in the seed frames

Change in the weather.

A huge amount of snow and near-record cold temperatures headed straight for my garden, probably with the sole purpose of wiping out the colony of crown imperials (Fritillaria imperialis) getting ready to bloom. It’s starting to snow right now.

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Or maybe it’s headed for Corydalis glaucescens ‘Pink Beauty’, which was already shivering from the cold, as this so-so picture indicates.

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I got my hummingbird swings from Pop’s Hummingbird Swings. The hummingbird sits on the swing, and swings, hence the name. The reason why the picture is kind of fuzzy is that it’s a picture of a swing, and it’s swinging in the wind, even without a hummingbird on it.

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Since the title of the post has something to do with seed frames, might as well go look at them now. There are seeds in pots all over the garden.

Before we look at them, it’s interesting to note that most of the seeds sown are of dryland plants, which, once they’re establish in the garden, I intend never to water them, but the current watering restrictions do not allow me to water them in the seed pots except on Saturdays and Wednesdays, and yet if I grew annuals or vegetables, I could water those by hand every day. Such is life.

Anyway, there are seed pots on the patio.

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And seed pots in the frames. The frames are on the patio my wife never finished. They were covered with snow for three straight months, more or less. When they weren’t covered with snow, they were about to be covered with snow, so that’s why I say more or less. There are occasional periods when it isn’t snowing here.

The rope attached to the frame on the right is so I can lift it and water the pots (only on the permitted days), and gawk at seedlings.

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The frame on the left, with the screen rolled back (for no reason), has seed pots which were sown in January of 2012.

Astragalus detritalis germinated a week or so ago:

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A penstemon, I forget which species:

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Penstemon acaulis. This is a big deal to me. These round pots are B.E.F. Growers’ Pots, polypropylene, cost 25 cents each about 25 years ago, and have been outdoors ever since.

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And finally, Aquilegia jonesii. Three seedlings visible in lower right, and one by the twig, upper right.

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I got another picture of the white-breasted nuthatch, a favorite here, always worried that it won’t find enough food, and so skittish it flies away when it hears me thinking about taking its picture.

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more hard work

I finally had a chance to try out this nifty new Victorian trowel that the people at Garden Tool Company gave me. It’s one of the nicest trowels I’ve ever used; good balance, beveled edge to dig into awful soil, and a blade flat enough to dig out a big chunk of dirt.  It will probably replace my old Yo Ho as an all-purpose trowel. (Update to mention the trowel’s manufacturer, which might help: DeWit.)

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Yes, I did some work. More rocks added, and some warm season grasses (and two ‘Boulder Blue’ fescues) moved from another part of the garden. The cool season grasses, Poa annua (annual bluegrass), etc., are all too evident in this picture; I want to get rid of them, but that means getting down on my hands and knees and scraping out all the tufts of grass between the flagstone and elsewhere.

I wouldn’t even try to spray the grasses because they would just come back from seed next year, and besides, there are some tiny pieces of Festuca thurberi, which I planted, among all the annual bluegrass. (My wife liked to spray weeds but my one experience with such things led me to conclude it was a waste of my time; I’m not a garden chemical type person anyway.)

The rectangular shadow at the right is from the bird feeder hanging in the tree.

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A border collie’s eye view. All the white in the rock garden is Corydalis angustifolia.

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In the rock garden itself, a nice color form of Pulsatilla vulgaris, which was more open when I went to get the camera, but it’s supposed to snow a whole bunch and get down to 12 or some equally asinine temperature, so I figured carpe diem florae pulsatillae. It was supposed to be ‘Budapest Blue’, but isn’t. Bluer than purple, but not enough Budapest. I’ve wanted that particular color form for quite some time, and all the plants I’ve acquired with that name have turned out to be something else.

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Also, Crocus rujanensis. I could have removed the spent flower in the front, but I didn’t. In a normal year no one would believe I have crocuses in flower in April (what’s next, lilacs in July?), but I do.  This year, so far, weirdness abounds.

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