Category Archives: the Lot

Planting Spring Bulbs

ColorBlends BulbsDuring the Garden Bloggers’ Fling in Toronto this past spring, bloggers were gifted a complimentary order of bulbs from Colorblends. We were able to choose from several pre-grouped selections. Since the Lot suffers from late winter blooms, I chose a late winter / early spring blend.

Basic Guidelines for Planting Spring Bulbs

Spring Bulb Assortment

Spring-flowering bulbs should be planted the previous fall. In our Zone 6a, most spring-flowering bulbs should be in the ground before Halloween, October 31st. As a general rule, it is best to plant bulbs in an area of the garden with good drainage so the bulbs do not rot. There are areas on the Lot saturated with water during the spring thaw. I’ve tried to steer clear of those areas when choosing locations for early-spring and spring bulbs.

When planting the 200+ bulbs, I used the above bulb planter because most did not need to be planted deeper than 3″. The notches on the side of this tool made for quick work as I could push the tools into the ground, twist, and remove a plug of dirt and sod to plant the bulb. After placing the bulb and replacing the soil and sod, all the planting sites were watered.

Which End is Which?

Does it matter which end of the bulb is facing upward when planted? Not really. A bulb planted upside down will eventually find its way toward the surface because of gravitropism, a growth response plants have to gravity.

Winter Aconite (Eranthis cilicica)

Winterling-Bluete-70.jpg
Winterling-Bluete-70“. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Commons.

My friend Miss A introduced me to this very early bloom, but I had yet to plant some on the Lot. Another common name for this plant is winter wolfsbane. Winter aconite, part of the buttercup (Ranunculaceae) family, can grow from Zones 4-7. A frost tolerant plant, it can even be found peaking up out of receding snow cover. According to the Missouri Botanical Gardens, it is “native to western and central Asia (Turkey to Afghanistan)” where the little yellow flowers are found carpeting forest floors.

Winter Aconite BulbWinter Aconite is classified as a spring ephemeral, having a growth habit of woodland perennial plants. Spring ephemerals take advantage of the sunshine available when the canopy of the forest is not yet fully leafed out. Aconite grows quickly, producing foliage, bloom, and seed before the sunshine is no longer available. Then it dies back to the bulb and roots.

Where to Plant Winter Aconite

Bulbs like well-drained soil, preferably hummus-rich which is similar to forest floors. The plant should receive full sun for at least 6 hours. Since they only grow 2-3 inches tall, winter aconite looks great in borders or beneath trees and shrubs.

How to Plant Winter Aconite

Winter aconite bulbs should be planted 3″ beneath the soil and 2-3″ apart.

Glory of the Snow (Chinodoxa luciliae)

Glory of the Snow.JPG
Glory of the Snow“. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Commons.

This six-petaled star-like flower is native to the mountainsides of western Turkey. Glory of the Snow is also a very early spring-blooming flower and can be grown in Zones 3-8. Glory of the Snow is so similar to Squill (see below) both plants used to belong to the genus Scilla.

Glory fo the Snow Bulb

Where to Plant Glory of the Snow

Glory of the Snow grows best in areas of full sun to part shade with well-drained soil. The plant is great for naturalizing, so lawns, hillsides, rock gardens, and woodland gardens are fun places to plant them en-mass. When it is time to give the lawn its first mow, the plants’ foliage will have already died back for the season.

How to Plant Glory of the Snow

Glory of the Snow bulbs should be planted 3″ beneath the soil and 2-3″ apart.

Tommies (Crocus tommasinianus)

Crocus tommasinianus (Xytram).jpg
Crocus tommasinianus (Xytram)” by Martyn M aka MartyxOwn work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Commons.

One of the earliest blooming crocus, tommies are native to Balkans, Hungary, Bulgaria, Serbia, Montenegro. They can be grown in Zones 3-8. These early spring bloomers belong to the Crocus genus and Iridaceae family. The Iridaceae include iris, freesia, crocus, and gladiolas, with each plant’s leaves being grass-like.

Crocus Bulb

Tommies are named after the botanist Muzio G. Spirito de Tommasini. Not true bulbs, tommies are instead a corm, or underground stem that serves as the storage organ for the plant.

Where to Plant Tommies

Tommies can be planted in full sun to part shade in well drained soil. Like Glory of the Snow, they can naturalize in lawns and woodland gardens.

How to Plant Tommies

Tommies should be planted 3-4″ beneath the soil and 3″ apart.

Blue Squill (Scilla siberica)

Blausternchen 2.jpg
Blausternchen 2” by Heike Löchel – fotografiert von Heike Löchel. Licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 de via Commons.

This blue, bell-like woodland flower is already planted on the Lot. I fell for this flower when I discovered it one spring in Miss A’s neighborhood, creating a carpet of blue across a tree covered lawn. I planted some right into the lawn opposite the drive from the alley bed.

Siberian Squil Bulb

Blue squill, also known as wood squill or siberian squill, is native to southwestern Russia, the Caucasus, and Turkey. It is extremely cold hardy and can be grown in Zones 2-8. Blue squill belongs to the family Liliaceae.

Where to Plant Blue Squill

Like Glory of the Snow and Tommies, Squill can naturalize lawns and woodland gardens.

How to Plant Blue Squill

Squill should be planted 2-3″ beneath the soil and 2-3″ apart.

Tete-a-tete Daffodil (Narcissus ‘Tete-a-tete’)

Unlike the above spring blooms I planted, this miniature daffodil is a specific cultivar or type of flower bred and engineered by man. I found many websites trying to sell me the bulb, but not many willing to share its origin story.

Mini Daffodil Bulb

The tete-a-tete daffodil can be grown in Zones 5-8 and tops out in height at a mere 7″.

Where to Plant Daffodils

Tete-a-tete daffodils are to be planted in areas of full sun. Being a shorter daffodil, they can be used to edge perennial beds, grouped together in rock gardens, or planted in containers and window boxes.

How to Plant Daffodils

Tete-a-tete daffodils should be planted 4″ deep.

Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day – October 2015

This fall season has been warm so far and many of the plants blooming last month continue to bloom this month as well. In Loki’s bed the lavender Lavandula (planted this season), coral bell, Indian Feather Guara lindheimeri ‘Passionate Blush’ (transplanted from fence bed), violas, and the little yellow tea rose are all still blooming.

guara and viola

The hyssop is continuing to bloom in the fence bed while the tall garden phlox is beginning to fade. The joe pye weed purchased this season has seemed to rebound and has burst into tiny, white blooms.

joe pye weed

They are not necessarily blooms, but the false indigo in the fence bed has its cool seed pods that rattle when brushed past. These make great accents in Halloween bouquets.

false indigo seedheads

The maiden hair grass in the fence bed has lovely seed heads forming as well. Around its base the lamium is blooming as always and the toad lilies on the other side of the door are blooming.

maidenhair grass

The plumbago continues to bloom in the backyard bed, but we’ve now had a handful of cool enough nights to trigger the color change in the foliage.

plumbago

The burning bush is beginning to ignite with color.

burning bush

And the smoke bush in the front, south bed is shifting hues as well.

smoke bush

This fall and winter are predicted to be mild, so it will be interesting to see what the next few Bloom Days bring. Remember to stop by May Dreams Gardens to “ooo and ahhh” over all the pretty blooms around the world for October.

Eight-legged Garden Guests

So… I am not one to say I suffer from arachnophobia. I’d instead like to say I have a healthy respect for spiders and prefer to give them their space. They are fascinating creatures, as long as they stay put in the garden and do not drop down on top of me while I’m working outside. If they do that, I have been known to shriek and run away across the yard while wildly flailing my arms.

When I was outside today snapping  “this is what the garden looks like at this time of year” photos, I also took pictures of a few spiders. Over the labor day weekend, I noticed an overabundance of spiders in the backyard spinning webs that looked like funnels. I had seen one of these on a pepper plant a few seasons ago. This season Charlotte must have been having a reunion back there because I’d never seen so many in the garden at one time. Then today when I found yet another type of spider I decided to finally look up these creepy crawlers.

Funnel web spider (Agelenopsis spp.)

This first spider is the species I noticed everywhere on the Lot, especially in the backyard. What’s so noticeable about them is they do not spin what I think of as a “traditional” spider web. Instead, their web appears like a thin sheet of semi-transparent tissue that decreases down into a distinct tunnel.

091815-funnelWebSpider

These guys are Grass Spiders or Funnel Web Spiders. According to the MSU Integrated Pest Management website, they belong to the larger funnel weaver family called Agelenidae and are important predators in the garden. The spider will wait back in the tunnel out of sight for vibrations to signal something has landed on the non-sticky web. It will then rush out and either pounce on the prey or realize it was a false alarm (aka a curious gardener) and retreat to the back of the tunnel to hide.

Here’s a closer look at  the spider above. I believe it is a female. According to a graduate student at Ohio State University, a male’s palps make him appear he is wearing boxing gloves.

091815-funnelWebSpiderClosup

Araneus diadematus

The second spider I noticed had spun the “classic” geometric wheel-like web between two blooms of a potted coleus. He or she was hanging out, head downward, in the center of his/her web. This one was orange-brown and I hadn’t seen it before on the Lot.

091815-crossOrbweaver

Thanks to the Animal Diversity Web, a project of the University of Michigan, I was able to ID this spider as a Cross Orbweaver. These little ones have the traditional sticky webs that insects get caught up in. Also, this group of spiders are known to consume their webs and rebuild them each day. Overachievers. Here is the close-up.

091815-crossOrbweaverCloseup

But Will the Spider Bite Me?

Most homeowners are concerned spiders will either:

  1. bite them
  2. bite their children, or
  3. invade their homes.

Spiders do not eat people in Zone 6a. They eat bugs.

With that said, spiders may bite if you try to grab ahold of them. Most wild creatures do. If children try to pull off their legs, the kiddies will more than likely be bit. Those children should  be committed because they will probably grow up to be serial killers. (This last statement is solely the gardener’s honest opinion… just sayin’.)

Spiders also do not make a habit of entering a home, even when spinning webs near the foundation, if there are plenty of insects outside to lunch upon. The majority of spiders’ lifespans end with the arrival of our winter freezes and snowfall. The egg sacs are what winter-over to the next season, delivering a whole new staff of natural pest control to the garden.