Winter check on the Sierra Foothill garden

What I am really doing in the garden

Daffodils, only thing left in beds formerly full of Mexican primrose

Sunny January weather is lasting into February, and although chilly, by mid morning, it’s possible to putter in the garden with the sun to warm me.  After a few weeks gone, a walk around the garden reveals welcome progress, and that there is a lot of work to be done. My heart lifts as I see daffodils showing their grey green shoots from under the winter leaves. One pops out of an old hollow log piece set in the entry way. 

First wild violet, Viola papilionacea

Violets are blooming now, too and tiny cabbage-like sprouts of the gold sedum are showing through dried sticks of last summer’s growth.

Gold Sedum, Sedum kamtschaticum ‘Golden Carpet’

Gold Sedum, Sedum kamtschaticum ‘Golden Carpet’ pops up

The chives have sent up the first slender strands of green in my herb basket outside the kitchen door. 

The dill planted itself next to the original pot. Nice!

A huge feathery bouquet of dill has volunteered from seeds fallen out of the last year’s pot.

Checking on the meadow
A satisfying check today on my meadow planted Nov 9th,  shows 2 inch seedlings of California poppies, two kinds each of clarkia and lupine, and a wildflower seedling ID post is in the works.  It will help when it comes to weeding, the next project. Which are weeds and which are seedlings?  I have dug up and tossed out tons of Hooker’s Evening Primrose in the past, simply because, from the seedling, I thought it was a weed. Shoot! I take photos of weed seedlings and wildflower seedlings to sort out later.   
Meadow Planting      and      1st Update

Winter Blooms

Winter Blooming Bergenia, Bergenia crassifolia

Winter Blooming Bergenia, Bergenia crassifolia

The Winter Blooming Bergenia is blooming to my surprise and I pause, stripping off the under-leaves that had turned blackish brown and crisp. Mental note to look into getting a skinny little rake, but for now my gloved hands are the best tool.

Bergenia, all trimmed up and purty.

Throw the clippings in the path to rake up later. Other bloomers are rosemary, a very few creeping phlox flowers and the violets. Buds are swelling on the pear, redbud and Bridal Veil Spirea.

Mess and clutter
Electric cords to put away, woodpile to neaten up, … car towels to put away, dead foliage still sticking up from the flower beds…still need to be trimmed up and I do, working my way around the front beds with my favorite scissor-like clippers and stop to give them a spray of WD-40 to get them springing back again. 

Front beds were once infested with Mexican primrose, by my own hand

Front beds were once infested with Mexican primrose, by my own hand, and now will sit fallow until I'm sure it's all gone.

I put the last of the pine straw in the front beds, improving them immensly which got a major overhaul to get rid of the Mexican primrose that became invasive there. Only a few sprouts of that are still seen thank goodness. I vowed not to replant the plants I took out until the unwelcome primrose is gone, gone, gone.

Discoveries

Helichrysum petiolare 'Moe's Silver’

Helichrysum petiolare 'Moe's Silver’ with Shasta daisy under the oak.

I notice how nice the grey Helichrysum looks under the oak tree by the bench. Moe’s Silver, it’s called, found at a nursery in Fresno. It, like my other Helichrysum ‘Icicles,’ is proving to perform four seasons of the year! They are from the strawflower family, actually Asteraceae, and each kind has long lasting flowers.  ‘Moe’s Silver’ has pinkie width yellow flowers; ‘Icicles’ has button sized round yellow flowers and are deer resistant.

Snow in Summer, Cerastium tomentosum

Snow in Summer, Cerastium tomentosum

The Snow in Summer, Cerastium tomentosum , is filling out this year after two or three years, and spills down the dry rocky stream bed. This grey-green, low grower, seen at a museum garden long ago, has since been ‘on my list’ and has not disappointed, blooming with starry white flowers every June.. It spreads itself around nicely, too.

Ghost Plant, Graptopetalum paraguayense

'Mother of the Garden' with Ghost Plant, Graptopetalum paraguayense

The tree trimmer put my planter in the bushes, I see, usually hanging from the oak trunk. ‘Mother of the Garden,’ with ghost plant in it, an echeveria-like succulent, called Graptopetalum paraguayense. Haven’t worked out the pronunciation on that one yet. I hang Mother back up.

Tip: When the whole garden needs doing, do one section at a time, so as not to overdo and not get overwhelmed. And be careful of stickery oak leaves down the back of your jeans…they may get in your panties,…but, yes.

5 comments

  1. Curbstone Valley Farm -

    The weather in January and February so far has been amazing, albeit perhaps a bit too dry for this early in the season. I’m a bit worried about the natives we put out in the orchard (a little late), and hoping they don’t dry out too much! You’re right about the seedling ID, it can be challenging. I bought a bundle of those neon-colored irrigation flags this time, and set them out in each swath of wildflower seed, marking which area was which plant (writing on the flags with a sharpie). I’m hoping it helps me not to dig back up the seeds I intentionally planted! We’ll see if works though…hopefully the plants will be robust enough that I can get rid of the flags soon…not really the aesthetic I’m going for 😛

  2. Sue Langley -

    Hi Clare,
    I’d love to compare notes on our meadow or wildflower planting! When did you plant? Do you remember …and where did you find your seeds?

    I’ve looked online and snipped a photo of what each seedling is supposed to look like, photographed the ones in the meadow I recognize along with the recognizable weeds and am sorting them now. I did not find any one site that had this info, so I’m hoping to compile it all in one post. And looking forward to another month’s progress.

    We still have had lots of snow in Feb, Mar and April here in past years so who knows what the weather will do?

  3. Desiree -

    Thanks for this catch-up snapshot of your garden. It seems to have survived your absence perfectly well! The dill looks so healthy…I really love using dill, but haven’t had too much success getting mine to grow into healthy, bushy plants. They tend to end up spindly and then just fall over 🙁 I love wild violets…and your daffodils look promising. Those I tried growing in my garden were eaten by the moles!

  4. Sue Langley -

    Thanks, Mouse!
    Desiree, I think the trick with this dill was t let it seed on it’s own…also it’s in the shade much of the day. Baby’s tears also grows in this spot, so there must be more moisture than other spots. Before I grew dill in this pot and had the same experience as you, tall and spindly.

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