Mar. 23, 2025
x

The great wisteria bloom begins

When you hear about 'the vine that ate the south' you probably think of Kudzu, and that's warrented. But a very close second contender is chinese wisteria.

Every year around this time of year the area i live in has an explosion of purple, it's inescapable. And while yes, we do have our own native wisteria, the native variety is shorter, taking on a more shrub-like look (it will climb though, if given the opportunity) and has some different qualities if you look closely, but they don't bloom until june-july. No, it's without a doubt, invasive wisteria eating my town.

And look, i get it, wisteria is beautiful! My god, the way the flowers gently blow in the wind, and just how elegant and sweet the plant is i really do get it, but can we stop planting invasives when a native is right there?

green colonialism is a curse.

Also, i got sunburned in the garden today. DON'T FORGET YOUR SUNSCREEN!!!!

Mar. 22, 2025
x

This is the absolute best time of the year to do major work in the garden; summertime gets too hot (multiple days reaching 100f, high humidity) and cold weather pisses me off, but march-april-may just works. We do have high temps in the high 80s(f) but usually a cool breeze is consistant, and the sun doesn't beat down as hard as it does in the summer.

I've already done a bit, moved my peach, fig, and mulberry trees to more optimal spots in the yard, planted some Blazing Star (Liatris Spicata) corms, started some common milkweed from seed, got a Fuyu persimmon, got an elderberry bush, and another fig.

My main goals for the upcoming months:

Let me say that the true revolutionary is guided by a great feeling of love. It is impossible to think of a genuine revolutionary lacking this quality.

Che Guevara