Saturday, October 4, 2008

Sternbergia lutea out of nowhere...not really, more out of the past

It's a good day when you learn something new or realize something important, so this is a good day. I found this Sternbergia under a rose in a front bed and remembered how it got there. About 8 or 9 years ago I divided a clump of these cheerful fall flowering bulbs and split the bulk of them between two locations. I remember now though that I took a handful of impossibly small bulblets and distributed them to random spots around the garden. This is the first of these plantings to come to fruition. It is a tough bulb and will inevitably become a clump and, if allowed, will, by seed, gradually colonize the bed it's in.

My epiphany though, was that all of our actions in the garden take different times to realize themselves. This sounds pretty obvious, but hey, maybe I'm not that bright. And anyway all epiphanies are patently obvious in retrospect; its just that explosion of awareness that makes them so wonderful.

I regularly think about time in the garden. Days and years are cyclical and roll along the linear passage of the years, but what about those finite fragments of linear time: 5 minutes to plant a flowering potted plant, 60 days to grow some annuals, 100 years to flower a Century plant, a lifetime to grow a mature shade tree. a year and a half to go from a 1 gallon pot to a beautiful garden perennial. And they are all layered on themselves like paper mache. I have always though that the idea that we had control over our gardens performce and evolvution was a bit of hubris. I'm not smart enough to do all those calculations. There's a lot of serendipity going on, or maybe the universe is helping us?

Sorry about the 4th paragraph but I have one more observation. If you are starting a garden you are waiting for results so its good to do the things that will give you a quick return; hardscape, annuals, perennials, a few big plants. Now the important part. Just because you're in a hurry don't neglect those plants that will take a long time to mature. Plant a Stewartia early on. Or a shade tree if you really want shade. They will take 20 years to mature, but procrastinating will only make you wait longer. Plant perennials that you want to colonize like asarums, or Pachysandr procumbens, or Trillium grandiflorum. Trust me, the time will pass!

Friday, October 3, 2008

I can't help myself....I really care about tree circles


I worked on the tree circles in the National Grove of State Trees today. I sprayed roundup on weeds; my original intention was to spot spray the perennial weeds inside the (relatively) clean circles, but I soon realized that wiregrass had been growing into the mulch from the surrounding turf. It is very happy when it can grow in a bare sunny area and less happy when it has to compete with cool season grasses that are almost able to overwhelm it in fall, winter, and spring. I knew that I had to stop it, so I sprayed the perimeters of the circles and that should keep them for another year.

Tree circles are an interesting concept. Everyone likes the idea of trees growing in a field of turf, but it turns out most trees aren't crazy about that situation. At least until they reach a size where their root systems can compete with the grass and their canopies can shade their roots enough to prevent extreme temperature fluctuations in the summer. Even at this point though, they are in danger of being damaged by lawn mowing equipment. A survey of the IAA (International Arborist's Association), large tree companies, and the literature, suggests that a circle at least 25 feet in diameter is appropriate for most tree species. When I began working in the Grove, the trees had either no tree circles, small tree circles, overgrown tree circles, or a combination of two and three. With a tremendous amount of help, most of the trees now have pretty good sized circles and they're mostly in pretty good condition in terms of weeds and mulch.

What I like to think of as the "corona effect" is an interesting, and bad, phenomenon that takes place with tree circles that have at some time not been properly maintained. I would guess that this includes most tree circles; certainly it includes all those in the Grove! The bare mulched areas are inviting places for seed germination and a variety of weeds take advantage of this. If they are ever allowed to go to seed themselves, when the weeds in the tree circle proper are sprayed, a corona of weeds is left in the foot or two or three of turf immediately surrounding the circles. Untreated, these weeds become a source of seed that can continuously reinfect the circles themselves.Dandelions, oxalis, violets, plantain are all common in this location. Often they don't move farther out into established turf. Killing the entire area and reseeding is obviously a possible solution, but I prefer less invasive techniques, so whenever I am spraying the circles, I make a point of killing the largest of these weeds any any that form large enough groupings to spray without hitting a lot of turf. This is important: When you spray tree circles with preemergent herbicide be certain that you spray these corona areas as well. You won't hurt the turf; it spreads by tillering not by seed. You will prevent germination of existing weed seed. That's a good thing.