Posted on 04/18/2008 8:31:09 AM PDT by Gabz
Taking an early morning walk this time of year is a singular treat, like Dorothy stepping out of Auntie Ems house into the color and sound of Oz. The same things that are always there, only instead of Winters drabness, Springs full and glorious color. Each walk is accompanied by a symphony of birdsong, a riot of color bursting everywhere. Fallen jasmine blossoms scatter themselves on the ground like the famed yellow brick road, and blooming things pop up everywhere like the fabled Munchkins.
And then, as if the colors and sounds arent enough, just to add a little spice, spider webs and silk threads abound. A nice, soothing walk interrupted by a moment of terror as an invisible spider web smacks you across the face. Frenzied panic as you claw at the strands, trying to get them off, as if each strand is composed of skin eating acid. Your heart is pumping, your adrenaline is flowing, because some spider, somewhere, manufactured those invisible strands. Its not the spider webs themselves we object toits every humans fear of the monster in the closet. If theres a spider web, then it stands to reason that somewhere close by, possibly on the very strand stuck to your face, is the spider that spun it.
To top it all off is the humiliating thought that a fellow human is watching you do the spider dance, snickering while they sympathize, glad its not them. Your dogs are laughing themselves silly, watching their human leap and scratch at an invisible assailant. Heads cocked to one side, they seem to be asking the canine equivalent ofDo you have fleas? You need a bath? Isnt it wonderfully amazing how our clothes reflect the changing seasons? My youngest son, even at four years old, was a very opinionated clothes horse. He told me in no uncertain terms what he wanted his Easter outfit to be. Since I was going to be the one making the outfit, we had a little more leniency in choices. He wanted Peter Rabbit grass green pants, and a matching vest and tie, so off to Wal-Mart we went. He was very specific about what he wanted on his vest and tie. If I remember correctly, we found the perfect print, a V.I.P. print by Cranston Print Works. Either someone at Cranston had been listening to a child describe Easter, and April, or they were very much in touch with their inner child.
My son informed me that the fabric for his vest and tie had to have green grass, daffodils, Easter eggs, bunnies, chickies, robins, and other assorted critters and Spring flowers. Thats about the most inclusive summation of Spring I can think of. The colors were matchless, too. Peter Rabbit grass green, sunshine yellow, browns and pinks and blues and whitesall the colors that best describe Spring, printed on a single piece of exactly right fabric. We couldnt have custom designed a more fitting tribute. Needless to say, my sons fourth Easter was a great success. Hope your Spring is as happy and colorful and perfect as that one was!
April isnt just colorsits sounds. The earliest spring peepers croaking from every ditchif frogs are a measure of health, then our area should be winning awards! Some nights you can barely hear yourself think for their welcome racket. Whippoorwillstheir distinctive cries are never so loud as right now. The Great Horned owls are sending out their mournful hoo-hoos, serenading us late into the night. The sounds of tillers and tractors, and the first strains of lawn mowers add their hum and buzz during the day like a well orchestrated symphony.
Time to get ready for some serious gardening! A few start earlier, and some wait. If your ground is ready and the temperature is rightgo for it! The very worst that will happen is another cold snap and youll have to start over. If not, then youve got an excellent head start!
Many good reports came back on the Crista tomatoes, the ones resistant to Tomato Spotted Wilt. Keep in mind, this is not the wilt that lives in the soil and causes a perfectly healthy plant to look as if its had boiling water poured on it just as it starts to bear. TSW is the one that stunts the plant, or kills it outright. There is another variety that some people had success with last year, one called Amelia.
Good reports back also on the straw bale gardening! Many people tried it and seemed very pleased. Less weeding, less disease and insects. Keeping the straw bales watered seemed to be the biggest challenge! Whether youre doing plants for squash and cukes or starting your own from seed, remember to keep the stems dusted with some kind of pesticide. It will help keep the squash vine borers from getting a toehold.
A few other reminders for this month: Dont forget to fertilize your lawn and shrubs, but do remember to wait until the end of April or first of May. Done too early, fertilizer can cause the grass to be too tender and green. If we get another cold snap, the tender shoots will be harmed worse. If youre going to put out warm season grass seed, end of April is a good time to do it. Bermuda and Centipede wont germinate until the soil temperature is around seventy.
Azaleas dont need to be fertilized until after theyre done blooming, but other shrubs will benefit from some liquid fertilizer both regular and acid kind, mixed with some Epsom salts, equal parts of each. Then when you do your lawn, theyll be ready for the granular fertilizer. The liquid fertilizers and the Epsom salts give them a little bit of a jump start and help to correct the soil ph, especially if the shrubs are close to the foundation of your house.
Get out there and go have some gardening fun!
Get out there and go have some gardening fun!
Gardening Ping!!!!!!!!!!!
Thanks much to Garden Girl for another great, and inspirational article!!!!!!!!!!!
I love gardening! I crossed a turnip with a Jewish bread and got a Rutabagel!.............
I’d love to get started on some gardening if the ground would ever dry out! It finally warmed up this week and started to dry some and then we had another big rain last night! I do believe we have seem that last of night time temps below freezing though.
We have a nectarine tree in full bloom and it’s supposed to freeze the next few nights - is there any way to protect it?
Hey there. Azalea question. I know not to feed them until after the blossoms are gone.
But when do I prune them?
It’s nearly that temp here as well and I’ve been in out of my kithen garden all morning!!!!
Spring is the resurrection of life—what a great time. I mudded a few items in 2 weeks ago here in the Midwest: onions, lettuce, peas, spinach, and broccoli. Tell me more about epsom salts—I need to acidify to grow blueberries. Any good info on growing blueberries in the midwest because the ones I put out last year don’t look healthy—I followed directions and acidified the soil but we had a warm and dry summer that didn’t help.
ROFL!!!!!!!!! That’s great!!!!! I’m stealing it.
I thought we were past that, and then we had the bottom fall out of the temps 3 nights in a row this past week..........GRRRRRRRRr
Help Ladies!!!!! We’ve got questions in posts 6 and 7 that I have absolutely NO CLUE how to answer.
My daughter and I took the Master Gardener course together and dig in the dirt frequently. We spent the last two days (almost) finishing spring cleanup in her garden.
The color is spectacular, but only creeping phlox and Halesia are in flower. The gold, green, purple, orange, white, red, and variegated foliage is breathtakingly beautiful. The sun on so many colors of heuchera is truly a sight to behold.
Hers is the most colorful foliage garden that I’ve ever seen.
Thanks for the gardening article. It’s one of my passions.
But when do I prune them?
Right after they are done blooming.
I think that you prune azaleas like most spring bloomers- after the bloom fades- before the plant begins to gear up for next year’s bloom.
By the way, only another gardener can appreciate my little Japanese maple that I grew from seed. The cat ate all of my seedlings except a red one. It survived the winter and is now almost a foot tall.
I would think that a mulch of oak leaves would help to acidify the soil for blueberries. I fed mine azalea and rhododendron fertilizer last year, but they don’t look happy now.
It’s in the 70’s here now, too, and the long range forecast (15 days) from Accuweather shows a very mild spell.
I got my peas and some lettuce in. I started some tomatoes way too early this year and they’re huge now; some are even flowering. I thought that they would go to waste except that now I can take the chance of planting them outside. We have plenty of buckets to cover them with if it gets cold.
If a freeze gets them, I have more back up and I’m no further behind that I would normally be. If it doesn’t I could have tomatoes at least a full month before I normally would have expected.
We’re planning on roto-tilling the garden tomorrow. YIPPEE!!
What a lot of clean up from the winter though!!!!
Any suggestions on raspberries?
I planted two kinds, spring bearing and fall bearing, and now can’t remember which is which.
Last year some of the bushes flowered late and got fruit late.
This year those same bushes are putting out leaves on the canes that fruited.
What do I do about pruning raspberries?
I meant, when can I feed them...
My peas, lettuce and spinach I planted a couple of weeks back are finally coming up. Sad part is they’re no farther ahead than if I’d planted them last weekend.
Slammed in some more early stuff. Had to work it by hand cuz the soil is still pretty wet. It’s almost impossible to get in between the rain.
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