|
What's funny about privet in the southeast is that it's super invasive and naturally forms a messy boundary of sorts between most rural properties. I'm sure if you maintained it it would be much prettier though.
|
# ? Apr 15, 2021 18:59 |
|
|
# ? May 30, 2024 04:32 |
|
Fitzy Fitz posted:What's funny about privet in the southeast is that it's super invasive and naturally forms a messy boundary of sorts between most rural properties. I'm sure if you maintained it it would be much prettier though. Yeah this + whatever show I was watching about Ye Olde English Farme made me think about it. We don’t really have the hazel? Or whatever gets used for hedgerows in Europe but we sure have privet. Maybe yaupon or wax myrtle would work as native options? Weave a little devils walking stick in for extra fun. Honestly I think any attempt at making a hedgerow in the SE would be abandoned after it got completely choked by blackberry and greenbriar and would murder anyone who tried to clean it up.
|
# ? Apr 15, 2021 20:02 |
|
I recently discovered that there's an insane amount of work and skill that went into maintaining those feild boundaries: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WoprVhpOKIk
|
# ? Apr 15, 2021 20:23 |
|
Bi-la kaifa posted:I recently discovered that there's an insane amount of work and skill that went into maintaining those feild boundaries: drat cool vid, thank you
|
# ? Apr 16, 2021 00:23 |
|
I. M. Gei posted:Funny you say this! We had a water oak pop up out of nowhere in our front yard a few years ago, practically in the same exact spot as an earlier (different kind of) oak tree that we had to cut down awhile before that. My dad, being a “live-and-let-live” semi-hippie type of guy, didn’t want to cut the water oak down because he had wanted to put a new oak tree in that spot anyway, and with this one magically appearing there on it’s own, he considered it to be — and I’m quoting him directly here — a “little gift from God” (he’s pretty religious like that, although thankfully not in a bad conservative way). Well Dad changed his mind again and now he doesn’t want to cut down the water oak. Apparently it’s growing new branches to replace the ones that died. Good news is I have some Roundup left over from when I had to clear out a place in our jasmine bed to plant a dogwood tree several months ago. Maybe I’ll grab my hand-pump sprayer and play a little game of After-Dark Angel of Death with it.
|
# ? Apr 16, 2021 00:31 |
|
Kaiser Schnitzel posted:Yeah this + whatever show I was watching about Ye Olde English Farme made me think about it. We don’t really have the hazel? Or whatever gets used for hedgerows in Europe but we sure have privet. Maybe yaupon or wax myrtle would work as native options? Weave a little devils walking stick in for extra fun. Honestly I think any attempt at making a hedgerow in the SE would be abandoned after it got completely choked by blackberry and greenbriar and would murder anyone who tried to clean it up. Actually this reminds me of a similar idea I had. Eastern red cedar grows thick like that along fences and roads, and it really encloses an area when it's old. It's definitely not a hedge, but it's close to our equivalent. If I ever have a long driveway I want to line it with cedar.
|
# ? Apr 16, 2021 02:21 |
|
Fitzy Fitz posted:Actually this reminds me of a similar idea I had. Eastern red cedar grows thick like that along fences and roads, and it really encloses an area when it's old. It's definitely not a hedge, but it's close to our equivalent. If I ever have a long driveway I want to line it with cedar. It's neat to me when the plants are all that's left of that history, happily thriving 80 or 100 years after all the people left.
|
# ? Apr 16, 2021 03:11 |
|
Bi-la kaifa posted:I recently discovered that there's an insane amount of work and skill that went into maintaining those feild boundaries: This is incredible, easily the coolest thing I've seen in recent memory.
|
# ? Apr 16, 2021 10:08 |
|
I just put in my first shrubs (a great looking Prunus glandulosa that I couldn't pass up for $30, a Salix integra cv. Hakuro-Nishiki, and some variety of prostrate Cotoneaster adpressus I haven't seen before) and perennials of the year now that the nurseries are opening up and... it decided it might snow today. All of the special expensive daffodils I put in last year have big old buds on them and are about to flower and if this kills them I will be sad. What the gently caress, weather? Kaiser Schnitzel posted:It's neat to me when the plants are all that's left of that history, happily thriving 80 or 100 years after all the people left. Completely unrelated: You were talking about making an effort-post about garden design, and I have been wondering lately what people's general feelings on rocks in gardens are. I have a gravel/rock garden that has always had some larger stone in it, but I recently built a dry-stack retaining wall and I've been distributing some of the remnants of the three pallets of stone used for it in a bunch of the gardens and I'm finding that I'm a big fan of some nicely placed rock in among the plants to add texture. Now I just need to make friends with someone that has construction equipment so I can find somewhere to steal some child-sized boulders to finish it off.
|
# ? Apr 16, 2021 13:20 |
|
Kaiser Schnitzel posted:Sometimes in the woods around here you happen upon a little patch of chinaberry, black locust, wisteria, and maybe a few spider lilies or crinums and it always means it's an old abandoned house site, and don't fall down the well. The rural south used to have waaaaaaay more people in it. You can see this in NorCal hill country. In the 1870s or so there was a lot of homesteading and there was a much larger (and very scattered) population in the hills. You know where are the old farms and homesteads were by the nonnative trees (and iron relics you find in the ground and redwood fence posts, also the wells, some of which are still good). It's usually eucalyptus, palms, and gnarled half-dead orchard trees. It's much more stark in the grasslands, where there will be nothing and then a stand of random out-of-place trees. The houses have long since turned to dust but the trees remain.
|
# ? Apr 16, 2021 18:48 |
|
There are lots of rock features in gardens around me. This is both a product of it being anything but flat, but also they’re great for helping move the water where you need it to go when it rains for all of November and half of December in the PNW. I’ve also seen lots of rock features in New Mexico, also a product of the environment, but still really pretty. Then there’s the patch of river rock right in a section around a raised bed in my yard. I don’t like it, but it helps the water go where it needs to go again so it doesn’t go in my basement. Saying that, rocks can be cool features and give your plants some extra background and really bring the garden together. Just don’t put small rocks in veg garden beds or someone will end up cursing you every single time they try to grow root veg. Big rocks are still cool there too. Especially if they’re big enough to sit on.
|
# ? Apr 16, 2021 19:00 |
|
Back when I worked in field survey, one of our tell tale signs for an old homestead was daffodils. We’d be in the middle of nowhere, miles from anything resembling a road, but if we saw daffodils, we knew that we needed to keep our eyes peeled for the remnants of the old house and especially the uncovered well, no doubt completely hidden by brush
|
# ? Apr 17, 2021 03:21 |
|
Havent thought about that in years but it is very wild to remember that whenever I saw a daffodil I would be like “oh poo poo, this just got real” and radio the rest of my team to keep their eyes peeled for deadly pit falls and other hazards
|
# ? Apr 17, 2021 03:31 |
|
My wine cap brick continues quite well I have two bricks and I think I'm Gunna try and break one up into the mush room patch and grow the other one
|
# ? Apr 17, 2021 05:12 |
|
I love succulents. We got this big rear end cactus I got from my mom. No idea what it is, I think it's a night blooming cereus? Anyways it makes these big rear end blooms only at night, maybe only during full moons, I don't remember Here's a video I took of it blooming https://fckgw.net/share/Cactus_blooms.mp4
|
# ? Apr 17, 2021 06:25 |
|
FCKGW posted:I love succulents. that’s fuckin gorgeous, looks kind of like a cereus— but don’t cereus bloom super rarely? Like once every few years? Or is it that they bloom consistently once they reach maturity, but mature specimens happen to be super rare in cultivation?
|
# ? Apr 17, 2021 08:48 |
|
FCKGW posted:I love succulents. It's definitely a Cereus based on the flowers. Might be hildmannianus? Ok Comboomer posted:Or is it that they bloom consistently once they reach maturity, but mature specimens happen to be super rare in cultivation? I think most of the larger Cereus don't start flowering until they're 5+ years old which is probably what you're thinking of.
|
# ? Apr 17, 2021 15:04 |
|
Ok Comboomer posted:that’s fuckin gorgeous, looks kind of like a cereus— but don’t cereus bloom super rarely? Like once every few years? This guy seems to bloom every year but maybe for only a week or two. It was super easy to grow, we just took a single clipping off my moms plant and stuck it in the ground and now it’s about 6 feet tall a couple years later. Wallet posted:I think most of the larger Cereus don't start flowering until they're 5+ years old which is probably what you're thinking of. I think this is right, we didn’t have any buds appear until after a few years
|
# ? Apr 17, 2021 15:13 |
|
FCKGW posted:I love succulents. Beautiful! I remember when I was ten we were invited over to a family friend's house one night for a party for a cactus finally opening its first bloom at a maturity that had taken something like 20 years to reach. They're something special, all right.
|
# ? Apr 19, 2021 04:29 |
|
Bi-la kaifa posted:I recently discovered that there's an insane amount of work and skill that went into maintaining those feild boundaries: I love everything about this. I want to become a dude with that kind of energy. I might even just get a pipe even if I don't smoke it.
|
# ? Apr 19, 2021 04:56 |
|
This thread has been quiet compared to the gardening thread the last few days. I hope everyone is just too busy doing plant things. I just picked up some new trees (an Amelanchier alnifolia and a Malus sargentii) now that more nurseries are opening up but I'm a little overwhelmed trying to decide what else I want to do with the rest of the new beds I put in. I picked up a Prunus glandulosa at a nursery a couple of weeks ago because it was a nice looking plant and I haven't seen them around here. It's just been dooting along with a bunch of buds on it but they've started to open and I'm getting excited about this little shrub's future. Also a bonus picture of some of the fancy overpriced daffodils I put in last fall (these are cv. Chromacolor):
|
# ? Apr 21, 2021 17:53 |
|
Well drat, we finally bought and planted the 2 Stella cherry trees we've been thinking about since last year. That was 2 weeks ago, which seemed to be after the last frost of the year. But now NC (zone 7b) is getting another freeze warning for tomorrow morning. (30-32 degrees F) I'm not 100% sure how old they are, I think like 1 year, they're about 2-3 feet tall and very skinny. I've already got mulch around the bases. It looks like it will only be tomorrow morning, then the temperature trends upwards again. Should I be worried? I also have 4 young blueberry bushes that I planted last week. A bit less worried about those because they're less expensive and I've already seen other blueberry bushes come back from worse. But these are our first trees.
|
# ? Apr 21, 2021 17:53 |
|
Sir Lemming posted:Well drat, we finally bought and planted the 2 Stella cherry trees we've been thinking about since last year. That was 2 weeks ago, which seemed to be after the last frost of the year. But now NC (zone 7b) is getting another freeze warning for tomorrow morning. (30-32 degrees F) I assume it's a quick freeze; if it's just going to dip down to 30-32 for a few hours and then go back to a normal temperature I wouldn't sweat it too much. Plants that naturally grow in areas where spring can have late freezes tend to either push out foliage later in the season to avoid the issue or be able to handle a late freeze or two without major damage. The soil + mulch will stabilize the temperature for the roots. Sir Lemming posted:I also have 4 young blueberry bushes that I planted last week. A bit less worried about those because they're less expensive and I've already seen other blueberry bushes come back from worse. But these are our first trees. I believe the freeze risk on blueberries is mostly an issue if it hits the blooms so this may depend on the variety you have and how far along they are. I don't think blueberries generally produce a lot the first year in the ground anyway but I am not a blueberry expert (or an anything expert, actually). Wallet fucked around with this message at 18:03 on Apr 21, 2021 |
# ? Apr 21, 2021 18:00 |
|
Sir Lemming posted:Well drat, we finally bought and planted the 2 Stella cherry trees we've been thinking about since last year. That was 2 weeks ago, which seemed to be after the last frost of the year. But now NC (zone 7b) is getting another freeze warning for tomorrow morning. (30-32 degrees F) Hello fellow Stella cherry tree haver! I think it'll probably be okay. The delicate blossom phase is pretty much over at this point, and it's not dropping to hard frost levels of cold. If it hangs below freezing long enough, there might be some damage that'll reduce the amount of cherries you get, but it seems that probably won't stay cold long enough for significant damage. Since your trees are so small, you could tent them with burlap - water them so the mulch is damp and then cover with burlap. The damp mulch will help regulate the temp under the burlap and the trees will be protected from icy wind. When we got hit with that really cold freeze (sub-25) right when blossoms were developing, we wrapped our much larger Stella in burlap (which was a pain because ours is pushing 9' tall), and got good results: Blossoms came out with only a small minority showing signs of damage. So the burlap defense worked, the tree was hardier then we assumed, and/or the blossoms were at a less fragile state than we estimated. Also: We were at the nursery last weekend to buy more irises and daylilies and one of the workers drove by on a utility vehicle and started asking us if we needed help/were finding everything okay and then suddenly was like "oh hey you guys bought the coral bark last year!" I was pleasantly surprised that they recognized us. This nursery has a handful of large older trees for sale and I guess it's a more notable/memorable event when one of them sells and gets installed (which was a fairly serious production).
|
# ? Apr 21, 2021 19:11 |
|
I have recently come into some large bins and am wondering if I might have more success with mushroom fruiting in a slightly more controlled environment What would be the best way to turn these into mushroom fruiting chambers? I figure hole drilling and hay may be involved
|
# ? Apr 21, 2021 22:03 |
|
Jestery posted:I have recently come into some large bins and am wondering if I might have more success with mushroom fruiting in a slightly more controlled environment Lookup “shotgun fruiting chamber” to give you an idea. Basically a bunch of holes stuffed with media to keep bugs and other nasties out while allowing air exchange.
|
# ? Apr 21, 2021 23:18 |
|
So the top here is what I’d call plant separation day. I had saved the Aglaonemia from a very large plant that needed to be repotted and my wife was learning how to do plants. Well, she killed most of it, but I managed to root and grow three cuttings from the carcass. And now I can give away these two and this off shoot of an Alocasia (I think? She threw away all the labels and I don’t know houseplants well). Then I have this monster of what I think may be Wisteria in my front yard. It’s been pruned into this shape over many years it appears and now I get to find out if I can learn how to prune it so it doesn’t look like a disaster for 5 months a year.
|
# ? Apr 22, 2021 00:30 |
|
Jhet posted:Then I have this monster of what I think may be Wisteria in my front yard. It’s been pruned into this shape over many years it appears and now I get to find out if I can learn how to prune it so it doesn’t look like a disaster for 5 months a year. Are you sure they weren't trying to kill it? It may be one of those stupid things people do where they decide the best way to prune X is to chop it to the ground every year, but what the gently caress. It sort of vaguely looks like it could be wisteria but if so whoever did the prior pruning did not do a good job. Would be easier to identify with foliage and, in an ideal world, flowers.
|
# ? Apr 22, 2021 00:50 |
|
Sir Lemming posted:Well drat, we finally bought and planted the 2 Stella cherry trees we've been thinking about since last year. That was 2 weeks ago, which seemed to be after the last frost of the year. But now NC (zone 7b) is getting another freeze warning for tomorrow morning. (30-32 degrees F) Hell yeah for NCs schizophrenic weather. But I wouldn’t sweat it, especially for trees. I went and covered a bunch of poo poo tonight bc there’s a bunch of real tender new growth on perennials that just started coming up and I don’t feel like losing it to the wind chill after my last set back, so I’m probably being paranoid bc that was some 24 degree bullshit out of nowhere. But 32-34 is seriously just not that bad
|
# ? Apr 22, 2021 02:18 |
|
Reposted from the gbs OSHA thread, woot
|
# ? Apr 22, 2021 02:43 |
|
Wallet posted:Are you sure they weren't trying to kill it? It may be one of those stupid things people do where they decide the best way to prune X is to chop it to the ground every year, but what the gently caress. Yeah, it’s been butchered badly for years. There are old cuts of varying age. The only reason I didn’t immediately dig it out is that it may look really cool and I have a lot of other projects ahead of it. The plan is to see if it is what I think it might be. If it’s not resplendent with beauty this year I’ll just dig it out and put in something cool. It may happen anyway if I can’t figure out how to train it into growing up instead of sideways on the ground too. There’s a small holly growing under it and I could train that into a nice shrub if I give it 10 years.
|
# ? Apr 22, 2021 02:49 |
|
I watch all kinds of weird British crap and have an Acorn TV subscription on prime and Monty Don’s ‘The Secret History of the British Garden’ is on there and it’s really good. I just watched the one on the 17th century and it was cool. Very neat to see reconstructions of how a garden looked in 1690 (weird af with tiny pyramid topiaries EVERYWHERE) vs. how a garden planted in 1690 looks 300 years later. ‘Gardeners World’ is on Britbox too and I guess that’s what I’m watching for the next month.
|
# ? Apr 22, 2021 03:44 |
|
Wallet posted:Completely unrelated: You were talking about making an effort-post about garden design, and I have been wondering lately what people's general feelings on rocks in gardens are. I have a gravel/rock garden that has always had some larger stone in it, but I recently built a dry-stack retaining wall and I've been distributing some of the remnants of the three pallets of stone used for it in a bunch of the gardens and I'm finding that I'm a big fan of some nicely placed rock in among the plants to add texture. A friend of mine has a concrete rubble wall that he has all kinds of succulents and herbs tucked into little cracks of and it’s very neat, and there’s neon green moss on the shady parts. It’s like a mini rock garden within their not at all rocky, tropical Née Orleansy garden. He gets stoned and stares at all the tiny plants for hours, and it is one of those places where the closer you get, the more different kinds of tiny things you see. Spiderwebs and ants and lizards and all different color lichens. You don’t need a big space to have tons of variety! Big ole rocks are neater to look at though and have so much funky variation. When they are local stones I think they add some terroir too. A big hunk of granite says ‘New England’ and some sandstone says ‘Tennessee’ or whatever. And those are some of my thoughts about rocks in the garden! I went to Bayou Bend in Houston this weekend and it has some really neat gardens. They were a wreck from the freeze, but the way it was designed (slowly, and organically over many years) is really neat and it works as a bunch of different ‘rooms’ that are very pleasant to stroll through. I hope to go back in a few years in early spring when the azaleas and camellias have recovered a bit and are blooming. The Rienzi across the bayou also had some neat and similarly designed gardens-very shady and tropical looking. Houston is not the massive sun-baked hellswamp I always think it is and there’s some really nice gardens there.
|
# ? Apr 22, 2021 04:05 |
|
hi thread - super-stoked as this is the first serious plant growth I’ve ever had, and the first time I’ve re-potted any plant, so happy this zz plant I got in the dead of nyc winter isn’t super pissed over the pot migration:
|
# ? Apr 22, 2021 04:13 |
|
Kaiser Schnitzel posted:I watch all kinds of weird British crap and have an Acorn TV subscription on prime and Monty Don’s ‘The Secret History of the British Garden’ is on there and it’s really good. I just watched the one on the 17th century and it was cool. Very neat to see reconstructions of how a garden looked in 1690 (weird af with tiny pyramid topiaries EVERYWHERE) vs. how a garden planted in 1690 looks 300 years later. I wish the US had a gardening culture more like Britain's.
|
# ? Apr 22, 2021 15:56 |
|
Fitzy Fitz posted:I wish the US had a gardening culture more like Britain's. It depends on where you are I think? Houses without gardens and only a lawn are very rare in a lot of older neighborhoods. It’s the move to suburbanization that just skipped the gardening part in a lot of the country. Hell, some places let them cut all the trees and then they just throw down sod “because erosion”. Most people are intimidated by started a garden from nothing, and the half dead dirt under that sod really doesn’t help. But we don’t require it of developers, so we get what we don’t pay for. There’s some good gardening culture in most parts of the country too, but it changes so much from region to region, and that’s pretty awesome.
|
# ? Apr 22, 2021 16:26 |
|
Jhet posted:It depends on where you are I think? Houses without gardens and only a lawn are very rare in a lot of older neighborhoods. It’s the move to suburbanization that just skipped the gardening part in a lot of the country. Hell, some places let them cut all the trees and then they just throw down sod “because erosion”. Most people are intimidated by started a garden from nothing, and the half dead dirt under that sod really doesn’t help. But we don’t require it of developers, so we get what we don’t pay for. I mean... we do have a great gardening tradition in the South, but it doesn't seem as universal and cherished as Britain's? It's very much an old lady's hobby, and what media we do have is not on par with Gardener's World. I just want to see it grow.
|
# ? Apr 22, 2021 16:40 |
|
Fitzy Fitz posted:I mean... we do have a great gardening tradition in the South, but it doesn't seem as universal and cherished as Britain's? It's very much an old lady's hobby, and what media we do have is not on par with Gardener's World. I just want to see it grow. Partly that's because England is about the size of Georgia and partly because it's been a thing for 400 years. I do blame crappy PBS shows for the state of gardening culture, and the way botanical centers tend to cater to exactly that 'old lady' crowd. I've never been to one and really enjoyed it because of that whole vibe and I love gardens. Youtube shows are much better when it comes to target audiences and just basic representation (but it's hard to sift through them all and find someone knowledgeable).
|
# ? Apr 22, 2021 18:04 |
|
Fitzy Fitz posted:I wish the US had a gardening culture more like Britain's. I think TV and air conditioning have alot to do with it. The It's definitely a local thing too. Louisiana for whatever reason seems to have tons of great and interested gardeners of all ages. I think more people would like to garden than actually do but they don't know where to start and grass is pretty low-knowledge to maintain (and easy to hire out). The youtube about how to nail 2x4's is the same if you live in New England or Florida, but gardening advice isn't nearly so universal and finding good resources for XYZ local area can be intimidating. We should make a list of good resources for XYZ area!
|
# ? Apr 22, 2021 18:16 |
|
|
# ? May 30, 2024 04:32 |
|
Jestery posted:I have recently come into some large bins and am wondering if I might have more success with mushroom fruiting in a slightly more controlled environment I saw this https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHRgY8fZNv4 the other day, and thought of your adventures spreading mycelium! Can anyone tell me what this youtuber's accent and/or dialect is? Certainly a local/regional USA English of some kind, but I'm unfamiliar with most.
|
# ? Apr 22, 2021 18:39 |