garden : daffodils!


The varieties of daffodils that bloomed in March and April, mostly unidentified.

A friend of ours acquired so many spring bulbs with the house they purchased that every time she wants to move or remove or plant something in her yard, she unearths dozens of bulbs. Since other parts of the yard are invariably already full of bulbs, she’s been offering them to me. As I’m a softie who can’t say no to free plants, especially flowers, I most recently accepted about 100 daffodil plants of various kinds. Yes, we know you’re not supposed to divide them in the spring, but the ones that had buds have all opened into flowers (many while the they were still in the bucket waiting to get a place in the ground).

Our yard started with just a couple of clumps of plain yellow daffodils (most likely King Alfred, an extremely common regular yellow trumpet variety) next to the front steps. I would have sworn that we had a jonquil pop up in that bed a few years ago, but I haven’t seen it since and don’t know which bulb it might have been from (there are a few that have only been foliage since I moved them around two years ago). I also unearthed a number of narcissus along the back fence while weeding, which I moved into the lamppost bed two years ago, but they have yet to bloom (although one did produce a bud this year, so I’m eagerly awaiting its flowering). Because I’m really only gardening in the front until we replace the fence in the back, I have been hesitant to attempt anything like a plan involving spring bulbs. However, I dove in once I had a bucket of plants sitting around waiting for action!

In the end, most of the plants went into the front sidewalk bed. I used the smaller varieties—a true dwarf yellow trumpet daffodil and an 8″ (or so) yellow non-trumpet daffodil where the part that should be the trumpet is a flat ruffle on top of the outer petals—to create a thick border row along the bottom of the bed below the line of orange daylilies. This is where I attempted to introduce carpet phlox last year, with no success at all; it was far too shady once the daylilies came in and the phlox all died. I am more hopeful about this new plan, as Christopher Lloyd specifically recommends interplanting with daylilies, as the foliage of the later plants grows up and hides the dying foliage of the daffodils (about which he is otherwise fairly disdainful). Seems reasonable. In addition to that row, I planted several clumps in the empty spots left by the demise of the creeping sedum I’d introduced several years ago (one regular sized yellow daffodil with a fairly bright orange trumpet, one regular height slender yellow daffodil with a more muted soft orange narrow trumpet which might be the Jetfire variety, and a clump of the aforementioned flat ruffled soft yellow type).

Once I’d basically filled that bed with daffodils, I was left with only a gazillion more to put in other parts o the yard. I planted four clumps of Ice Follies (the one variety I could conclusively identify!) under and in front of and in between the various azaleas in the yard, with a couple more clumps of the shorter varieties interspersed (most likely the flat ruffled kind). I then gave away 20 or so plants and bulbs to another neighbor. And have not yet started to find places for the tulip bulbs (I’m thinking a fair number can go into the spot in the front foundation bed where the poker primrose didn’t survive).

I will say that the front looks quite cheery with all the yellow and white and orange blooming this early. I’m curious to see how it looks next year, and whether the masking effect of the daylilies works as advertised. When my partner returns later this week with the digital camera, I’ll try to get a photo of each of the different blooms. In the meantime, I need to train a climbing rose up a pyramid trellis and move a few perennials around. Yes, this is the year of sitting back and watching things grow. Can’t you tell?

garden : daffodils!

garden : spring is popping up

It’s always exciting to see the first daffodil buds, particularly since I’ve moved the bulbs and as a result am never sure I’m going to get flowers. This year I have crocuses in the little bed I created by the lamp post, so even if I did plant them too deeply (as I suspect) they’ve recovered enough to flower. The daylilies are sending up shoots, the sedum has buds, and the aster already has a number of sprouts breaking through. This year is (planned to be) a year for watching things grow. We have no plans for new beds, moving things around, or new plants. This could change, but simply sitting back and observing the perennials is the official plan.

It’s too rainy for taking pictures, and exactly rainy enough for ordering a new dehumidifier for the basement. I’m on it.

garden : spring is popping up

snowed in for Presidents’ Day

We had planned to visit my family in Ontario this weekend, but with the three feet of snow we’ve gotten in the DC area this week, we postponed that trip until after the thaw. Which is good, because the weather they’re getting on the other side of the Lakes this week is likely to swoop down on us here by Monday. A friend told me that the federal government (in DC) closed for 11 days following the 1996 blizzard; since this one hit on a Friday, we’re only at 4.5 and counting. With the federal holiday on Monday, we probably won’t make 11 actual days of closure, although we’re at 7 calendar days already, making 11 is not out of reach there.

Despite the massive amounts of snow, we’ve been lucky on our block. Much of the town lost power with the first storm, but we never did. Having worked together on Friday to get our car, and six other cars on our block, off the street and into the driveways of friendly neighbors, we also had a well-plowed street, which made it easier to get out to clear driveways and fire hydrants. We did have a few limbs down on the block, from the oversized Bartlett pear trees and from the vulnerable hollies, but my partner worked with other neighbors to get those sawed through and moved out of the road. By Sunday morning the plows were able to clear both the road and the alley, so nobody had their car completely blocked in.

Things weren’t so lucky for the town as a whole, though. Two big trees came down onto power lines, blocking plow access and requiring intervention from professional arborists and the utility company. The town employees worked around the clock, went without power at Town Hall, and lost two plows. Knowing that they were working without heat, with little sleep, and with minimal food on Saturday, I cooked up double batches of lentil soup, spaghetti, and chocolate chip cookies for them to come and have at the house as they finished their shifts. In the end we gathered at a neighbor’s (who’d also supplied cornbread and brownies), but everyone chose to sleep or go home (or both) over eating. As a result, my partner and I ate spaghetti for several days and have a freezer full of lentil soup should we require it (the cookies were, of course, not difficult to get rid of).

As soon as we were all dug out from the first storm, we learned that we’d be getting another foot of snow on Tuesday night. There are a couple of people in town who rely on the bus service for groceries, and several neighbors with 4WD cars were generous enough to make sure that they were taken care of before the second storm struck. Not that there was much at the grocery store; on Monday afternoon there was still a selection, but by Tuesday morning there was very little of anything fresh on the shelves. None of the trucks had been able to make their deliveries on the rutted and ice-covered roads, and apparently the stores keep very little on site in warehouses these days. We have a pretty well-stocked pantry, but if this keeps up through the weekend we’re going to be down to the dregs. Hopefully we won’t have to be surviving on pickles!

Despite high winds, the second blizzard really wasn’t that bad. We got about another foot of snow, and the blowing snow filled in much of the spaces that had been cleared while creating drifts like I haven’t seen since I was a kid. While we didn’t lose power or tree limbs, we did lose one section of gutter and probably more before this is over. We needed just a couple more degrees of warmth or a few more hours of sun for the snow to come all the way off the roof earlier this week; as it was, it slid down and created huge overhanging snow-ice blocks over our dormers, leading people walking by in the street to stop and take photos. Today it’s windy, but clear and sunny. With a little luck, some of the snow will come off the roof and not take all the gutters with it.

snowed in for Presidents’ Day

birds : holiday visit to Lake Artemesia

After a completely gray and rainy Sunday, we took advantage of the beautiful clear weather to walk around Lake Artemesia. I can’t remember the last time I was up there; they’ve completely repaved and widened the path around the lake, and have removed at least one tree the roots of which were growing up through the pavement. Since so many people have the day off for Martin Luther King Day, the parking lot was full and the paths were busy with families, kids and adults walking dogs or on bikes.

The lake was partially frozen, so the usual winter residents were a bit crowded into only two areas of open water. We saw huge numbers of Canada Geese, a couple of pairs of Mallards, a decent flock of Ring-necked Ducks, a dozen or so Ruddy Ducks, about that many American Coots, and loads of Ring-billed Gulls on the lake, both in the water and on the ice. The big excitement was the sighting of a pair of Black Scoters, which marked my first new life birds of the year. There were hardly any other birds active at noon, but we did see a chickadee, a White-throated Sparrow, and a Song Sparrow along the paths and a smallish Red-tailed Hawk circled overhead as we were leaving.

birds : holiday visit to Lake Artemesia

food : cooking goals for 2010

So far, I have only a couple of cooking goals for the year. One, I want to learn to cook dried beans in my slow cooker. Two, I want to learn to make pizzas. Neither of these will seem like major challenges to most of you, I’m sure, but they are things that I’ve had a block on that I want to get past. To this end, I am soaking my first batch of dried (Great Northern) beans overnight tonight and will be making them in the slow cooker tomorrow. The inaugural cooked-white-beans dish will be Marcella Hazan’s white bean soup, which is essentially white beans, garlic, and parsley. (I finally scored a copy of the original The Classic Italian Cookbook at a local thrift store this weekend and already have about a dozen recipes marked to try; rather than spring for the new version, I’ll now keep an eye out for the equally out of print and well-regarded More Classic Italian Cooking!)

On the second point, we’ve set a date for the 31st of January to make our first homemade pizza (yes, that’s the next weekend day we will have free together after today). Between now and then I’ll be assembling whatever it is we need for pizzas, and polishing up the as-yet-unused pizza stone we received as a wedding gift. (We did request the pizza stone, we just haven’t broken the barrier of actually making a pizza yet.)

In general, I want to branch out into making bread, but I am not yet ready to set a specific goal. I have a strong suspicion that the pizza hump is actually just a foothill of the yeasted-dough mountain by which I remain completely daunted. It’s not even the prospect of either a bread brick or a pot of runny goop that is the specific problem, I am just disproportionately stressed by the whole idea. So, after January 31st, the goal is to make some bread. Sometime. Before 2011. Or maybe not. No pressure!

food : cooking goals for 2010