The pests may well be the end of me!
Every year is a struggle against mealybugs and now the mole who comes charging under my root systems, but good golly gracious, does this year seem like they ramped up and conspired to take over my gardens!
AND not only them, but the caterpillars! Oh the caterpillars! They are horrendous this year and it feels like I am in a losing battle.
I've tried insecticidal soap and neem oil sprays, but it seems to just come down to having to hand pluck them from the plants 😑 Yeah, so THAT's fun! 😑
And then there's the rain.
We got dumped on in the beginning of June ... the ground was so saturated that it wouldn't drain in certain spots. I actually completely lost my little pebble path on the right because standing water plunged it under mud.
And then the mazus reptans took over and I had a little Secret Garden look going!
Yeah, that's supposed to be the path in between those two stones!
(These photos below are about a week apart, showing how full and fluffy the groundcover filled in!)
At least the elephant ears are doing wonderfully!
And yay little mini chrysanthemums!
Then there's the newer "experimental" and "overflow" and "semi-forsaken" side of the garden...
I have let grow, what I was pretty sure were cardinal flowers.
I love cardinal flowers. I discovered them years ago when first doing research for my "10 year garden plan". Two years ago I finally found one at the nursery!
I put it in a large pot and enjoyed the gorgeous red.
I was stunned last year when the same red showed up in this then-nothing-but-weeds section! My guess is birds helped with that transplant...?
Well, this year, like nearly every other perennial I put in pots, the original cardinal flower didn't come back. Rough winter.
So I took my chances on what I thought I remembered looking like cardinal flowers and behold! I was right!
Little red buds are a'poppin'!
On multiple stalks!
I also believe that I am growing other tall variations of weeds.
Again - it's my experimental section, so it's the one place that I let them grow and since it's pretty shady, they tend to shoot up reaching for sun.
I will likely decide that they are weeds and it's time to pull them out right about the time that they are putting out weed seeds. And next year we'll start all over again.
This is the very effective, scientific process of my gardening.
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Well, this past weekend was literally my definition of perfect weather, so I was out all day and got most of what I wanted to get done in the shade bed.
Weeding, bug control, spraying vines, fertilizing, cleaning out dead stuff, pulling out overgrown groundcover, and rescuing my poor pebble paths (though I still didn't re-do the sunken one; just at least got the groundcover off of it!) Oh...and watered. Because, yes...we're now in like day 9 of no rain. Go figure. Feast or famine...no middle ground here!
Cute little speckled sun area over groundcover and moss...and the sad spot where my main columbine was decimated by caterpillars earlier this spring and I don't think it's coming back :-(
(especially not after the mole ran his little inconsiderate fluffball self right underneath what were probably already psycho fragile roots! 😑 )
Here's hoping next year...?!
The good news is that I had divided it in the fall and while caterpillars did get to all of the others, I apparently rescued them in time and they've all put out new green leaves. Phew! I haven't totally failed my friend's legacy plants!
Better, much better!
Not to get all philosophical on what is intended to be a largely humorous blog, but I did have a realization after Saturday clean-up was done and Sunday was hammock-laying observation of the beautiful yard...
I had started to resent this little piece of paradise.
It was my ONE success!
It brings beauty and happiness, basically all by itself, every year!
But this year the pests are atrocious and I'm stressing about not spraying stuff because the bumblebees are out and then there's the vines coming from the neighbor's yard through the fence and bringing more mealybugs with it and probably mosquito and tick infestations too and the columbine is gone and the groundcover is overrun and the mole is destroying things and the water isn't draining and I haven't touched it in a month because it rained every weekend and then we were busy and...and...and...
And it's beautiful.
It really still is.
I let my stress overshadow a reality.
I projected my struggles onto this little section of nature.
And nature won.
Sure, I helped a bit doing the clean-up and pest control and filling dirt, etc., etc.
But just taking a little time to get it a tiny bit more "under control", then stepping back and taking pictures, and suddenly the calmness this little garden brings was back.
No, all the problems aren't solved, but dang it - it's still pretty stinkin' beautiful, with or without me!