Sunday, October 3, 2021

Concord Grape Crop


We have 3 vines of Concord grapes that make up our "vineyard."  Small as that may be, we were able to squeeze out about 4 quarts of juice, most of which we canned to enjoy later. 

grape juice

Concord grapes trained over an arbor


 

Friday, July 30, 2021

Peaches!


Our four year old peach tree is producing lots of fruit.  The variety is Reliance, which is a good variety to withstand northern winters. The peaches are sweet and juicy.  We don't use any pesticides at all and this year's crop is beautiful.






Saturday, July 24, 2021

Bees, Birds & Butterflies

 Today is a beautiful, sunny, breezy day -- perfect for watching and photographing birds, bees and butterflies.


Ruby Throated (female) hummingbird on climbing honeysuckle

Monarch and bee on side-by-side zinnias

Monarch caterpiller




Sunflower with bumblebee

Male monarch nectaring on zinnia

Female monarch on lantana 



Egg laid by female monarch (above) on swamp milkweed (asclepias incarnata)

Friday, June 25, 2021

Yay! Summer is Here!

 

A view of the vegetable garden from the grape arbor entrance

Beets

Butterhead lettuce with peas in the background being nibbled away by a chipmunk, I think

barrel of sunflowers

Tomatoes have reached the top of their cages

Grape vines being trained over the arbor


We're into Summer now. The Spring season has been great for the garden this year. Flowers and vegetables are thriving. The fruit trees are loaded with baby fruits and the berry bushes have already begun producing raspberries. We've had some good rains, so weeding is a breeze! Also, today a monarch butterfly laid 19 eggs on the common and swamp milkweed. I've gathered the leaves on which the eggs were laid and will let them hatch indoors to protect them from preditors. After they become second stage cats, I'll move them to the milkweed plants in the nursery enclosure to fully develop into adult monarchs ... egg to caterpillar to chrysalis to butterfly. They'll then be released from the enclosure to continue the cycle.

Thursday, June 3, 2021

Strawberry Season

This is our first picking of strawberries.  The strawberry trug is located behind the shed where it gets plenty of sunshine.  This is an everbearing variety called "Tribute".




Saturday, May 15, 2021

The Perennial Path at Dusk

This is the entrance to the path just before sunset. We added lighting to the path last year.

Monday, May 3, 2021

Early Bloomers


Our spring weather has been so beautiful this year that we have early bloomers in the garden.  The apple tree, given to me by my dad as a sappling 35 years ago, is full of blossoms. The little grape vine area next to the shed has been trimmed and is budding.

 

Apple tree in full bloom


This is the second year for the strawberry plants in the trug behind the shed.  


Strawberry plants

The lilac tree in the perennial path smells wonderful as we walk by!


Lilac


We've found that the secret to a large crop of rhubarb is adding plenty of composted manure in the spring!  This planting has been in the garden for many years.


Rhubarb


Forget Me Nots seed down each year, so we always have mounds of blue and pink flowers scattered throughout the garden in early spring.


Forget Me Nots


The red azalea adds bold color to the garden and is surrounded with blue forget me nots and white azaleas behind it.  Red, white and blue!  Our patriotic area!


Azalea


The rhododendrun is in full bloom at the front entrance.


Rhody

We installed two oriole feeders on April 28th and received our first visitor May 2nd.



Baltimore Oriole

Wednesday, April 28, 2021

Spring Things

We're finally confident that Spring is here.  After early April temperatures in the 80s, then 6" of snow a week later, today is a comfortable 66 degrees and we can get on with the garden work.

Last summer we purchased a small fig tree.  I've never actually eaten a fresh fig, only Fig Newtons : )  The variety is Brown Turkey and although it's a good variety for our northern climate, it can't take the weather if it gets too cold.  We left it planted in the large pot and moved it from the patio into the garage for the winter.  This is what it looks like today --

Brown Turkey Fig Tree

If the weather is expected to drop below freezing, we'll move it back to the garage overnight and bring it out when the weather warms up.  

The below photo shows our asclepias incarnata "Cinderella" milkweed emerging from the pot it was planted in last year.  We bought it from a local nursery and it wintered over on our patio.


Milkweed




Each year the orioles return to our area the beginning of May.  I put out the feeder a couple days ahead of their arrival so they'll see it when they fly over.  The feeder is filled with nectar, grape jelly and oranges.  Cardinals and grey catbirds also enjoy it.