Autumn garden

Wrapping up April

Birdfeedr

I built this birdfeeder with slices of sumac and cedar and a 6-inch ring bolt. Then I smothered it with homemade vegetarian suet and hung it out on the backyard clothesline. The first creature to notice was a black squirrel. And then the feeder was destroyed.

birdfeedr-1

birdfeedr-2

birdfeedr-3

Snow day, continued

Snow comparisons

backfence1-dec12
Back fence – December 12
backfence1-jan8
Back fence – January 8
backwindow-dec12
Back window – December 12
backwindow-jan8
Back window – January 8
backyard-dec12
Backyard – December 12
backyard-jan8
Backyard – January 8
backyard2-dec12
Shed – December 12
backyard2-jan8
Shed – January 8
cedars1-dec12
Cedars – December 12
cedars1-jan8
Cedars – January 8
cedars2-dec12
Cedars – December 12
cedars2-jan8
Cedars – January 8
frontwindow-dec13
Front window – December 13
frontwindow-dec16
Front window – December 16
frontwindow-jan7
Front window – January 7
frontwindow-jan8
Front window – January 8
frontwindow-jan9
Front window – January 9

Planting witch hazel

Gardening is all I think and read about lately and the witch hazel tree was one of my early fall obsessions. I spent weeks reading about the 5 different species and 100s of varieties, only to find that none of the local nurseries had any in stock. Finally, I found a place that would order me one and I select the small, vase-shaped, bright red flowering Hamamelis x intermedia ‘Diane’.

I then spend a week building “structures” in the backyard to model how ‘Diane’ will look full grown and decide where to place it. When I get a call from the nursery I force Eric to immediately drop everything and drive out to help me fetch my baby tree.

The nursery staff notice my excitement, but nonchalantly mention they couldn’t get ‘Diane’. They substituted.

Jelena, I think– orange would be fine. Or Arnold Promisemore common, and yellow is not bad. But no.

They’d chosen a different species altogether. They’d ordered me a Hamamelis vernalis with no name. My heart sunk (I hadn’t researched this species at all), but I took it home anyway. Though it will be a different shape and colour, it has redeeming factors: it’s native to Missouri (just like Eric), more cold hardy (unlike Eric), and should do better in my clay soil…

Fingers crossed it doesn’t die before it’s supposed to bloom: late winter / early spring.