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Garden of Delights Blog

Monthly Archives: April 2012

Yeah, We Got Chickens—The Trendy Chicken

27 Friday Apr 2012

Posted by ninagarden in chickens, compost

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chickens, ranch

Does it seem like everyone you know has chickens these days? At least here in our community, which is very urban, very beachy, very chicken-y—the answer is –you guessed it, Yes. Chickens are trendy right now. Very trendy.  Not one to miss out, I have three little chicks too.

When I told my father, who grew up on a ranch, he said “*$!!$#, why did you do that?” He ranted for a long time something like ….

“I cleaned chicken poop from chicken coops from the time I was three until I was 16. They are the dirtiest, dumbest animals ever.”

Really, Dad, you cleaned coops at the age of three?

Did I mention he was a rancher?

Growing up, I never remember having chickens on our ranch or our farm. Okay, maybe one time, one cowboy had some, but they didn’t last long. I remember a pig. A giant, muddy pig that I was scared of.  I remember a Texas longhorn cow with brass doorknobs on the tips of her six-foot long horns. I remember lots of big red quarter horses.

I remember kittens.

Calves.

Cattle dogs.

A donkey.

Never chickens.

Or sheep (which is like a swear word to most ranchers) Or goats (Boy, did I want a goat. I still do.)

Did I mention that my chicks are the cutest, sweetest things? I don’t care if they are dumb. I think they like me. They look at me when I talk to them; they know my voice and start peeping. They are cute even if they are losing all their down and look like little teenage messes, little punk-rock chickens, chickens that went through a dryer.

Every morning, I try to spy on them. I creep over to the door in the room where they are living in a giant plastic bin with chicken wire on the top, and I try to catch them off guard. At first as I watch, they chase each other around, they stretch their nascent wings, they stand on the water dish.  Then they spy me, freeze, and start peeping.

“Hello! Hello! Hello!” I imagine them saying. “Let us out of here, we want to stretch. We want to dig up your garden. We want to parade around the yard.”

Hmm. Wonder what my Australian Shepherd will think of that? He already tried to eat one — even in his feeble, arthritic state. He watched innocently as my daughters held the chicks, and Whomp! Chomp! He tried to grab one. A lot of women started screaming. I had two grandmas here. Two little girls. Everyone started hollering at my dog, and they kicked him out of the house.  Hopefully, he learned his lesson. He is very sensitive. Diego, the sweet boy

My mother who is from a large farming family in Ohio, said her grandmother loved her chickens. She sent her daughter to college on chicken egg money. (Don’t think my chicken eggs will pay for college these days.)

Her “little grandma” she called her as if being short had something to do with caring for chickens.

Mother seems excited for chickens, but worried too. She worries about almost everything. Now she is worried that I will kill the chickens.

Hey, mom, they lived in my office for the first week. I had conference calls with peeping chicks.

“I can hear them,” my employee said when we spoke on the phone. “Clients will think you are peeping.”

Gee. I moved them, okay? Now I can walk up and spy.

“Honey, hurry up and build the chicken coop,” I say to my husband each morning when I see how much they’ve grown overnight. Just like a baby, they grow while sleeping.  (I really want a chicken coop that looks like a gypsy wagon, but I don’t think he’s willing to have that in our yard.)

Anyway, I wonder what sociologists will say years from now when they study urban farming trends in 2012. Will they say we were misguided?  A chicken only lays eggs for two or three years, the book says. What will happen to all the old chickens of Point Loma? We can’t set them free by the sea shore.  I certainly don’t want to eat mine when they are old. Will people relinquish them to the dog pound?

Will social scientists say this urban chicken farming trend was a yearning for a simpler life? A reaction to these tough recessionary years?  Nostalgia?  Most people I know get chickens once their kids reach a more independent age. That’s a weird one to think about!

It definitely seems to be  fulfilling a need —  the way growing  flowers or vegetables meets a need to actually produce something tangible, to make something real—not a spreadsheet or a blog, but something you can touch and hold—or eat.

I think it’s fascinating how many people are getting chickens—me included.

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Roses: Pruning Results

20 Friday Apr 2012

Posted by ninagarden in roses, Uncategorized

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 I was worried that I pruned too much. See the Mary Rose below after I pruned it this January.  But now it is blooming and full of leaves. See it at right and below. Roses are miraculous plants. They loved being pruned.

The Crocus Rose is huge already. Much larger than last year.  I can’t keep up with cutting it and making bouquets. Here is its before and after picture:

Pruned crocus rose. Did I prune too much? I asked.

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Tucson Botanical Garden: Butterflies and Barrio Gardens

12 Thursday Apr 2012

Posted by ninagarden in Botanical Garden, butterfly garden, butterly, drought-tolerant, garden, gardening, Tucson, Uncategorized

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butterfly, butterly garden, Tucson, Tucson botanical garden

I love visiting other gardens and getting ideas. Last week I went to the Tucson Botanical Gardens and the butterfly green house. It was amazing. The greenhouse was full of plants that grow in San Diego such as hibiscus and Pentas lanceolata, which was beautiful. I might try to plant it. I see it grows as a perennial here and as an annual other locales.

I had some little garden helpers with me on the tour. The butterflies were attracted to them.

We really enjoyed the butterfly house, but there was so much more to see. So many of the plants both inside the 80 degree green house and outside the butterfly house, can grow in San Diego. That’s what so amazing about the climate here. We can grow almost anything.

But here is a shady fountain that they have planted and turned into a flowerbed. I think that’s Dusty Miller, which, I am surprised to learn, is a type of Artemisia. I don’t usually like Dusty Miller, but I love my Artemisia Powis Castle. I am not so great at growing it, but I love its smell and its silver gray color. I love all the funny names it has too like Wormwood. I read that is has been grown since “the time of ancient Greece.” (Sunset Western Garden book.) Now that I read this, I see I need to prune it in the fall. Maybe that’s my problem. Anyway, here it is in Tucson:

I also loved the Barrio Garden with its roses, fig trees, purple heart (the deep purple houseplant-type that grew profusely in the flowerbeds in the house I grew up in), pomegranates, and tombstone roses. Just beautiful!

I love the look of this garden path (see below), which is lush and full, despite the heat. This pictures shows a pomegranate, a mesquite and some other flowers in the wildflower garden area. If you are ever in Tucson, be sure to visit this wonderful place!

Of course, March is a wonderful time to visit Tucson.  Everything is blooming–the Palo Verde trees are full of yellow blossoms. They float down the street reminding me of buttered popcorn. My great-grandma tried her whole life to paint one that satisfied her with its perfection. The vibrant yellow flowers against the sage green branches made a very compelling subject. Since I don’t paint, I write, and I can write about her trying to paint, but mainly I prefer to watch them because they are full of pollen and make me sneeze! (If I find a picture, I will post it.)

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Marvelous, Mystical, Motherly Poppy Plants: Ancestor Gardens

09 Monday Apr 2012

Posted by ninagarden in garden, gardening, roses

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I’ve read all the sexy stuff that people have written about poppies–the opium, the seductive red hues, the Laudium making. Decked out with teasing, luscious fringe and lavish sage green foliage, they are bee-seducing, hypnotic, sleep-inducing (think Wizard of Oz), intoxicating. Yep. They are all that, I guess, but for me, the poppy is forever associated with my dear Mama. Yes, my mama. The number one –the only—person, besides myself, I’ve ever known who grew them. They are part of my ancestor garden, and remind me of her as I hope they will remind my children of me. Below is a picture of my mom in her Arizona garden–here she is photographed with African daisies.

In writing this, I realized I didn’t know where my mother acquired them because she has been growing them as long as I can remember. She racked her brain a minute and told me that she couldn’t really remember but thinks they came from a guest speaker at her Garden Club meeting many years ago. She said she got a little packet of them at the meeting and has planted them ever since.

Every year she collects the seeds and one year, she passed some to me. Now I plant them every year and my kids love to help me collect the seeds once the pods are dry. They call them “little salt shakers” and they go around scattering seeds everywhere. We also keep them in a jar, distributing them to friends who can’t believe they are easy to grow.

I always plant them in the empty strip along the front garden. One year I got a phone call from an elderly neighbor. She left me a message saying her gardener told her I was growing opium and I needed to pull them out before they sprouted all over the neighborhood or she would “call the police.”

I told my mother and this sent her into a furious frenzy of research. How dare, that nice neighbor, say that!  She called the experts at the University of Arizona Extension Service on gardening.  She looked in every gardening book and I helped her research on the Internet, intent on proving her favorite flower was not illicit. Of course, even though I felt better when I found that they were for sale, legally http://anniesannuals.com, I was nervous from the threat that my neighbor, who was normally sweet and wonderful, had left on my voice mail. I pulled all the poppies out in my front yard, street-side—my husband laughing at me during the whole process—but I kept the ones in the front courtyard behind my patio wall. The final conclusion was that they weren’t illegal, but perhaps, we should not plant such showy, potentially controversial flowers in front of our house.

My mother still plants them (although I noticed this year that they were growing only in what she calls her “dog yard” even though the dog never goes there, and I quit letting the kids scatter them outside our wall, but they still grow, remnants of my previous enthusiasm. I now mix in toadflax and California poppies so they don’t stand out as much. It still isn’t clear in my mind if my neighbor was upset that I was growing them, or more upset that the seeds might blow across the street and sprout in her yard—scandalous! I have thoughts of scattering the seeds all over our neighborhood canyon, but the source may be so obvious that I don’t have the nerve.

So the poppies grow and mutate each year. There are ruffled ones, purple ones, red ones, red ones with crosses inside. The bees love them and they are filled with humming and buzzing. The thick green stalks grow in cracks and driest soil. They thrive with little water and little care, lending their magic to our yard, making smiles, brining memories, maybe making little gardeners who enchanted by the poppy magic will one day grow them — behind garden walls, of course!

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Erysimum

09 Monday Apr 2012

Posted by ninagarden in Uncategorized

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erysimum

April is here and there is so much going on in the garden. First, the roses — they are about to bloom.  Looking at them now, I’m comforted that I did not prune too much. Maybe the first year I pruned the climbers when I shouldn’t have, but every other rose seemed to take the aggressive pruning well. Buds are everywhere waiting to bloom. I cut my first rose on Easter morning.

The second news is somewhat disappointing but not uncommon to my garden—I dug up my seed nursery. Well now, what can I say? It had originally been the home of a nice fat Erysimum Bowles (mauve) that died. When it did, it left me with a garden hole, not one you could see, but one that was sheltered and became my “nursery” where many plants such as this nemesia self-sowed. But I dug it up and planted a new Erysimum Bowles “Mauve”, popularly called wallflower, and now, who knows.  The Rudebekia seeds were so tiny. I’m sure they are buried under too much dirt now. But at least, I had a “control” set in peat pots along with some Coneflowers. There are a few tiny sprouts now.

The Erysimum Bowles, by the way, is a great perennial. It takes little water, grows in a nice even mound, blooms almost continuously. The only complaint I have is that a few of mine have bloomed themselves out of existence after a few years. They grew woody and split open, which I’ve heard about lavender, but I seem to encounter that more with the wallflower—I read it’s “short-lived” somewhere so maybe this is expected.

I’m also not quite sure how to prune it. Perhaps this leads to the problem above (the splitting open), but the leaves and flowers seem to reside in the outer orb of the plant and when I’ve cut it back, it looks dead so go figure!

Let me know if you have any ideas. I have three in my front garden right now and they do look good against a wall.

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Erysimum

09 Monday Apr 2012

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erysimum

Erysimum

The purple-flowered bush on the right is the one Erysimum.

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Posted by ninagarden | Filed under Uncategorized

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