the yard and I would need snowshoes to go cut any. I haven’t even seen the rock  garden since December. The early blooming clematis vines (c.alpina and c. macropetala) may still be  buried under when their time comes to bloom. The last time we had this much snow , we had to shovel it out of the pool area (where the fence insulates it) In MAY!

Although she is not technically “winter interest” , Pumpkin is providing us with quite  a bit of frolicking fun. The dogs , because of their little legs,  have many paths (gruelingly shoveled out day after day by Erin and I- our side yard looks like a habitrail) but she is adventurous and loves to walk up and over the crusted snow pack. The snow level is even with the new fence, so she could  walk right on outa here, but inevitably her rear end will sink down into the snow as she makes her way and she is scared into turning back. She is also drawn to those irresistable  bobbing tips of all my shrubs poking out of the snow cover.  See her there…behind her is the wire that tops the fence and in front is the top of  hydrangea paniculata ‘limelight’ ( a very large shrub by the way) and a bit of the weeping birch.

So, anyway,….. I did what any desperate person does, and took pictures of the top of things. The crabapples (malus ‘robinson”)  add some nice color,  what you can see of the weeping birch looks cool as well as the Harry lauders walking stick in all it’s contorted glory. The tops of a trellis covered in snow  , the tree tops that look like shrubbery, the few pieces of garden art that are placed up high, are all the winter interest we can see. …….but they are no less beautiful for their scarcity….now where’s that coffee…time for my reality check

let it snow, let it snow , let it snow

Here’s to New England weather and all it’s unpredictable  extra snowy bone chillingly fr-fr-frigid glory.

You can puch me if you wanna, but snow is my bestest friend these last few weeks.   SNOW+ Cheryl =BFF     

 Why ? you ask….why when you have spent morning commutes sitting on the highway for hours watching idiot drivers bend fenders and slip slide all over causing numerous traffic delays?

  Why  …when your days are spent walking around aimlessly with heavy shovelfulls of wet snow trying to find a new GD place to stack it up.

 Why…. when the children never ever go to school where they rightfully belong bugging the bejeezus out of paid professionals instead of whinning to you about how bored they are.

 Why…when just today you drove through a pothole the size of Manhattan that jarred your jaw in a way that is still making you wince.

 Why?…Why? Why? am I happy about the snow?.

Because it is winter , and winter is cold . So very cold lately that not one inch of the 50 or so we have recently aquired has even thought of melting…and therein lies my the root of my happiness. My garden is snuggled under the loveliest of winter blankets with no threat of someone stealing the covers so to speak and leaving it exposed to horrible wind chills and the notorious freeze thaw cycles that heave so many of my babies out of the ground and just plain kill others.

In Alaska they call a winter with no ( or very little)  snow a blue screamer. We have had them here ,although the only screamer was me when I saw the damage that January did to May.  The last one was 9  or so years ago and going out in the gardens that spring I  spent  day upon day slowly  realizing how many plants were just  not coming back. All of my fruit trees had a huge percentage of dead branches that needed  to be pruned out, some were not even worth trying to save. I lost anything marginally hardy, which meant that almost every plant in the rock garden was gone as most of them were borderline zone 5 anyway. I can look back at photos taken before that winter nd actually feel a little weepy about the mass die-off.  No part of the garden was left unscathed and  I even lost extremely hardy perennials and 2 ‘New dawn” climbing roses that are super-de-duper hardy.

That terrible no good very bad January ,temperatures were frigid, often below 0, often with numbing winds accompanying them, and there was no snow.

 Snow to a gardener  is  mostly just a great insulator(to  heck with all the slippery qualities you skiers apprecaite)  and here in Jefferson it means that we can plant like we live in zone 5, even though I will insist we are and will always be zone 4. The snow makes all the difference, take it away and we are screamin’blue.

Confessions of a Compulsive Gardener (part 2)

While I am happily knitting away, in this very snow-stormy winter, eating lots of hibernation foods and also enjoying a beverage or two since I can’t go out and drive anywhere , the garden is calling my name (well not really silly else I would be on medication locked up somewhere). What I am “hearing”  sounds suspiciously like  cries for NEW PLANTS!  Well, happy to oblidge.

Lest you think I can supress my gardening compulsion for any legnth of time, let me asure you it never really goes away. While my hands are occupied, my mind is busy busy busy planning and dreaming.

And what am I dreaming of….well, in a happy way a couple of new climbing roses from my favorite rose breeder, David Austin Roses  www.davidaustinroses.com  and the two clematis I ordered that are overwintering in the cutting garden . I got them from my favorite vine nursery , Brushwood www.gardenvines.com. I also have my usual crazy order in at Bluestone www.bluestoneperennials.com  and just a few things from Khlem’s song sparrow  www.songsparrow.com

What I am dreaming about in a dreadful thrash about the covers kind of way is the fact that the new fence installation left me a huge chunk of lawn that needs to be removed then the area tilled and soil amendments added…then several bushes and one tree need to be shifted… and a pathway added ..and perennials divided to continue the pattern that is already started abutting the sidewalk.  This will be a huge chore that is already taxing my brain as to how I can most effectively rearrange the plants without spending days on the couch eating advil and wearing ice packs. I may even hire help….we will see how it goes. Anyway, while I avoid thinking about that , here are some photos of  a few plants I have on order.I must love them now because when they arrive and I can’t remember where I meant to plant them, I will not be so enamored.

Confessions of a Compulsive (Gardener)

When I really sit to think about it, which I shouldn’t at all because it makes me seem obsessed, I spend a heck of alot of time in my yard. From spring clean-up through fall clean-up , I average more hours a week than I care to admit. So then, what happens in November when there is no garden?  Bill would love it if a job mysteriously appeared making me a useful asset to the household blah blah blah. The house would love it if I would spend some time organizing and cleaning:  not happening. The children would probably appreciate some fun field trips, or creative and delicious suppers. Keep wishing kids, mama will never be much of a cook, and I’m not great at planning the outings either.

What actually happens is I subsitute in another obsession hobby to suck up the time vacuum left behind by the garden; knitting.  Since November I have made 6 pairs of woolly socks, 2 warm hats to send to my nephew and his wife in Colorado, a vest and mittens for me, a baby sweater, and presently have another pair of socks and a sweater on my needles. Then add to that the huge stash of yarn and stack of patterns hidden here and there to keep normal people from commenting on my over zealousness. Must I mention the books, pattern websites,blog reading  and magazine subscriptions? I think I will keep those to myself TYVM.

 It is actually easier to hide all the gardening stuff. Once the plants arrive ( the trickiest time to keep them hidden because of the pots and boxes) I just have to get them in the ground super quick and no one is the wiser. No living being ( except maybe my friend Christina who knows  the garden and  my personality as well as I do) could possibly cast doubt on my insistence that

“no, that’s not new,that plant has always been there. It must not have been in bloom when you were here before”

and

 What do you mean that new tree in the way of the mower Bill? It has been there for years, it must have had a growth spurt.”

Then a lot of them die anyway , and now with the bunnies ravaging everything as well, it is hard to tell that I have gone a little overboard in the plant purchasing.

Not so much with the yarn and stuff. I cram it in a lot places, but  to no avail. Plus I get VERY frustrated  and loud and compulsive borderline frenzied when projects don’t go well, which is surprisingly often given that I have been a knitter waaayyy longer than I have been a gardener(.  I think the frustration  is due to the fact that there is no “thing ” like weather, or soil, or rabbits to blame ,just me and my crappy attention span).

I truly believe if I had a less weird interest, like reality TV shows, or skiing, I would be more inclined to share it with the world. Everyone can “water cooler talk” about The Bachelor or snow conditions . Who wants to hear me go on and on about soft squishy yarn and delightfully warm woolly socks? I know, no one.  But there it is anyway, my garden surrogate , my sanity for winter, by substitute obsession.  WANT TO SEE SOME PICTURES?????????

thanks to my sock models: Erin and Faith!

No chatter today, just pictures taken this morning after night of heavy snow here in The Burrow. It is t a perfect winter scene out there, and even nicer to view from the windows while sitting near the fire. … I luv ya though, so booted up and braved the wind and snow to take these photos for you 🙂

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So you think it’s time to rest?

After a very nice holiday, with Dave home from the Airforce (he is at the Defense Language Institute in Monteray,tough gig!)  and CJ home from college,and Bill on vacation for 2 weeks, it is time to focus more of my energy on chores and less on overeating and wine .

 Over the break we had what was declared a “blizzard” and although we had up to 70 mph winds, we only recieved a few inches of snow. A few days ago I finally got around to a yard inspection to look for limbs and damage and it was not too bad. A climbimg rose came unanchored because the ground is frozen I can not upright it’s trellis and the canes are scratching a window so they have to go. This is not, I repeat NOT the time to prune roses of any kind, that is for very late winter/early spring, but I did it anyway. Crossed fingers we have no more 60 degree winter days and it is ok come spring.

Being outside reminded me, or kind of jolted me out of my gardening lull, that it is time to prune lots of other stuff. Winter is optimal pruning time because deciduous trees are free of leaves so you can really see the structure as well as  what needs cutting and le’ts face it, no other garden chores are stealing your attention at the moment . It will also keep you away from the avalanche of catalogues arriving in the mail threatening your third borns education fund. (Sorry Erin, I will try to practice restraint this year)

This month I plan to prune a few pear trees and maybe the apple out front. They all constantly have water sprouts (those wierd branches that grow straight up to the sky) and every year need lots of pruning. while I am out there I will scan the other trees and bushes for any crossed branches that will cause damage and easy entry for bugs/diseases and take those out as well.

Two FYI s  1.) If you have spirea bushes, in the fall (or now) use your hedge trimmmer and just lop them off to about a foot high.They grow more like perennials and will shoot right back up into bush form very quickly in the spring, it saves  deadheading and thinning too.

2. )While you have your clippers in hand, bushes that flower in the spring that you can force into bloom in your house( like forsythia and cherries), only need 6 weeks of dormancy before you can cut branches and bring them inside to bloom. We are rapidly approaching that window so don’t wait until late Feb or March.  If your forsythias are like mine( unruly overgrown messes )then you can cut till your hearts delight for a couple of months.

…….and by the way …pruning is not scary. If you have never dared to hack at your bushes and trees, take a class, it will empower you. If you just need to re-fresh your knowledge check out the great how to videos on finegardening.com, or take out a book from the library. Better safe than being sorry after you re-create Dr. suess’ who-ville in your backyard!

Dear Santa

Dear Santa,

 Merry Christmas to you and the Mrs. I wish I could say that I have been very good this year, but that would be untruthful . Anyway ,I have figured out that some years when I am very bad you are actually much nicer to me, so without worry  here is my wish list for the garden in 2011.

1.) Snow, snow and more snow. Aside from the prettiness factor, a good 2-3 foot layer of snow is the perfect insulation for the plants here in the fabled “hills of Worcester” It also covers up all the crappy chores I never got around to in 2010 and makes me forget for a while all the work that awaits me in spring.

2.) Moderation. A small favor whose impact is immeasurable. No overly rainy springs causing plants to rot at the crown and fungal diseases to abound. No letting Mr. Heat Miser fry us with temperatures from hell and droughts that drive my water bill into quadruple digits. While you are at it, tell the north wind to take it easy on my arborvitae and rhodies, they do not enjoy his dessicaating  breath. In addition, no more “Ice Storms of the Century” either.  Really, all I want is just average, normal temperatures and precipitation please. Again, small favor, big impact.

3.) I asked you for a tree under the tree, a meyer lemon, but your elf in the nursery saw fit to ship it unprotected in an unmarked cardboard box during a spell of artic temperatures. The UPS man left it on the porch and it is dead, dead, dead. I am pretty pissed about it so a replacement would go a long way toward getting back in my good graces.

4.) I could also use the gift of time in the spring to re-landscape around the fence. And if  you could, a little backbone to say “no” to garden tour requests or overly large summer parties that force me to frantically and constantly prune, deadhead and otherwise spruce up the garden. Let’s let 2011 be a year of the “natural ”  (read:untidy, overgrown, and messy) look I so prefer.

That’s all, really a very manageable list. I know I can count on you to come through for me.

Happy Holidays! Hugs and Love, Cheryl

                                                                                                                                                                                       photo:                       David, Pumpkin, CJ

                                                                                                                                                                                                                Erin, Tigger, Faith

The Most Wonderful Time of the Year?

Really? because I hate the mall, stress out when forced to do any cooking that requires measuring spoons and mentions using your food processor ( one of which I REFUSE to own lest someone expect me to whip up a salsa or something), and hate being cooped up inside. Lately, although the temperatures have been pretty reasonable the wind has been ferocious and I find being outside highly uncomfortable.

Being stuck inside, I spent some time re-arranging the family room to accommodate the( as yet un-bought )christmas tree. This is always a perilous time for my houseplants. Most of my indoor plants come from florists , sent by well meaning people after a tragedy or some other nonsense like anniversaries that  people equate with house plants and cut flowers. For me, plants belong outside, but out of the guilt that my parents worked so very hard to instill in me via church and their own financial worries growing up, I am forced to nurture these sorry looking specimens that have shown up on my doorstep through the years. It is a half-hearted effort at best, and when the furniture gets moved, there are always casualties.

 Last Christmas it was moving the bookshelves that cause the 90 foot long  philodendron to get tossed. Watching it forever stretching it’s ugly legginess all over my books was more than I could bear anymore. To the trash it went.

Over the summer I parted with a large palm- looking monstrosity that had been lurking in the corner of my daughters room trying to hide it’s yellowing leaves from the over- watering ministrations of my 13 year old.

And in an move I am not overly proud of, I left an 8 foot ficus tree out on the deck, promising it that if it overwintered I would   let it come live in the living room again. It didn’t make it, which is not shocking since it is only hardy to zone 8 or something and certainly can not survive a zone 4  New England winter. The ficus had been my dad’s, lovingly groomed and grown from a small 2 ft plant to  a beautiful  8 ft tree while in his care. When he died my brother declared that he refused to spend his time raking the hallway at the house, so either I took the tree or else. My mom thought that was a great idea and so to Bill’s dismay it came to live here. We have short ceilings so immediately it had to be trimmed. It was sited next to the couch in the living room , where you would go to enjoy a book, or a fire, or a good poke in the eye from a wayward ficus branch. We all hated it. It dropped leaves constantly, had to be trimmed  often and given the resentment we all felt toward the space it took up the pruning was done in such a manner as to make it look about as hideous as any tree could. When we switched the dinning room and living room last year, and finally fit all the rsepective furniture back into each room , the ficus was left standing in the kitchen. I realized that to fit it in the “new” living room would mess up everything I had accomplished trying to arrange things well. So out to the deck it went. This spring we cut it up and composted it and I do not miss it at all.

Even though I am not enthtralled with houseplants, I have a few I am proud of. Some are cuttings of the many plants I grow outside and by propagating them I feel like a true gardener and a frugal yankee , although neither description  is true . Another is the christmas cactus that blooms like clockwork in December like it should and if it ever doesn’t- it is compost city baby. The biggest is a poinsettia that not only has been   kept alive, but has grown huge and is now in the process of turning it’s green bracts red just in time for the holidays. I hope it neighbors have warned him that to live here you must never do anything to upset me, like stay green or drop all your leaves or other post-christmas poinsettia behavior.

a bract turning red

The Chipper

After a long  weekend of  fall clean-up work out in the yard , I  am reminded again how old I am getting and how grateful I am I have help. Thankfully, I have CJ my oldest boy who is starving college student and will do anything for some dough, and Bill who is a super-hero gem of a husband. But, much as I enjoy his help, like all men Bill  has his lovable eccentiricites,( many of which force me to place all of the sharp objects in the house out of reach just in case things get  ugly.)

One of his most endearing eccentricities (if you are the CEO of Home Depot) , is his deep pocket approach to problem solving in the household chore arena. Bill sees a problem, rapidly assesses  what needs to be done to remedy it, then hops in his car and flies off the the store to drop a load of cash on stuff we either don’t need , or that he already has but can’t locate due to organizational dysfunction.Seroiusly, if I took inventory of the utility room, first I might cry, and then I could open up my own hardware store right in the basement.He has a whole stash of extra blades (at $50 each) for a saw he uses about once a year, a wall of fasteners in litle bins that are unlabeled so therefore do not exist in his head becasue they are too hard to find, many little metal bits like screws and bolts etc all in their original baggies purpose unknown, His cable running supplies take up two whole toolboxes and a large carboard box and several plastic bags as well(FYI he is a suit wearing financial guy, not an electrician or cable installer by trade).He also owns every tool most people borrow like tile wet saws, power mitre saw, screw guns, power washers, air compressors, table saw, you get the idea. This all gets overwhelming to me , as I like things neat and organized and hate his stashing habit and his ability to spend large  money on the most useless of items….BUT….one day while out doing some cleanup in the yard, Bill abruptly left for a while, then came back with this

The Chipper

Honest to God, my heart was beating so fast I needed to take a little lie-down to recouperate! OUR VERY OWN CHIPPER! What a joy!

Now, I hear your warning:   new chipper+ mouthy wife with crappy attitude+ wait? are those bags of lime he stacked in the corner of the garage? =fresh addition to compost pile .Maybe it will be best to tiptoe around Bill for a while, be on my best behavior and such. Duly noted.But… as long as I am looking at it from the OUTSIDE, the chipper is a thing a beauty, a wonder to behold, the love of my gardening life. We have chipped and chipped, and mulched and mulched, then chipped some more. The compost pile is usuable almost immediately thanks to the chipper, and those large stacks of limbs and twigs have all but disappreared, only existing now as the most wonderful and free wood chips for the garden. This weekend, what typically would have taken several days was compacted into two thanks to the chipper (Thankyou Bill) nad now the beds have a rich layer of shredded leaves over them which is a great soil conditioner. I am a lucky girl 🙂

So here is something I like to do……

In my quest to find colossal ways to waste my valuable time…every fall I dig up all my dhalias to store for the winter. After frost has blackened the foliage,( which by the way has only happened to a few so far, Jack ole buddy where are you?) I dig up the tubers and roots shake off any loose soil and lay them on my deck to dry in the sun for a few days. Then I give them a better cleaning once the dirt has dried and falls off more easily, and pack them in either peat moss or vermiculite .After that I try in a ridiculous fashion to find a suitable place in this airtight overly insulated house with  finished cellar.  My parents had a dirt cellar in their first house , and an actual honest to goodness root cellar in their second.Those would have been perfect . We have a carpeted heated man-cave and work out room which never dips below 60. The garage, although insulated ,still gets way too cold. In a spectacular failure last year I listened to a garden speaker who said she just leaves hers in containers which she places in her unheated garage for the winter and Viola!  in spring they get put back outside to start to grow again. Well, guess what? mine were rotted disgusting wet mush in the spring, thank you very much! So they went where ALL  my dhalias go, the great compost pile in the sky. As you can see from photo, year after year of  nothing but dried or rotted tubers has done nothing to dampen my enthusiasm for trying to store and re-plant my dhalias. What is that definition of insanity?….do the same thing over and over again expecting to somehow get a different result?……well ok…… point taken.

Moving on to fall, or the lack thereof….many of my plants and I , as well as a few grasshoppers so the story goes, are harboring the delusion that winter may never come. Although the trees seem to get it and their foliage is stunning, my daylilys have fresh strappy green leaves , the hosta although a little fried from a September night, are all still solid not translucent and melting away into the soil. How the heck I am supposed to clean up the garden like this??? Cutting down all this lively foliage is work work work and I am not a fan. I know I could leave it until later, but then it’s soooo cold( piss moan piss moan). I refuse to leave it until spring because it gives the rabbits great cover as they decimmate the evergreen stuff, ain’t happenin’. While I think on the dilema, please feel free to enjoy some stellar (humor me)  photographs taken at  the peak of  fall color here in the Burrow.