Entries to Win Afghan

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Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Driveway Bed 1- Report #1- 2026


Since it was cloudy/rainy all day today I was able to get a picture of this cleaned-up garden space while it is all in the same light.
garden bed


Just for comparison, here is that space in June of last year.

flower garden

And in June of 2024 when I first started cleaning it up and seeing if I could do something with it without spending money. I did sketch out a plan and used flagging tape to deliniate some spaces (you can see that in the picture above). I've mostly been sticking with that general idea. bare garden bed

Some serious progress has been made. I've spent $1 on one plant that is alive, and $10 on another that is dead. That was my own fault. I really thought it was not hardy here, but the tag said it was, so I gave it another shot. Nope. Dead in spring. Everything else has been free.

The orange stakes are holding two wire cages in place. They are protecting (I hope) wild orpine which has only managed to bloom for me twice because the deer ate it down to nothing. Perhaps it will live long enough to flower now that it's in prison.

This is where the purple iris bloomed this spring, and a bunch of daffodils. It's where the deep purple meadow sage is. Partly by design and partly because it's what I have, the primary color in this garden is going to be blues and purples. Right now, three plants in that scheme are blooming at the same time. I moved some of the blue globe campanula over here. I thought they would like more sun. Not sure if they do, but three of them are blooming. In this shot there is one on the right, with a stalk of the deep purple meadow sage, and a tall stalk of the viper's bugloss with the lighter blue. As I often say, it's just a "weed," but I love it.
blue flowers


The Variegated Artemesia is spreading like crazy, as it does. If the patch gets too aggressive, it's not hard to rip out. It's supposed to get really tall, but mine never does. In fact, I put a few sprigs in the top of the rock garden a couple of weeks ago. The bright yellow on the leaves lightens the area.
variegated artemesia


I put five of the plants Betsy brought me in here. I'll just share two of those today. She raised them from seed.

This will get quite a lot larger. It's Lemon Balm Melissa officinalis. Native. Can be used to make tea or used as an herb.
lemon balm


And this is Monarda punctata, Horsemint. I'm tickled to have this because it's a native plant I love.
horsemint seedlings


Here's what it will look like when grown. horsemint

I'll save the other three. One of them might not make it. Something has already dug it up twice. Now it's got a wire cage.

In other news: It did rain today-- not very much, but enough to keep everything wet. I did a little bit of garden puttering, editing, projects, had a great phone conversation with a friend I don't hear from much.

And spent some time dreaming and making drawings for a garden I'd love to have, but I sure can't make this one happen for nearly free. So far, dreaming, looking at plants on line, and fooling around are free (except for the time). We shall see what happens beyond that.

Oh, I did buy two on-sale annuals to put in a planter with the geranium Betsy brought me. I put that together this morning. You'll see it some time. The geranium isn't blooming yet.

See Driveway Bed 1- Report #1 2025

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Only Took 20+ Years


This is a monumental day for the Spirit of the Woods Chapter of the NCTA. Let me tell you why.

Approximately 20 years ago (I have to look up the exact year) our chapter started to prepare to put two register boxes out along our section of the trail. The chapter south of us has them. The chapter north of us has them. Chapters all along the entire 4800 miles of trail have them. But, until today, we did not.
trail register box


I won't go into all the reasons why, but it all began with a political decision by someone higher up the food chain in the Forest Service who decided we couldn't do this. We've been negotiating ever since. Seriously, the volunteer who made the boxes has even died! Van, if you are watching, I hope you are happy to see your beautiful cedar boxes finally appear along the trail.

Pete and Bill are installing the box on the post. And Pete added the baffle to try to keep critters out (mice love to chew up the books and make nests).
installing a trail register box


This was actually the third thing we accomplished on this trail work day. The second part was getting the "Private Property" signs up on the section of the trail I talked about in the link below. The family officially has signed paperwork allowing the trail passage, and these great signs provided by the National Park Service hopefully help people to understand that they should stay on the trail and respect our privilege to pass through.
trail private property signs


And before that... we spent a bit over 2 hours working with some Forest Service staff to remove invasive species. We are now approved to do so without their direct supervision. Dan is weilding our new and violent brush cutter. It can take out things almost up to 3" in diameter. Here, he's working on a Tatarian Honeysuckle.
man cutting a bush with a brush cutter


We cut stuff and painted the cut stumps with herbicide. You've seen me doing a lot of this at my house.
 autumn olive stumps with herbicide


There were 7 of us working for those two hours. Even so, it's slow going. One has to find all the trees and shrubs, big or small, cut them off really near the ground, treat the cut ends, move the branches off the trail. We tried to get everything within 10 feet of the trail. But walking back, we found even more that we missed. This is just one pile of cut brush.
pile of cut brush


I left home at 7 am, and got home just in time to shower and make it to a meeting in Ludington at 3 pm.

Nothing else happened today. This was plenty, and I'm going to go lie down very soon.

I tried to estimate the total walking and separate it from the walking on the actual NCT. We had to carry the posts and the digger a fair distance for the 2nd and 3rd projects. Dan left us after the second part and went off a different place to mow a section of trail. It takes a lot of work to keep a trail in nice shape.

Total miles walked 4.6, with 3.0 of them being NCT in various places.

Miles walked in 2026: 186.6
NCT Hike 100 Challenge: 63

See Slightly Out of Focus

Monday, June 22, 2026

Tiny Flowers


Some of the things blooming in the rock garden right now have very tiny flowers.

I'll lead off with one of the brand new sedums. I'm very happy with it, but it may not be hardy. I'm going to leave some out for the winter and bring another pot inside to be sure I'll have some come spring. I think I do need to buy a grow light. I suspect my poor luck with overwintering is related to poor light.

This is the 'Little Missy' Sedum. The flowers are extra-tiny. The leaves are only about a quarter inch long.
sedum little missy flower


Here's one I've shared off and on. This is one of the Sedum hispanicum varieties. I have 'Blue Carpet,' and 'Pinkie.' They tend to move themselves around and pop up who knows where. I expect they also get promiscuous. But my guess is this is 'Pinkie.' Betsy just gave me another clump, too, that seems to be neither blue nor pink.
sedum hispanicum pinkie flowers


Can you even see the flower on this one? Unlike the Creeping Thyme that gets covered with blossoms, this is Thyme 'Sparkling Bright.' It's taller and the foliage looks more white from a distance. But it does get tiny light purple flowers.
thyme sparkling bright flowers


This is the Creeping Speedwell 'Georgia Blue.'
creeping speedwell Georgia Blue flower


Finally, here is a really, really tiny one. I won't tell you what this is today, but it will be featured again.
bigbract verbena flower


In other news: The ground squirrel must be slipping under the fence. He's doing some damage. I put out repellant. Lets' hope he doesn't like it.

In the morning, I worked my little part-time summer job and weeded the driveway flower bed in the afternoon. I finished the big section of that and was going to show you, but the light is all dappled now, and pictures are no good. So that will be another day.

Tomorrow, I'll be doing trail work. Have to get up earlier than I like, but I can do it. And if I'm home in time, I have a meeting in the afternoon.

See Sorting Out Sedums

Sunday, June 21, 2026

Icing the Ice Plants


For some reason, ice plants just don't do well for me. The rock garden appear to have everything they should like, but it's a no-go. Or at least a no-thrive.

Here is 'Red Mountain Flame' this year. It's the one I've had the longest- about 4 years. It's also the happiest. (with a weed I missed pulling)
red mountain flame ice plant


At some times of the day, the way the sun hits it, it seems to sparkle!
red mountain flame ice plant


The other one that is just barely hanging in there is 'Granita.'

granita ice plant

This is the 'Ocean Sunset' that I really liked. Here it is in 2024. That one died.

ice plant ocean sunset

So I bought another one last year. Want to see what it looks like this year?
dead ice plant


Yeah. Well, apparently there are some varieties that are tougher. The yellow one- 'Cooper's - is supposed to be really tough. But I have a ton of yellow in the summer and don't really want that. There is an orange one called 'Fire Spinner' that's supposed to be more hardy, and 'Dancing Embers' is sort of a pink-orange. The descriptions of all of them say they are OK in my zone, so who knows.

I'm tired of buying new ones and having them do poorly. Probably no more ice plants.

In other news: I edited. I finished my column for the Daily News. I finished weeding the rock garden and worked a little in the other gardens, and finished mowing the lawn. I'm beat, but it's all good!

Funny story from last night. I forgot to close the fencing at the bottom of the rock garden. I was looking off the deck and darned if that little 13-lined ground squirrel wasn't digging in the bottom of the garden. I clapped and yelled and he got himself back to his hole. He was digging where there are some bulbs, but I don't think he got anything. Fence is now closed. You can believe that!

See Ice Plants

Saturday, June 20, 2026

Swapping Plants with Betsy


Betsy asked if she could stop by because she had some plants for me.


She wasn't kidding! She brought me a whole tray of plants, with 13 different things in it! And they've been cared for so they are as nicely established as anything from a nursery. Some are for the rock garden, and some for other places.
two women and a flat of plants


I did get three of them planted. It takes a hot minute to figure out where I want new plants to be.

This is Sedum ternatum, Woodland Sedum. It also grows wild and rambly in the woods, although I can't honestly say I've ever found it in the woods. I'm not sure that it likes full sun. I guess I'll find out. Supposedly it tolerates it, but it may not be as sprawling and drape as well as if it had some shade. It will have white flowers, and will contrast nicely in any season with the 'Firecracker' Sedum- the purple to its left.

Anyway, I'm trying it here where the purple rock cress was. That is barely alive. Not sure why- it should be very happy where I put it. Anyway, it's now in a pot and will hopefully recover.
sedum ternatum


She gave me two Sempervivums that I did not have. I'd been thinking I needed something like these for the spaces between logs at the top of the garden.

This one is 'Chocolate Kiss.'
Sempervivum chocolate kiss


And this is 'Blue Boy.'
sempervivum blue boy


There is some other plant news on the horizon too, but this is certainly enough for one day.

In other news: I edited, I got groceries. Then Betsy came. She already has most of the things I have available to share, but I did send her home with a few plants. It's fun to have a friend who likes the variety of plants as much as I do!

And, you know, I'm contemplating another garden space in my head.

See Betsy's Rock Garden