Showing posts with label Texas gardening. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Texas gardening. Show all posts

Friday, September 2, 2016

Ways to Support Garden Birds in Times of Drought

Here at Catnip Cottage, the headquarters for the Earthly Gardener blog, we are all about the birds, bees and other little critters and are always looking for easy things we can do to support wildlife.

Cardinals LOVE black sunflower seeds!

That's why I enjoyed this short article from Horticulture magazine. Take a look; it's a short read with some easy ways to support garden birds in the time of drought.

http://www.hortmag.com/headline/ways-support-garden-birds-times-drought

Since my surgery and subsequent *hospital-acquired* infection, I've been avoiding a lot of the heavy garden work. But I was finally able to plant some fall cukes and squash this week. So some progress was made, although a tiny bit. That's why I love my galvanized tub garden and raised wooden bed; it's so easy to bop outside, poke a few seeds in the ground, then bop back inside without a lot of fuss. :-)

Sometimes that's all you can hope for. :-)

Happy gardening!

bobbi c.

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Pollinator Gardens--A Guest Post by Debbie Burns

Dear friends,

Today I have another guest blog post article by my dear friend, Debbie Burns.  Debbie lives in north Texas on her Beulah Land farm, with her husband John.  She shared a bit about her chickens with us last week in an article titled Let the Chickens do the Digging.

Here, she talks a bit about her Pollinator Gardens and shares a few more photos with us.  It's important these days to plant things to support our native pollinators.  So many of them are destroyed by agricultural chemicals, damaging weather, etc.

Hope you are inspired to plant a few plants in your garden that attract pollinators!

Pollinator Gardens

by Debbie Burns

When we decided to convert to Wild Life Conservation for our land Ag Exemption we had no idea how much it would impact our lives.  One of our goals was to create Pollinator Gardens to feed and nourish all kind of pollinators, not just butterflies or hummingbirds.

Since there is no water source in our pastures we wanted to test the Pollinator Garden idea in our yard, convenient to the water spigot with easy access for maintenance. We designed one in the front, the South Pollinator Garden, and one on the side, the West Pollinator Garden. Again, these were test gardens so we decided to not spend a lot in set up. We had some old landscape timbers – yes, I know they’re not food safe by any means, but they were already here and paid for – to edge the gardens and hold down landscape fabric or cardboard.

pollinator garden, Texas native plants, garden pollinators, hummingbirds, zinnias
The West Pollinator Garden

 We used the cardboard to mulch around the plants, on wet ground, then added pine bark mulch on top to make it look better. Surrounding the garden area I have a width of landscape fabric with stepping stones to hold it down. This was to prevent the yard Bermuda from taking over the garden area. So far that has worked well.  I still need to put pine bark mulch on top of the landscape fabric but that has fallen to the bottom of the budget list. Since this is the first year for the plants I’ve had to water them regularly. I’m hoping that won’t be needed next year as their root system grows.


native Texas plants, pollinator gardens, north Texas gardening, Debbie Burns
The West Pollinator Garden showing walkway around the perimeter
I purchased the plants for the South Pollinator Garden – butterfly bush (which was the only one that died), yarrow, esperenza, orange lantana, tansy, white salvia, Purple Homestead verbena, lemon verbena, achillea Pink and two stevia herb plants. Even thought these plants are labeled for full sun, they haven’t done as well as the same plants in the West garden that gets partial shade.

A friend invited me over to dig from her native plant collection. On her recommendation I purchased the Native Texas Plants book, which is fantastic. Most of her plants went into the West Pollinator Garden – daylily, lantana, salvia, sensitivity plant. I also purchased German chamomile and blue salvia that is outdoing itself in there.

I transplanted zinnias I  seeded inside, but the self-seeded zinnia from last year out-did all the other plants in attracting the hummingbirds and butterflies to the West Garden. The hummingbirds flit from the flowers to the feeder hanging close-by on the clothes pole.

South Pollinator Garden

So how did these two simple gardens change our lives?  It’s amazing how much time we spend watching the birds and butterflies zoom in and out around the gardens---especially the West garden with those bright red zinnias. At one time we counted eight hummingbirds buzzing around and we’ve seen swarms of butterflies hovering over the flowers. Wasps and mud daubers come to dig in the mud to build their nests.

The South Pollinator Garden has a shallow dish to supply water for the pollinators also.

South Pollinator Garden
As we’ve sat at the kitchen table, looking out on the West Pollinator Garden, we’ve seen so many different colors of hummingbirds, butterflies and dragonflies. We’ve also seen blue birds, cardinals, swallows and many other birds come up to our yard that have not been there in prior years. We didn’t realize the Pollinator Gardens would draw up so many different types of birds.

Swing beside the West Pollinator Garden

 We’ve found we’re enjoying our yard so much more than in past years, spending time on the porch swing beside the West Garden or walking out tending the plants in both gardens. I guess the Pollinator Gardens have drawn us up to them as well!

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Sunday, April 27, 2008

Brrr! AGAIN!

Dear gardening friends,

I managed to finally get some EZ cedar fence picket beds filled with that great Garden-Ville humus and cedar mulch, and went out this morning to work out there and it was COLD! This is very unusual for this time of year here in Central TX. I know my new bell pepper and tomato plants will be shiverin' for sure! I told Husband it was better than working out in 120-degree heat, though.

I'm thinking that with this cooler weather, maybe I should go ahead and risk planting more lettuce and cold weather greens seeds. Couldn't hurt, right? The worst that can happen is that it'll get hot, they'll bolt, and I can either eat them bitter or compost them. I think it's worth a shot.

I still have to get pics of the new garden set-up. I'm SO behind!

dig it!

bobbi c.

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

tomatoes!

Dear friends,

It's been a while since I posted here. We've had torrential rains for days and days. The weeds are knee-high, the grasshoppers are voracious, but the plants are happy! You might remember I talked about the EarthBox I bought. I finally harvested a handful of ripe, juicy cherry tomatoes from it yesterday. I'm sold on those Earthboxes! The plants are much healthier than the ones I put out in the raised beds, and even though I have to add water to the box even when it rains, they are relatively maintenance free.

All we had to do was tie up the huge vines to the porch!

Now all I need is an extra burst of energy to haul a few loads of mulch to smother those weeds!

Dig it!

bobbi c.