Thursday, May 3, 2012

The Back 40

Our property line doesn't end at the edge of our backyard, but continues down a rather steep ravine. Despite living here for nearly six years, none of us had ever seen what is down there, so curiosity finally got the best of me and I headed down with my trusty camera. What I wanted to see most was a wee stream at the bottom, but what I found was much cooler than that.

Terrific Stump

Cool mushroom, bigger than my foot

Tiny spider

Kitty on a log, halfway down the ravine and I can hear water.

Aha! Found it.

Neat limestone half-moon waterfall

Layers of rock

Down the watershed

Human refuse brought here by the water.
I was really saddened to find quite a bit of refuse down there. Possibly some of it landed during the 100-year flood we had in 2010. Debris is a terrible problem for the Middle Tennessee watershed, which is another reason I'm glad to be helping in the annual cleanup by the Nashville Clean Water Project. Metals and plastics leach chemicals into the water that harm birds and other wildlife and all that refuse has a dramatic negative impact on our beautiful natural environment in Middle Tennessee. It's all connected! If we don't pick it up, it could wind up in the Gulf of Mexico; debris from other parts of the U.S. might find their way to the Pacific Trash Vortex.

We like to think we are insulated from our waste, when we sit with our laptop in our sanitized, temperature-controlled homes. We like to think we are masters of our environment. But we are woefully out of sync with the deepest rhythms of our earth, of which we are just a part. Nature will find a balance. If we don't act, our trash will always find us in the end.

Not down the ravine, but a cool caterpillar "train" and gathering.

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Garden Tour - May 1, 2012

My ultimate gardening goal is to always have something blooming and/or edible in the garden. Last year, I sacrificed annual color in my garden budget to invest in some perennials and this spring we are all enjoying the fruits of that decision! The gardens are full of color and life and lots of little shoots poking up into the world in search of the sun.

Bearded Iris
Jacob's Ladder
The Jacob's Ladder will flower later, but the new spring leaves are tinged with pink. Beautiful!
Asiatic Lily
Hyacinths poking their heads out.
The hyacinths are not blooming, but they have grown fast! I only planted them last month.

Bunte Forellenschluss Lettuce
Winter Density Lettuce and some Dill

Major Wheeler Honeysuckle
Chives

Amaryllis (Full House or Clown)

Bok Choy
I saw some bok choy starts and thought I'd try them, but it was unseasonably warm (80s in February), so they bolted almost immediately and I decided to just enjoy the flowers!
Hydrangea, with beautiful yellow Creeping Jenny behind.
Mexican Sage/Salvia Leucathna
Can you spot the happy bee? He was hard to catch.
Spiderwort
If you look closely, you'll see several unopened buds near each bloom. Here at Sunnybrook South they bloom for several months, from March-June.

Baby Begonia -- these have come up on their own the last two years!
Purple Queen -- also has perennialized in my beds

Moss Rose/Portulaca -- tiny seedlings sprouting

Geranium cuttings taking root. Two whole new plants here!


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