On the right side, where the yellow sticky tags are from last year, is a row of peas. |
The lower beds, above, were added last year. Some have cover crops to be tilled under. I'm planting several of the old garden beds with peas for cover crop, others with wildflowers. Hopefully there will be a lot of wildflowers this year in several places for the bees. And honey.
Looking up the hill under the power lines. |
Pretty uninteresting, just brush and grass that prevents the wildflowers from getting established. |
From top of hill looking downward. You can only see about half the meadow from here. |
The good thing about Ornamec is you can spray the grass, and it only kills grass. It won't hurt the wildflower seeds that are coming up and you can spray right over the seedlings without any harm to them. Since I don't grow food crops in this area and the wildflowers are important to the bees, I decided that getting rid of the grass this year would go a long way in helping establish a wildflower area that should only need an annual mowing after this. (Wildseed Farms sells this product and recommends it for getting wildflowers established).
You can see, above, the tiny wildflower seeds are coming up. I've planted an assortment of liatris, poppymallow, oxeye daisies, coneflowers, Mexican hats, yarrow, poppies, larkspur, bachelor's buttons, butterfly weed, clover and lots more. Some are annuals that will reseed themselves, others, like the coneflowers, are perennials and will continue to grow and expand their area. Just 2 years ago this area was trees and brush, like you see on each side of the photos. After the power company brought their giant brush-cutting equipment and ground everything down, fescue, that mostly useless grass took over. Turning the area into a wildflower meadow seems like a better use of the area. I've tried planting wildflowers before, sowing directly into grasses without much result. This method of controlling grass the first year, as well as scratching up bare soil with a rake or tiller, or both, before planting the seed, will give better results.
In my fantasies, this is what I hope it will look like. It may not look that way, but hopefully it will be close. Once established, a yearly mowing or light cleanup should help keep it a nice wildflower meadow.
Back in the garden, I dug a bucket of parsnips. Adam planted them last August and we've had nice parsnips all winter. It's amazing how many people have told me they've never eaten a parsnip, and wouldn't know what to do with them. What a great vegetable, one of my favorites! Roasted, boiled, added to chicken pot pie, steamed and buttered, just about any way you cook them. I actually like parsnips better than carrots, cooked.
This is about half a 5 gallon bucket from just one row of parsnips. I have 7 more rows to dig! |
8 comments:
What good info about a wildflower meadow. I am planning on doing the same in a smaller space and this was very helpful and gives me hope that I will succeed over time. And it will encourage the bees that a neighbor keeps near here.
Jim
It looks like you are working pretty hard. It is looking real good. I am sure the bees will appreciate it very much and Matt should be giving you some good honey. If the wildflowers grow as good as they are in the picture you will definitely have a postcard view.
Marc
I can't wait to see the progress on the wildflowers! I only discovered parsnips a year ago (and love them) but I haven't tried to grow them yet.
Hello, I'm interested in your wildflower project as I am doing a native grass and native flower project.
The grasses and some of the flowers are here already and we are very close to doing a 33 acre burn to encourage the natives and hopefully discourage the invasives.
I'm aiming to control japanese honeysuckle, multiflora roses, and an serecia lezbedesia (prob not the right spelling). I have a plan with MDC that calls for herbicide on the above plants after the burn. I have always been organic and am agonizing about this as I'm sure you did. I'll make my final decision after the burn.
I need a broad leaf herbicide, not a grass one and so far nothing even remotely organic has turned up. this chemical control is by far the biggest budget item for this project, so, it is important that it work
Thanks for talking about your decision to use Ornamec.
Pat Hight
I'll make
Pat,
I don't know of any organic-approved herbicides except for 12% vinegar. I don't remember the brand name, but it kills many broad-leaf weeds and grasses. The downside to using it is that it sterilizes the soil so completely that virtually NOTHING will grow in that soil for a year. Good luck!
Jim
What a lovely garden you have, Jim. I can no longer work my beds, but my daughter has cleaned them all out and plans on replanting those that need it. Used a lot of bulbs previously. Thanks for sending me the link.
Hey Jim
As I sit in my office in Japan, eight floors up it it is really nice to read your blog and remember working in the garden. I miss the outdoors and the farm, but I know it is a lot of hard work too. Hope the weather works for you better this year than last.
Dennis
p.s. can't wait to see the wildflower meadow. I put one on my screen saver" which is really big.
Dennis
What a fantastic garden!!
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