so I moved a long time ago. you can find me at
https://nuthouseweb.wordpress.com/
come join the fun
there will be flowers
comments from a obsessive and creative gardener and do-it-yourselfer
Join me on my Garden and DIYJounery
My husband and I recently bought a early 1900's Foursquare house in North Dakota that was flooded 2011. Yeah, crazy! There was 10' of water sitting on the property for a month. So beside needing to reconstruct the main floor and basement ourselves. I'm dying to get to the fun of starting a beautiful garden. I'm beginning with a yard that only has some large deciduous trees, a few violets, ox-eyed daisies and lilies of the valley that survive the disaster. My last garden was in full of sun with few tree. It was also rather large with clay soil. This will be a big change from the last 15 years of gardening. So come and join me as I try to create a beautiful place to experience from the beginning.
Thursday, May 31, 2018
Monday, May 27, 2013
Spring: great garden expetations and new starts
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| Pansies harbingers of Spring |
This year was a hard winter in the north. The snow covered the ground forever, never melting completely between storms. I spent most of the season hiding in my house in North Dakota "pinning" beautiful pictures of gardens on Pinterest.
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| view out of front door early May |
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| daylilies and common yarrow |
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| arbor in back yard- California |
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| Front yard in California |
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| Lilacs in front-California |
My other home is in a very rural, remote, dry and cold part of California. Its a few miles from the Nevada boarder and less than an hour from the Oregon boarder, that's right, in the comer where there is nothing on the map. It sits at an elevation of 4652 feet, clay soil, and little rain fall. USDA says it's zone 5 but Sunset Magazine says it's zone 1, they do have different systems. North Dakota have some thing in common with this part of the California but North Dakota is colder by far. This will be my second year trying to get something beautiful growing here in North Dakota.
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front flower bed after thaw early May- North Dakota |
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same flower bed May 27th filling in fast- North Dakota
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This spring in North Dakota I have been planting tender petunias a few week after I planted my pansies. That was unheard of in my Callie (California) garden. In my Callie garden pansies went in around early April, but you waited and waited, sometimes till mid June before putting in petunias, due to erratic frosts. An elderly lady friend told me not plant petunias or tomatoes till the Locusts trees bloomed because of the frosts and I must say she was right. The ground in North Dakota was frozen solid in the first week of May and in my new garden, when things warmed up the following weeks with low's in the 40's, I planned the petunias. I've planted some other things that I hope to talk about on the next blogs.
Thanks for reading,
Lorin
Lorin
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