I
might have exaggerated a wee bit in a recent blog post, when I wrote
that I had ordered and received six billion tulip and daffodil bulbs.
The actual total was closer to six hundred – nearly all of which I
planted during a three-day weekend, in 16 hours of gardening. My
husband put in nearly as many hours, rototilling the new bulb
gardens, mixing compost into our raised vegetable beds, and planting
two shrubs in the backyard. (I know: we are the poster couple for
romantic weekend getaways – to the compost pile, garden shed and
the Church of Dirt and Flowers.) As I inched along the planting beds
on my creaking knees, mentally designing color combinations for
grouping the bulbs, my mantra was Think Springtime. I pictured
the new tulips and daffodils joining their veteran bulb buddies to
create blooming waves of red, purple, orange, yellow, pink, and white
petals bordering the perennial beds in our front yard. [Note: I
have ordered tulip, daffodil and other spring-flowering bulbs from
VanBourgondien (dutchbulbs.com) and Breck's (brecks.com) for years,
and appreciate the fat, healthy bulbs I receive at planting time.]
Now
most of our flower beds are ready for autumn blankets of compost –
except for the sunflower garden outside my office window. As I write,
finches and chickadees are hanging upside-down from the tall stalks,
harvesting the last of the seeds from flower heads nearly bald from
the little birds' unrelenting appetites. I love this unexpected bonus
of garden joy so much that, next spring, I'll move the tomato bed
elsewhere and plant only sunflowers (for the birds) and hollyhocks
(for the bees) below my window.
During
my recent bulb-planting-palooza, I had company in the garden.
Abigail, our chickadee-sushi-loving cat, and chief staffer Tessa the
Vague, our calico – whose already limited battery power grows
dimmer every day – each took a turn as my supervisor. Abby
complained that the noise from Lee's rototiller in the side yard was
giving her a migraine (and scaring off her luncheon plans.) Tessa
wandered about, startling at every oak leaf that crunched under her
paws, until she finally settled in the middle of the narrow bed I
was planting. I didn't disturb her, because her safe touchdown in an
actual garden site is a rare event. She napped for awhile, and then
rolled around awkwardly in the newly composted patch before beginning
her long, complex trek to find the cat door. Meanwhile, Benjamin
BadKitten, the deposed chief, did not set even one fat paw in the
garden with me all weekend. He was too busy doing research, he
explained with a snooty lift of his nose. Halloween is coming, and he
was calculating the algorithm required to stuff my chief garden
staffer into a pumpkin.
We
impetuous gardeners cannot count on memory alone to remember our
plans for next year's plantings. In my decades of gardening, I wonder
how many fabulously brilliant ideas I lost between the blue and gold
of October's skies and the pink and green of May's gardens. No matter
how certain I was that I would remember exactly the changes I'd make,
some of those bright thought-bubbles floated away before I'd even
filled the Christmas stockings. Many of my family members and friends
rely on their smart phones for keeping schedules and lists. I, the
geezer who still has an aol.com email address (it's so ancient, it's
now retro-hip,) use a paper-and-pen weekly planner. Every week during
take-down-the-garden month, usually October, I note which varieties
of seeds tanked and which triumphed. (Guess which column has the most
entries.) I always buy next year's planner early, so I have it in
autumn, and I can make my to-do lists on the calendar pages for next
April, May and June.
On
my 2016 list, I'll write these three items in big letters at the top:
- Don't cave to cheap thrills and set more than one zucchini plant in the raised bed. Remember you're the only one who will eat the Zs, and that you don't eat much sweet stuff like zucchini bread. Remember the nightly dinners of baked, roasted and sauteed zukes, egged, floured and herbed, in hopes of revving up their blandness? Remember that the blandness never really disappeared?
- Plant the tomatoes in big, individual pots and set them on the sunny, south-facing patio. A few years ago, they grew well in their patio pots and tasted sweet and juicy. (We would have enjoyed many more tomatoes that summer, but our late, beloved golden retriever, Kaylee, stole them off the vines, even after we wrapped the plants in plastic netting. That dog loved her 'matoes.)
- Do not plant any more bulbs. At all. Anywhere. Do not gaze out onto the backyard shrubbery beds and imagine how well the taller shrubs would set off flowering clusters of tulips, daffodils and grape hyacinths along the length of the fence. Imagine, instead, how much hard labor those beds would need to become bulb-ready. There's bad dirt out there, and it would need digging, amending, fertilizing, rototilling, and more digging before you could sink to your aching knees (which will be a full year older and creakier) and start planting six billion more bulbs. But...can't you just see those gorgeous parrot tulips,pink and yellow angeliques, deep red couleur cardinals, the giant trumpet daffodils…?Stop that right now. Smack yourself on the forehead. Do not plant any more bulbs. Anywhere. At all.
What
will be on your own “do or don't” lists for next year's garden?
We put our outdoor geranium flower pots in the greenhouse. Geraniums are some of the best flower producers and they do fine if you can keep them from freezing and water them every once in a while.
ReplyDeleteI didn't know that you could overwinter geraniums. Thanks, Lynn!
DeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDelete