Showing posts with label sunflower. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sunflower. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 11, 2025

the fungus among us

My unfinished to-do list is growing longer every day and the blog has fallen by the wayside!  I will try to keep caught up, because I have a massive photo backlog.

We've had an insane amount of rain.

The weather has been delightfully cool - 70s during the day and 50s at night (it was 57 degrees this morning when I woke up!).  This is great for heat-hating humans like me, but terrible for small seedlings.  I got fairly nice germination, at last, and then the rain and the cool...everything stagnated.  And it's too late in the season to play more.  Thankfully celosia filled in the holes in the annual garden, but it does look like I will mostly have a million pink celosia plants despite all my work this year...sigh.  

One interesting garden anomaly...I did not plant sunflowers this year because it was so cool for so long and sunflowers hate cold, wet soil.  I repeat:  I didn't plant ONE SINGLE SUNFLOWER SEED.  Sunflower seeds are large and distinctive...it's not like I could've planted them by mistake. Yet...dozens and dozens of sunflowers sprang up in my greenhouses.  I used NEW soil that rarely had old soil from old greenhouses mixed in.  This old soil sat outside in the freezing snow all winter long.  Sunflower seeds do not last in weather like that.  They rot easily, and our many little animals would've rooted out any that lasted.  Squirrels, chipmunks, groundhogs, even birds.  Yet...somehow...I have almost a hundred sunflowers.




I planted one last set of greenhouses last week and unbelievably, MORE sunflowers grew.  How is this possible?  Where are they coming from?  Well, in a sea of hot pink celosia...I will take it. 

At least the yellows have filled in in the perennial garden.



...and in all the other gardens around the house.

In front of the garage

Along the front walkway

one of the front-facing beds

I got the very last peonies this week for house bouquets.  They didn't last long...they know that it's June.


Our tree frogs are LOVING all the rain.

Cope's grey tree frog

Our wild animals are loving it, too, from new fawns to a gaggle of raccoons!  :)


The spillway from our back pond to the forest streams that run from it are roaring loud all the time from so much rain!


A rabbit can have 40 babies in a breeding season, and we're seeing it!!  These rabbits were playing in the side yard the other morning.  It was too dark to get a good picture, though!



Wild strawberries are ripening...


...ditto with blackberries.



Lots of busy insects...

winged carpenter ant

leafcutter bee

fall webworm moths mating

chrysophilus velutinus mating

...and insects whose lives have run their course, like this fly infected with the entomophthora muscae fungus.


The name in Latin literally means "insect destroyer."  It infects their brains, kills them, and compels the corpse to climb to a high location for maximum spore dispersal.  Pretty cool!  

The cold and wet has kept me out of the garden...and the rain has interrupted a lot of our walks.


Even bundled up in a sweater and wearing jeans yesterday, I 10000% prefer it to a normal Indiana June.  

Have a great week!  





Monday, August 30, 2021

scarred, marred, but now bestarred...abelard!

 "At the edge of the pool stood the muskrats' house.  It was taller than Laura, and far larger than her arms could reach around.  Its rounded sides and top were rough, hard, and gray.  The muskrats had gnawed dry grass to bits and mixed the bits well with mud to make a good plaster for their house...Pa was shaking his head. 'We're going to have a hard winter,' he said, not liking the prospect. 'Why, how do you know?' Laura asked in surprise.  'The colder the winter will be, the thicker the muskrats build the walls of their houses,' Pa said." 

- excerpt from The Long Winter by Laura Ingalls Wilder

A muskrat house - or the beginnings of one - has appeared in our front pond.  If I go by Pa's logic, it will be a mild winter indeed!

There's a lot of life and activity in this pond.  We know that there are shrimp, fish, giant snapping turtles, muskrats, nesting blackbirds, and all sorts of frogs.  Herons stalk this pond for prey.  Bats and birds skim mosquitos from it nightly.  But we rarely see anything, although the pond is easily visible from our living room window.  If I walk down, I hear the outraged plops of scores of frogs from all around the pond's rim...but I never see anything but bubbles.


We've started keeping a pair of binoculars in the living room, but I think I'm going to set up a trail cam here.  I'd love to know what goes on here at night!

I don't know exactly what's going on there at night, but I certainly know what's going on inside the house.  It's been a chaotic week, because we're dealing with a dog slipping into senility (a short trip, to be sure) and barking endlessly at all hours.  Added to the mix is a new cat!


We couldn't keep Klaus, because he so aggressively play-attacked our older girl, Tabitha.  No amount of "diversion playing" could keep him away.  But Tabitha didn't do well while we were away on our northwest trip.  She cried for a week when we returned, and I knew that she wasn't meant to be an only cat.  The search resumed, and we finally came home with this guy:


He's not pretty like Klaus:  his ear was shredded by an unknown assailant.  His front leg was broken and not set, so it's a bit crooked.  His mouth hangs open most of the time, like a resting alligator.  But he's a sweetheart.  He's a cuddler, so he wails in agony if he wakes up alone.  His loud howls of protest accompany every shower that I take, because although he wants to be close, he doesn't quite dare to clamber in.  He stays close, purring and headbutting and taking every opportunity to bare his stomach for rubs.  He is unbothered by loud noises, inspecting corgis, and constantly-shifting legs in a bed.  Unconcerned, he lazily rolls to avoid an errant foot.  He's a champion sleeper!  


Tabitha is supremely annoyed as he watches and occasionally follows her, but makes only gentle attempts to play. The midnight dust-ups have gradually decreased, and for the first time, I've started feeling like they're going to be a good pair together.  

We cycled through several names, but nothing quite fit.  Then I remembered a name from a college history course:  a 12th century scholar who wooed and then married his student, and was then castrated by her uncle.  He became a monk, while she was forced into a convent.  Following a series of much-lauded love letters, the student decided that perhaps marriage was a bad idea and that she preferred to be left alone.  Castrated male bothering uninterested female?  Perfect fit for us.  Welcome ABELARD!

("A" as in TAB...ell...ard)

As we focus on the tempests in teapots within the house, the season marches on outside.  The late-season sunflowers are astoundingly high. 

(Todd is 6'1" or a bit taller, for scale!)

Despite near-complete neglect, my pumpkins are showing growth!  I planted a row of tall sunflowers on the other side of a cattle panel for some additional support, and they're taking full advantage.


Dahlias are growing in a great sea of weeds.  I'll have some nice bouquets this week!


Bees are frantically collecting every last bit of pollen.


Actually, this patch of celosia is quite the lovers' lane.  Large numbers of paired Goldenrod Soldier beetles bustle around, oblivious.


Another great sign of an advancing season!  Goldenrod Soldier beetles are great for a garden.  They're pollinators, of course, but they also eat predatory aphids and caterpillars.  Instead of hard-shell wings like most beetles, theirs are leathery!  This female will lay her eggs in the fall leaf litter, and her offspring will be back to assist in the late summer, next year.



I'm probably just being fanciful, but Seth Brundle's quote from The Fly came to mind as these two stared (glared?) at me:  "Have you ever heard of insect politics?  Neither have I.  Insects...don't have politics.  They're very brutal.  No compassion, no compromise."  Eh, I prefer to think of them happily working around in the garden, a la the happily singing dwarves in Snow White.  Here's a big job for them:  a nice stem of aphids to snack on!


Inside, I've very slowly made progress on a quilt.  I hadn't quilted for months and months, but I started picking away at my confetti quilt, a few squares at a time.  Suddenly, the top was done!  It was meant to be a jumble of shapes and colors:


This felt a bit too jarring, though.  I carefully rearranged the squares (somewhat laboriously, due to an overeager assistant)...


...and came up with something more pleasurable.


I still need to work on the arrangement a bit, and then they all have to be "squared up," or cut down to exact size.  I've already started on another big project, so this will again be put away and slowly fussed with as the mood strikes.  This low-pressure method appeals to me!

Other knitting projects on the horizon, and I'll have some embroidery to show soon, too.  Fall is a great inspiration for textile work!

Have a great week!


Monday, August 16, 2021

back to buzz-ness

 The title is a bit of a cringe, but says it all:  we're home from our travels and focusing on things around here, which includes a whole lot of buzzing.

It's the time of year when insects are EVERYWHERE:  bees and butterflies are frantically working the flowers...


...competing with hummingbirds for the nectar.


It seems like every flower peered into houses a little guest.



Insects have to share a space with our voracious birds.  Whole flocks of goldfinches rise, scolding, from our beds if disturbed.  All local feeders are empty - a DNR directive, as scientists are attempting to discover what's causing a wave of bird deaths, and are discouraging the congregating of birds at feeders - so they're making the most of our flowers.


Birds who don't eat seeds are eating well here, too.  A Great Blue Heron hunts daily in our front pond.  They are quite skittish, and sometimes it's only by seeing their reflection in the water do we know that they are there.


It takes patience to wait for them to reveal themselves.


Small fish and frogs, which they love, can all be found here.


Signs of fall are everywhere!  Care has to be taken when bringing in flowers this time of year, because spiders are marching, mating, and making egg sacs.  Thankfully I discovered this one before it hatched!  Peeking inside, you can see the eggs.


Speaking of babies, our local turkeys are still making a daily trek through our back fields with their poults.  A normal turkey clutch can contain up to 17 eggs, and as few as 9, which is the number of poults in this little family.


Mosquitoes, too, are laying now for fall.  I noticed mosquito larvae in the bucket with our tadpoles.


They are pretty distinctive.


Tadpoles do not eat mosquito larvae, so I had to sprinkle in mosquito dunks - a bacterial attack, which will only kill mosquitoes.  Sure enough, the larvae were gone in a few days!

Deer stop by daily to eat the immature apples that drop from our tree.


This sweet bounty means that, for the most part, they leave our garden alone.  

Our late-summer sunflowers are growing well...


...and I'm still making bouquets.



Tabitha focuses on making peace with this little encroachment upon her space.


Seed gathering and flower drying continue as weather permits.  The season marches on!

Have a great week!