Lasagna Beds for Beginners

welcome

My adventures into gardening and my discovery of the "Lasagna Bed" technique. Learn from my mistakes and always feel free to comment, good or bad. If I can make a garden anybody can!

Memorial Day 2008


Always remember - I AM NO EXPERT

Learn something every day.

We had a brand new lawn last year. It was seeded and as luck would have it the next day heavy rains came and created canyons in the new dirt. However once things started to sprout it seemed the entire lawn was nothing but quack grass. Not CRAB grass which is killable but it looked like Quack Grass which is nigh-unkillable.

Well - this was a huge problem but I was told to fertilize and put seed down in the fall and all would work out.

I did as told and this year the only real problem was dandelions and the neighbors who's yards look wonderful. But . . . . I have not seen any Quack Grass.

Today I find out WHY! It's because it was NOT Quack grass but Rye Grass. They mix Rye Grass WITH regular new lawn grass seed because the Rye Grass grows very fast and prevents erosion while the much slower growing regular blue grass catches on.

WHO KNEW!!!
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In other yard/garden news.

The Clay garden which contained Lavender, Coreopsis, Rue, Purple Palace heuchera, some other type of heuchera, daylilies, and catmint is doing well. The lavender died completely and one type heuchera is dead. The catmint is hanging on and the coreopsis and daylilies are doing GREAT. Rue? not even sure what that was but it ain't there now.

I think that is part of gardening - seeing what works what does not work and then correcting. So I put in more Coreopsis and more catmint. I transplanted some of dj's moms daylilies that we dug up from the old house and where the lavender was I'm putting in pinkish red Coreopsis which I THINK will look great against the yellow slightly taller Coreopsis. This will be very pretty once it all gets going . . . I hope.

The problem with this garden was that the catmint was the tip of the spear when it came to rain water gushing down the hill. So I put in edging and made it a little higher then the surrounding area to keep the flood gates closed.

Here is the Clay Garden on Memorial Day - I'm ready to put in edging and have yet to put in some Coreopsis rosea (pinkish red) and a few more Catmints near the tip of the garden. And yes that is a hill that slopes toward the garden - thus he need for edging. (wireless rain gauge for weather station in middle)



The butterfly/bee garden is almost fully planted but I no longer know what the heck is in there. . OK - I really do but I somehow went off "plan" and started planting whatever I happened to see at the time. It will be interesting to see the color patterns once things bloom . . . .if they ever bloom. And SOMEHOW some annuals suck in. DAMN YOU!

It does not look like much yet but things seem to NOT be dieing so there is hope. Those are the annuals wearing red up there - a little cheating but they had the word hummingbird on the label and I was sucked in.


One interesting plant to watch will be the Sweet Autumn Clematis(SAC)(see below photo). Lets see how big it gets this year. Reports say 3 inch's a day up to 25 feet once it's established.


Here you see a Pink Princess Weigela (PPW)which I REALLY can not say to any golf buddies. However Humming birds LOVE this plant/bush! Behind the Weigela are three Globe Thistles which seem to be just hanging around growing roots but they will look awesome cool space age - how could I turn them down! .

I'm a little worried about size but I feel with the Weigela being a slow growing bush they will not crowd it. However there could be a battle brewing between the Globe Thistles and the Sweet Autumn Clematis. Both are aggressive and I think the Clematis COULD start to strangle Globy. It'll be interesting to see if there is a winner.

I'm putting my money on SAC which is climbing up the post thingy holding up the deck. SAC is suppose to be an awesome thing of beauty that can grow 25 to 30 feet in a year. You cut it back to 6 inches every spring and by the time summer is over it's spread to 25 feet.

I would show you pictures but they can get scary and I don't want to worry DJ about losing Milo if Milo sits still too long. It has been known to grow 3 inches a day. So with 150 growing days . . . think about it :-)

We'll see.

And the mailbox garden is doing AWESOME!! A success!!!! Here is a photo from May 5th and another from Memorial Day.

May 5th

Memorial Day

And that is not even covering the four rock gardens that I'm tinkering with and you should see the plan for the 300 sq foot patio and surrounding BIG area! (insert evil laugh).

Until next time!

Rod and DJ

2 comments:

~Minxie~ said...

Rod.... the mailbox garden looks GREAT! I remember seeing it earlier when you first posted about it.
The Clematis sounds like a wild child! Cant wait to see the pics on how large it gets!
How will the frost affect the plants? Will you have to cover them to protect them?
Oh, and I know you are NO expert, but perhaps you have some advice for the gopher infestation I have... I cant use poisons because of dogs and the gophers are in my "food" garden. Do you have any advice or suggestions?
I LOVE gardening... and your PE blog.... so now I have another blog to keep up with!
Thanks,
Minxie in Cali

Captain Morgan said...

We also planted a Autumn Blaze Maple in our backyard. He's doing very well and looked lovely last fall. I have a picture of him on my blog.

This year we planted 3 more clematis in the backyard. We have one that the last owner planted in the front garden. It gets HUGE in the summer w/ purple flowers. Looking forward to the new ones getting larger as the years go by.

2 weeks ago we added more plants to my perennial garden. Last summer we planted black eyed susan and coneflowers. I wanted to add a few more different types of plants for more variety and color.

2- Peach Leaf Bellflower
1-Jacob's Ladder
1-Bachelor Button
1-Ruby Star Coneflower

We've did a lot of planting last year because the previous owners didn't do much for landscaping. The yard looked horrible. Our house was built in the 70's but it was like building a new home with all the stuff we had to plant and do.

My salvia all came back this year and are huge. I added two more salvia "rose queens". Of course when the men were working on the outside of our house for the kitchen remodel they laid bricks on top of them. Hopefully they are okay. I wish people would be more careful. We told them to watch out for our plants while working on the back of the house. Basically it was a waste of time to even say anything. I had to go out each night and rescue plants that we being smashed by siding and other paving stones. GRRRRRRRR