Thursday, October 8, 2009
All the reason I need
For the past few days Yellow-rumped Warblers have been taking up residence in the garden - today they were "showering" in the spray of the sprinkler, six of them - that makes me happy deep in my soul; all the reason I need to be building this garden as slowly, carefully and thoughtfully as I have.
Another guests - Willow flycatcher and Cedar Waxwing
Labels:
birds,
Cedar Waxwing,
Willow flycatcher,
Yellow-rump warbler
Thursday, October 1, 2009
FALLing back into work
The past several weeks have been kind of quiet for me in the garden. Sunshine and near 90 degree temps kept the black shade tent in place and the baked ground just wasn't worth trying to hammer into. So instead, I spent weekends on my bike, out on the roads, watching nature's larger garden prepare for the shift that could only be days away. Then last week fall arrived - temps dropped into upper 50's and low 60's and overcast sky and on-again, off-again rains have started softening the soil.
I took down the shade tent constructed a couple months ago and the NE corner is now exposed to the elements. The cooler wetter weather has also brought about a lovely change to the garden - one of the great joys of a garden - hidden secrets: Leaves on several of the maples have begun the tintal migration and a lilliputian forest of fungi have erupted in the humus infused soil I amended in late spring. The fungi only last a day and exhaust their sporing caps, but daily a new, differently arranged forest erupts. I could not have asked for a more wonderful surprise!
Over the next few weeks several new progress posts will pop up as I plow back into several projects wanting attention - the new walls, bed-scaping, rock transfer, bamboo planting and eventually larger pine and maple tree plantings.
I took down the shade tent constructed a couple months ago and the NE corner is now exposed to the elements. The cooler wetter weather has also brought about a lovely change to the garden - one of the great joys of a garden - hidden secrets: Leaves on several of the maples have begun the tintal migration and a lilliputian forest of fungi have erupted in the humus infused soil I amended in late spring. The fungi only last a day and exhaust their sporing caps, but daily a new, differently arranged forest erupts. I could not have asked for a more wonderful surprise!
Over the next few weeks several new progress posts will pop up as I plow back into several projects wanting attention - the new walls, bed-scaping, rock transfer, bamboo planting and eventually larger pine and maple tree plantings.
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
At last rain!
At last rain fell last week - after nearly 6 weeks of dry and of late scorching heat, the rain finally came to the garden. You could hear the collective deep breath and sigh from every plant, moss and lichen. Beyond my garden (and my own soaring summer water bill) over on my photography/travel blog - small planet perambulations - I'm giving growing thought to water issues, and what shape my next photo/film project will take around communicating our planet's thirst.
Back in this little garden, after almost a week reprieve, the heat is returning - today 90's, tomorrow 98 is predicted - I'm back to watering... and the Anna's hummingbirds, goldfinches, bush tits, song sparrows and other are soaking it in as well.
Back in this little garden, after almost a week reprieve, the heat is returning - today 90's, tomorrow 98 is predicted - I'm back to watering... and the Anna's hummingbirds, goldfinches, bush tits, song sparrows and other are soaking it in as well.
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Emergency measures in a heat wave
This wasn't my idea of a second post, but on the way to the forum a heat wave struck and I began waking each morning to more and more curled leaves and listing fronds. With temps the past few days soaring over the century mark, not at all our norm here in Portland, I needed to do something dramatic and quick. The above picture is the heart of my solution. This a tent of black woven polypropylene material - Aluminet shade cloth.
Typically our temperatures dance in the upper 80's and low 90's in late July and early august - with an occasional day above 100. Generally any temp is accompanied by some cloud covered, even if scattered throughout the day, and a breeze. This heat wave is stifling, sitting over the valley not a cumulus in sight and suffocatingly dead air. The sun just beats down on life large and small.
I chose Aluminet for a couple reasons, but primarily becasue the strands are twisted, so it reflects diffused light from many directions. I needed well diffused light to ensure even the smallest lower level plants received ample light while still continuing to be protected. Aluminet provides several benefits, including 50+% radiation/shade protection. This is the same cloth-like material many local nursery growers use. It comes in six foot wide sections and lengths up to about 230 feet on a roll. I took the remainder of a roll - 200 ft.
In addition, I purchased three bags of grommet sets (6 per bag), and a 100 unit bag of zip-ties. The grommets were critical in helping string the entire tent up via ropes to my roof and the existing fence on the north and east sides. The zip-ties were needed to "sew" the fabric together since each width was only 6ft. The resulting tent became approx. 18'x22'.
The last element was to prop the central section up high enough to allow the taller maples and Hinoki cypress gracilis breathing room to continue growing upwards. I used eight foot 2"x2" poles I had left over from another project to do the job.
What I have learned in the past couple days is as this heat lingers - even at night - propping the tent up higher not only gives the trees canopy space, but also provides for better ventilation - which I had not originally taken into account.
The whole project cost me about $150 - a small price to pay for the dozens of trees and small plants I have commited to insuring a future in my garden.
Side Benifits:
1) the tent maintains greater humidity underneath - which has helped many of the small ferns and ground mosses and lichens I had seeded the area with
2) the tent slows evaporation and reduces my water requirements
3) I moved many of my small potted maples and conifers under the tent and reduced there rapid drying out
4) birds like bushtits, chickadees, Anna's hummingbird, song sparrows and western towhees are using the shade as a respite from the sun and feeding on the increase in insects that are trying to benefit from the added shade and moisture
Since my garden had no established large trees for shade I have decided to keep the shade tent up, and will probably extend it. While not the ideal look, I'm in this for the long haul and the trees I have planted and will plant this coming winter, to form the eventual shade architecture, will take a few years to establish the required canopy height and breadth - until then the shade tent will stay in place.
Typically our temperatures dance in the upper 80's and low 90's in late July and early august - with an occasional day above 100. Generally any temp is accompanied by some cloud covered, even if scattered throughout the day, and a breeze. This heat wave is stifling, sitting over the valley not a cumulus in sight and suffocatingly dead air. The sun just beats down on life large and small.
I chose Aluminet for a couple reasons, but primarily becasue the strands are twisted, so it reflects diffused light from many directions. I needed well diffused light to ensure even the smallest lower level plants received ample light while still continuing to be protected. Aluminet provides several benefits, including 50+% radiation/shade protection. This is the same cloth-like material many local nursery growers use. It comes in six foot wide sections and lengths up to about 230 feet on a roll. I took the remainder of a roll - 200 ft.
In addition, I purchased three bags of grommet sets (6 per bag), and a 100 unit bag of zip-ties. The grommets were critical in helping string the entire tent up via ropes to my roof and the existing fence on the north and east sides. The zip-ties were needed to "sew" the fabric together since each width was only 6ft. The resulting tent became approx. 18'x22'.
The last element was to prop the central section up high enough to allow the taller maples and Hinoki cypress gracilis breathing room to continue growing upwards. I used eight foot 2"x2" poles I had left over from another project to do the job.
What I have learned in the past couple days is as this heat lingers - even at night - propping the tent up higher not only gives the trees canopy space, but also provides for better ventilation - which I had not originally taken into account.
The whole project cost me about $150 - a small price to pay for the dozens of trees and small plants I have commited to insuring a future in my garden.
Side Benifits:
1) the tent maintains greater humidity underneath - which has helped many of the small ferns and ground mosses and lichens I had seeded the area with
2) the tent slows evaporation and reduces my water requirements
3) I moved many of my small potted maples and conifers under the tent and reduced there rapid drying out
4) birds like bushtits, chickadees, Anna's hummingbird, song sparrows and western towhees are using the shade as a respite from the sun and feeding on the increase in insects that are trying to benefit from the added shade and moisture
Since my garden had no established large trees for shade I have decided to keep the shade tent up, and will probably extend it. While not the ideal look, I'm in this for the long haul and the trees I have planted and will plant this coming winter, to form the eventual shade architecture, will take a few years to establish the required canopy height and breadth - until then the shade tent will stay in place.
Friday, July 17, 2009
You can building anything out of nothing...
It started with a simple comment - "there's nothing here", referring to the yard of house a just assumed. The innocent and unknowing reply back, "you can building anything out of nothing." That was nearly two years ago - and a lot of wandering green thoughts, half starts, a small dozer, 13,000 pounds of rock, five 10-yard drop boxes of grass sod, a ton of Mexican blue beach stone (so far), etc. It's now becoming something, evolving into something.
What I'm really building is a Pacific Northwest shade garden-strongly-Japanese Garden influenced-with a dedication to native plants from this Zone in the PNW and Japan and China. Now throw in your basic love of bamboos, maples and pines and you have a garden that keeps evolving... very organic mind you... into something that I think I will love and so will most of the small creatures that fly, swim and crawl here. It IS NOT a formal Japanese Garden, it's not a tsubo niwa (courtyard gardens) or a kare sansui (dry gardens) or any other, so please refrain from your over ego-indulgent-chastisations. If that's what I wanted I would move to Japan. I love the plants and feel of the PNW shade forest, but like architects Gustav Stickley and Frank Lloyd Wright , photographers Ernst Haas and Shinzo Maeda, and other creators, I'm influenced by the need for simplicity, my travels, my photography and the serenity and tranquility other elements afford - so adopt, adapt, and evolve. (Note - if you are banging your Japanese Garden head against the wall right now [you shouldn't be on this blog] then let me throw you this bone - I'm building what renowned garden designer Motomi Oguchi calls a native place-inspired "weed garden", so there, enjoy.)
Don't get me wrong, an authentic perfectly crafted Japanese Garden is amazing - I spend hours throughout the year in one (photo above). I'm further cursed and blessed by having as they say, "Proclaimed one of the most authentic Japanese gardens outside of Japan, the Portland Japanese Garden is a 5.5-acre haven of tranquil beauty nestled in the scenic west hills of Portland, Oregon." Sitting across town only 5 miles away the Portland Japanese Gardens is way too much inspiration and temptation! Then on top of that they go and have a member plant sale once a year - I was doomed!
So my garden is divided into four sections (I'll post a diagram soon), the front yard (west facing) and backyard (east facing) each 35'x50', and a strip on both the highly exposed south and shaded north each 6'x30'. Most of the blog will be focused on the front and back. For the near term I use the south for open storage of pots, bags of soil, etc. The north is currently being kept open for access to the back yard - which I can move larger plants, trees, stones, fencing, etc.
This is my first entry - the garden's blog beginning - but my garden is an eternity from being "complete" if one ever can be. So after numerous prodings from others I'm sharing what I have learned, questions about what I don't know, my constant mistakes, a few solutions, links to resources I discover, lots of photos, maybe a few videos as well.
What I Started With:
What I'm really building is a Pacific Northwest shade garden-strongly-Japanese Garden influenced-with a dedication to native plants from this Zone in the PNW and Japan and China. Now throw in your basic love of bamboos, maples and pines and you have a garden that keeps evolving... very organic mind you... into something that I think I will love and so will most of the small creatures that fly, swim and crawl here. It IS NOT a formal Japanese Garden, it's not a tsubo niwa (courtyard gardens) or a kare sansui (dry gardens) or any other, so please refrain from your over ego-indulgent-chastisations. If that's what I wanted I would move to Japan. I love the plants and feel of the PNW shade forest, but like architects Gustav Stickley and Frank Lloyd Wright , photographers Ernst Haas and Shinzo Maeda, and other creators, I'm influenced by the need for simplicity, my travels, my photography and the serenity and tranquility other elements afford - so adopt, adapt, and evolve. (Note - if you are banging your Japanese Garden head against the wall right now [you shouldn't be on this blog] then let me throw you this bone - I'm building what renowned garden designer Motomi Oguchi calls a native place-inspired "weed garden", so there, enjoy.)
Don't get me wrong, an authentic perfectly crafted Japanese Garden is amazing - I spend hours throughout the year in one (photo above). I'm further cursed and blessed by having as they say, "Proclaimed one of the most authentic Japanese gardens outside of Japan, the Portland Japanese Garden is a 5.5-acre haven of tranquil beauty nestled in the scenic west hills of Portland, Oregon." Sitting across town only 5 miles away the Portland Japanese Gardens is way too much inspiration and temptation! Then on top of that they go and have a member plant sale once a year - I was doomed!
So my garden is divided into four sections (I'll post a diagram soon), the front yard (west facing) and backyard (east facing) each 35'x50', and a strip on both the highly exposed south and shaded north each 6'x30'. Most of the blog will be focused on the front and back. For the near term I use the south for open storage of pots, bags of soil, etc. The north is currently being kept open for access to the back yard - which I can move larger plants, trees, stones, fencing, etc.
This is my first entry - the garden's blog beginning - but my garden is an eternity from being "complete" if one ever can be. So after numerous prodings from others I'm sharing what I have learned, questions about what I don't know, my constant mistakes, a few solutions, links to resources I discover, lots of photos, maybe a few videos as well.
What I Started With:
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