With the loss of detritus comes the loss of plants that annoy me. I'm ripping out these: 95% of the iris, shasta daisy, giant knapweed (Centaurea macrocephela), Miscanthus 'strictus'. There's never any leaf damage, the number of insects on the flowers is paltry at best. And they aren't native. So I'll make room for some natives I want to experiment with, and I'll also have a crop of seedlings ready to go in June for transplant. More wild quinine, verbena, aster, sedge, liatris, milkweed, etc.
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
Goodbye, Winter Awesomeness
I have started cutting down the garden and the
sadness is unbearable. This was the first year I totally, completely,
and head over heals fell in love with the detritus. Truly, the winter
garden can be more spectacular than summer's. I think
I'm beginning to see summer as either a utilitarian necessity (to help
insects) or as cake topped with brownies topped with candy sprinkles
topped with pie. No -- the summer garden is the necessary overkill that
gets us to the more profound and penetrating echo of winter. The garden
succeeds or fails in what it leaves behind. Just as we do.
With the loss of detritus comes the loss of plants that annoy me. I'm ripping out these: 95% of the iris, shasta daisy, giant knapweed (Centaurea macrocephela), Miscanthus 'strictus'. There's never any leaf damage, the number of insects on the flowers is paltry at best. And they aren't native. So I'll make room for some natives I want to experiment with, and I'll also have a crop of seedlings ready to go in June for transplant. More wild quinine, verbena, aster, sedge, liatris, milkweed, etc.
With the loss of detritus comes the loss of plants that annoy me. I'm ripping out these: 95% of the iris, shasta daisy, giant knapweed (Centaurea macrocephela), Miscanthus 'strictus'. There's never any leaf damage, the number of insects on the flowers is paltry at best. And they aren't native. So I'll make room for some natives I want to experiment with, and I'll also have a crop of seedlings ready to go in June for transplant. More wild quinine, verbena, aster, sedge, liatris, milkweed, etc.
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6 comments:
To you, summer is a cherpumple (it's a real thing! Heinous, but real) :-)
This really has me thinking - summer just "utilitarian necessity"...winter being "it". Usually I mock such thought, but your reasoning has some merit, Professor Prairie:-)
Ha, yes, a cherpumple. Maybe. David, I'll convert you yet!
never any leaf damage. It must go.
That's a refreshing thought I'll follow.
Indeed. I wish I was brave enough to hang on to the brush longer. However my wife volunteered some labor, so I relented to the big cut about a month ago during spring break. What a abnormal spring it has been, too slow.
I agree with the adage to design for the winter. Lots of new american natives going into the prairie garden right now. Whoop!
Prairie up, right?
Diana -- here to serve!
Greg -- Prairie up BIG TIME!
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