Archive for Ornamental grasses

It’s Almost Summer 2026

Hi All! It’s been more than a minute since I’ve blogged — sorry about that! Life in general has been keeping me busy, and when that happens it is so hard to get a chance to concentrate. Let me catch you up with all that’s been going on. January started out with some absolutely gorgeous sunrises and sunsets, and I was feeling hopeful about getting out into the garden early this year for some cleanup. Then this happened:

Yep, Ice Station Zebra! We were housebound in the thickest ice coating I have seen in years. The ice was six inches to a foot thick. When you walked on it, it didn’t even leave a footprint. I even put on my ice skates thinking the front yard might make a good ice rink, but no, too bumpy and ice too chunky. It took a few weeks to even find where the walkway was to chip our way out of the house with picks and garden forks.

While I was stuck inside fighting cabin fever (LOL), I was lucky to have the chance to pack away all the Christmas decor and launch in on several upholstery projects. Doing my best to be Earth-friendly, I have been following the mantra of updating things we already have, and nothing new but essentials. I slip covered this great chair that was one of the first pieces of furniture my parents bought after they got married. My sister got the chair when my mom downsized. She and her husband were building a new house, so I got to work on re-upholstering it as a house warming gift.

Given how crazy life has been, somehow I didn’t get a final photo of the front — but here’s a photo of the side, so please use your imagination. It came out really perfect for their main bedroom, and I made some pillows to match. This a great Earth-friendly way of reusing, and also making things fit in with the the way we live today.

Once I finished with that project, I made a few things for our own house. I made slipcovers for one of my most treasured pieces, a loveseat, a chair from my grandparents’ home, and an ottoman from my husband’s great aunt. I also made a pillow and slipcovers for two rosewood chairs. Was I on a roll or what?

I also covered the piano bench with some gorgeous velvet from my mother-in-law’s fabric stash!

These summertime slipcovers just button on, so they’re easy to swap out for the seasons. I have to say that my sweet “Home Ec” teacher from long-ago high school days, Mrs. Tibbs, was on my mind while I was sewing. She taught us so many practical things that stuck with me, I send my many thanks to her in heaven. As I finished up with these projects, I was hoping to get outside and start my spring clean up in the garden — but the ice stuck around for more than a month! At long last, in late March, I finally got outside, and barely got all the perennials trimmed back, before new growth started to pop out. What a gorgeous spring!

Garden tip #1. Banana Water – The first flush of roses were absolutely perfect. Last summer I started giving them banana water. It made a great difference in the strength of the roses’ branching, color, and health this year. It’s easy to make, too — just put your banana peels in your watering can, fill it with water, let it sit over night (or longer), and water the root zone with it. You can leave the peels in the can for week or two, and keep reusing it. Once the peels have gotten mushy go ahead and dig them into the garden where ever you want to improve the soil. Your plants will love you for it! I always love finding a use for something I would have thrown away otherwise.

The hollies, iris, and peonies all loved the banana water, too. It’s a really nice shot of potassium for the root zone.

Tip #2. Coffee grounds – I also scatter the morning’s coffee grounds each day under a different plant. I’ve done that for many years now, and I can’t say enough good things about it. It has improved the soil and is better than any slow release fertilizer I’ve ever used.

After the intensely bleak winter we had, I was worried that my prized cherry tree wouldn’t make it, but I was thrilled to see that every branch had buds. Despite the devastating fungus that I been battling since we moved here some 26 years ago, her bark is healing nicely. She looked absolutely glamorous for Easter, and we saw more than a few people taking family photos under her pink shade. That made me very happy.

Tip #3. Soapy water (yes, really!) — I had been using an over-the-counter fungicide, literally painting it onto the entire trunk, working it into the crevasses in the bark, but lately I switched to mixing up dish soap and water in my watering can, and pouring that onto each trunk. The tree revived and even thrived with new growth. The soap mixture sticks to the bark and discourages insects, too.

Tip #4. Wire landscape hoops — If you love ornamental grasses as much as I do, but have a hard time getting the mower underneath the mountain of beautiful grass leaves, this tip is for you! After trimming down the grasses in the spring, measure the circumference of the grass and add a few more inches. Cut the length of landscape wire fencing (I like to use the 2 foot high, green coated wire), and make a hoop to go around the grass. Once the grass is around 3 feet high put the hoop on the grass, being careful to get all the long leaves around the edge straight up. This clears the underneath so you can mow right up to the garden edge. The grasses grow another 3 feet on mine and within a couple of weeks you can’t even see the wire hoop. Here’s some photos of mine, up close and at a distance.

Tip #5. Vick’s Vapo Rub to keep squirrels away — Yes! I have tried everything imaginable to keep these cute but aggressive critters from ruining my flower pots, and nothing had worked. I read on an internet site that smearing the outside edge of the pots with Vick’s works. Since I had tried so many things, I was skeptical, but much to my surprise it’s working! I put a lot of it on the edge and down the side a bit. It does stink, so set the pots a few feet away from chairs, but it works! It also has stopped slugs and even ants from invading, so I’m calling this one a win! Now my flowers are starting to grow back and fill in. Yay!

Well that’s it for now, and I’ll try not to be away so long in the future. Happy Gardening everyone!

Autumn House and Garden Tour 2024

To me Autumn is all about pumpkins, fall leaves, candles, and warm colors. I just love all the different shapes, colors, and varieties of decorative gourds. I have been collecting them for decades now, and I love to use them all over the house, even outside. Most of mine are either paper mâché or resin, and last forever, which is important to the Earthgirl in me to be able to reuse over and over again. While I love decorating for each season, I have to be careful from going overboard, as my entire pumpkin/gourd collection fills two large storage bins when packed away.

I love to mix them up. Each year I fill bowls with small ones, as well as use them in lanterns, around candles, in stacks, and on fireplace hearths from Labor Day until Thanksgiving. Here are a few photos from this year’s display at our home.

Choosing interesting bowls that have fun colors relating to the season is the key. This vintage one was my grandmother’s, so it’s very special to me.

These two Bordallo green cabbage designs are some of my favorite pottery pieces, and they really set off the pumpkin colors.

Here are two of my favorite paper mâché gourds on the family room mantle. I embellished a few of them with fall leaves to bring together the color scheme. I love them with a mix of candles. The more eclectic the grouping, the better, in my opinion. All of my candlestick holders are either inherited or thrifted from shops, or estate sales– I love them all!

In the photo below are decorative lanterns on the mantle in the game room. Tip: when you decorate the inside of lanterns, be sure to use battery candles so you don’t have a fire risk.

Of course, on Halloween a witch stopped by and helped me hand out candies to the Trick-or-Treaters, and even one of my pumpkins got in the holiday spirit and dressed up!

On the front porch, I created a stack of gourds inside old tomato cages for each side of the door. Just turn the cages upside down and bind the ends together with copper wire to form a cone shape, then fill with gourds. I added stakes to hold them in place in the pots during the fall winds. They are large enough to be seen from the street and make a big autumn impact.

But enough of my gourd obsession for now! Let’s move into the gardens. Here’s the east garden before the leaves started to fall. I love to watch the leaves turn their spectacular colors, but this year, because of the drought, you could blink and miss them. I felt lucky to catch a few pictures.

In the back garden, where there are many ornamental grasses with plumes and plants with berries, this is the season that they really come to life. It was a challenge to keep the grasses hydrated this year, so I’m thrilled that they made it through. The nandinas and hollies this autumn are beautiful and loaded with berries, which is a testament to their resilience after such a hard summer.

In this changing climate the poor pear tree is really struggling this season; it hardly produced any of its tiny pears. The birds and squirrels love to eat them, and they’ve been coming around to snack but not finding any. In a normal year, it would not be an exaggeration to say there were close to a million pears on this tree, with hundreds of tiny pears on each of the branches.

Lastly, on the deck, I opted for violas this fall because they reliably bloom all winter, and even into the spring if I’m lucky. I have them all in pots, so if we are predicted for snow I can easily bring them into the garage and back out when the weather clears.

That’s the end of my tour, I’d love to hear what you are doing in your gardens-

I hope all my readers have a wonderful and healthy Thanksgiving, and as always, Happy Gardening!

Making the Most of the Weirdest Weather Ever

Wild weather going from 70's to 20's with thunder, snow and hail, then back to sun- breaking records almost every day.

Wild weather going from 70’s to 20’s with thunder, snow and hail, then back to sun- breaking records almost every day.

We are having some truly crazy weather here in Mount Vernon. Over the last week, we have had a daily high of 74 degrees and a daily high 38 degrees; snow, hail, sun, and rain; and three or four days with 60+ mile an hour winds! It seems like we are having records broken every day. You never know what will be in store from one minute to the next.

I’ve been making the most of the nice days and getting lots done in the garden. There have been some interesting things — and some not so — but it’s been great to just be outside soaking it all in. Here are a few things that I’m doing here that I hope will be a useful reminder to you in your gardens.

An easy fix for mature grasses with a bare center- read all about it here!

An easy fix for mature grasses with a bare center — read all about it here!

When we’ve had a nice afternoon here and there, I managed to get at least one or two ornamental grasses trimmed down. With more than a dozen out in the garden, this is the most time consuming of all of the cutting-back tasks.  Mature grasses always start to die back in the middle after a few years, and it can start to look like a doughnut with all the growth around the edge and bare in the center. I have a tip for working with these: If you have a saws-all you can use a long blade to cut around the inner circle and remove it. This will dull the blade, but just keep it for this duty — makes it so much easier to cut out the fibrous, tough center. The bare center then can be then easily be filled in with a chunk of fresh, new growth from the outer edge, making the plant good as new.

These grasses can grow to be more than three feet in diameter in just a few years, so an alternative would be to divide it in fourths (or more) and turn one plant into many. Gardener’s gold! I have seven of them trimmed down now, so I’m well on my way. And — once you have finished trimming down the tops, don’t forget to clean out the old leaves and debris that settle in to the center during the course of the previous year. It will make the crown of the plant much healthier, and as a bonus it will look much nicer, too.

First Spring flowers are already blooming! Time to scratch up the mulch and enjoy the fresh Earth scent!

First spring flowers are already blooming! Time to scratch up the mulch and enjoy the fresh Earth scent!

Now that we are starting to have warmer days, I like to stir up the mulch. It can become so compacted over the winter when it freezes and thaws. By stirring it up, it is much more porous so the spring rains can more easily soak in. It also makes the mulch look fresh and nice.

This is also the perfect time to check on emerging bulbs and perennials. I like to take the time to clear out the branches and leaves that have blown in, and give the garden beds a good edge for the upcoming growing season. Another tip — use your senses to evaluate your soil. It should have a beautiful fresh earth scent, as you stir it up. If it doesn’t, remember where and return with some nice compost to stir in when the soil has warmed. Ditto that if you see an area where rain ponds up, or there is moss or heavy clay.

The roses are already sprouting leaves in this warm weather- time for a major pruning.

The roses are already sprouting leaves in this warm weather — time for a major pruning.

Right now is the perfect time of the year to trim up rose bushes. Leave five or so main branches, and cut out any that cross. Make your cut about 12-18″ up the branch just above an outward facing leaf bud.

Last year I heard a new tip and really like it: sprinkle cinnamon on the soil surrounding the rosebush about a foot in diameter. It keeps fungus at bay. It really works. I had no black spot at all on the leaves of the bushes where I did this.

On to a reminder about some of the ugly necessities in the garden. After 17 years, we are replacing the A/C system. I wish they lasted longer, but even though we have ours serviced every year, there are only so many years of life in them. Here’s a tip I’ve mentioned before, but bears repeating: make sure to trim any bushes or hedging back so that the unit has at least a couple of feet of breathing room around it. You will have perfect air circulation around the unit and the technicians will have room to service it.  Thank goodness for that invention, makes life so much more enjoyable!

I also made some progress clearing out a space to dedicate for storing my recycling bins and trashcan. It’s a little more visible than I’d like, so I’m still thinking about what I might do differently to improve on it.

On an exceptional day last week, we took a field trip to Mt. Vernon Estate, just down the street. More on that next time!

On an exceptional day last week, we took a field trip to Mt. Vernon Estate, just down the street. More on that next time!

In between some more wild weather, we had a beautiful day to take a field trip to George Washington’s home, Mt. Vernon. I’ll be writing the next blog on some really inventive gardening tips from there that are still valid today!

I hope you’ve been able to get out in the garden on your good days, and may we have many more to come. Enjoy!

 

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