Chopping and dropping has been the name of the game for the past couple of weeks. I deal with a few nasty invasives (chinese privet, amur honeysuckle, various wildflowers) and some prolific natives (cherry laurel, yaupon holly, poison ivy) and of course, i want to honor the energy, time, and resources used to help these plants grow, i don't want to just bag them up and put them on the curb. So I chop and drop on my in-ground garden beds, where they'll break down and feed the soil and invertebrates that call the soil home. Of course they grow back, but putting pressure on them will slow them down, and as i remove stumps and such hopefully i'll eradicate them and replace with natives. Any trunks that are especially large get turned into edging for my pathways.
In other news my father-in-law gave me some peppers and tomatos, and promised more in the future (yay!) currently have some brandywine pinks, super sweet 100s, pumpkin spice jalapeno, brazilian starfish, west indes red habanero, cayenne, orange spice jalapeno, and lemon spice jalapeno. (he loves growing peppers) I just started my zucchini (one of my favorite summer veg) already they're popping up and i planted them yesterday!
In other news, last year i got some serviceberry trees and planted them in the wooded area of my yard, but the heat got to them and i thought they died, but they lived! very happy about that. Eventually i'd like to take cuttings and add more around the yard.
Now that my herbaceous perennials have popped up, it's time to clean up the garden. This starts with chop n' drop.
Chop n' drop is basically what it says on the tin- chopping up unwanted/invasive plants and putting them in the garden beds to build the soil. Usually I let them dry out a few days then I'll add a layer of pine needles on top as mulch. My 'soil' is just sand with chunks of clay, degraded from being used as a pine plantation in the past. Repairing the soil and restoring biodiversity is my upmost concern for my yard, and sure, it would happen eventually by itself, but i prefer to help.
Once the garden beds are mulched, i can figure out what to add. I have a number of species I've added, but there's still a lot of empty space. This year i'm hoping to add milkweed, black-eyed susan, mountain mint, and wild sunflower. (trying to create a small list that is doable) Trees are also a concern, but any added would have to be next fall/winter. It's already too hot to add any now, transplanting in the heat leads to sadness and dispair.
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!!!!
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:
"The slogan 'refuse, reduce, reuse, repair and recycle' provides us with a hierarchy of strategies for dealing with waste. Refuse means to decide not to engage in the consuming action or task in the first place because it is not necessary. Reduce means to minimize the materials and energy required or the frequency of the consuming action. Reuse means either reuse for the same purpose or put to the next best use. Repair means to use skill and very limited additional resources to restore function. Recycle means to break down into more basic elements or materials before being reprocessed for the same or other uses."
Permaculture: Principles & Pathways Beyond Sustainability by David Holgren, page 112