11/13/2023 – Around Colehaus

Autumn-y Decor © Colehauscats.com
Autumn-y Decor © Colehauscats.com

We’re getting into mid-November here at Colehaus and that means lots of fallen leaves, vibrant autumn colors, chilly nights, and finally, lots of rain. While our summer wasn’t quite as dry as last year’s, it was close. Hurray for spreading water-saving, weed-blocking bark mulch early!

I didn't but so what? © Colehauscats.com
I didn’t but so what? © Colehauscats.com

Tessa insists she most certainly did not dig some of those old red pecans out of that basket to bat around the room. “So what if I did?” she adds smugly. You’re not doing yourself any favors there, Tessa.

Blueberry bush, fall 2023 © Colehauscats.com
Blueberry bush, fall 2023 © Colehauscats.com
Sedum, Autumn Joy, fall 2023 © Colehauscats.com
Sedum, Autumn Joy, fall 2023 © Colehauscats.com

Here’s a super easy pollinator plant to grow – Sedum Autumn Joy. This is used in a lot of neighborhood road mediums/roundabouts here and we think it looks good almost all year around. We like the bluish gray-green foliage and the bees LOVE the early fall-blooming flower heads. We just wish we knew people who wanted some. We have three medium-large patches and may need to eliminate one of those next year.

Red maple, Bloodgood, fall 2023 © Colehauscats.com
Red maple, Bloodgood, fall 2023 © Colehauscats.com

Years ago, we had a red, upright Japanese maple, variety Bloodgood, along our back property line, and after fifteen years, its roots began outgrowing the narrow plot it was in. While we absolutely LOVED this tree, we liked the cement sidewalk better and when it started lifting because of the maple roots, Mom had to get out her trusty Saws-All and chop it down. But not before finding and pot-planting a single seedling from the tree.

Seven years later, that Bloodgood maple, still in a large pot and pushing 7 feet tall, desperately needs to find a home. A neighbor waffled over the past three years on whether he wanted to dig a hole for it on his property, and finally confessed last weekend he didn’t want it.

Mom says next spring, it goes one way or the other. We don’t have any room for it and it cannot live another year in its pot without strangling itself. She’ll list it on NextDoor and hope the ghosting trend doesn’t continue (people who swear they want something and after making a commitment and the item is pulled from advertising, never show up and don’t return messages – ha ha, funny isn’t it?) and at worst case, its going into the yard debris bin; a sad, sad end to a little seedling that was babied and loved for 7 years. Sigh.

Alyssum from seed, fall 2023 © Colehauscats.com
Alyssum from seed, fall 2023 © Colehauscats.com

These are also seedlings from two tiny plants we got in 2021. We’re collecting seed from these to sprinkle out back where a sad thyme plant misses his columbine buddies that raccoons dug up back in August. Bad raccoons.

Bad raccoons, says Quint © Colehauscats.com
Bad raccoons, says Quint © Colehauscats.com

Quint agrees. This year’s raccoons weren’t nearly as destructive as last year’s batch, but they still tried to reach that bar. We held them off from uprooting new transplants using rocks around the plant bases and keeping in mind anything left outback will be seen as fair game. What used to be a mild annoyance finding patio furniture pillows scattered about came to an end when one pillow was forced to give up its stuffing to an overly curious and bite-y baby raccoon!

Pineapple sage, fall 2023 © Colehauscats.com
Pineapple sage, fall 2023 © Colehauscats.com

We always forget that it’s not the crepe myrtle and the Autumn Joy sedums that are last to bloom for the year, but it’s the pineapple sage! We grew two 3 years ago and divided those two into four plants after the first year. Relatively short lived, two didn’t make it through last year’s winter and another we removed due to planting it in a bad location – blocked a sprinkler head, blocked access to a fence gate. The fourth one however, grew big and healthy and our overwintering hummingbirds love the flowers. Next year, Mom’s probably going to move this one (if it survives the winter). She says it’s way too close to the heat pump and she’s certain that someday, a hummer’s going to get sucked into the heat pump vents. Not good odds that that will ever happen, but Mom’s imagination goes wild sometimes.

Cyclamen, fall 2023 © Colehauscats.com
Cyclamen, fall 2023 © Colehauscats.com

Mom’s cyclamen is still doing well, remarkably so! This greenhouse grown gift plant (from Dad back in 2017), usually doesn’t last more than a year or two in most homes. But Mom has a very hard time tossing out perfectly good plants (see sedum and maple dilemmas above) and tried her luck with planting it directly into the ground in a mostly shady area. Last year, this little plant weathered all but the very deepest snowfall when Mom put a plant cover over it for 2 weeks. And it rewarded us with half a dozen blooms in spring.

Calibrachoa, fall 2023 © Colehauscats.com
Calibrachoa, fall 2023 © Colehauscats.com

These annual mini petunias, called Calibrachoa, are almost done for the year, only because they’re in a semi protected area.

Hoya in full bloom, fall 2023 © Colehauscats.com
Hoya in full bloom, fall 2023 © Colehauscats.com

Inside, Mom’s hoya (wax plant) went into bloom making her wildly happy. She’s had hoya plants in the past long, long ago but was never able to get them to bloom, and in fact, questioned whether they really bloomed at all. She also heard they have to be old (they don’t) and that the blooms smell very sweet (they don’t). The flowers lasted a lot shorter time-wise than she thought they would and again, she’s very happy she got her photographic proof.

Homemade biscotti, fall 2023 © Colehauscats.com
Homemade biscotti, fall 2023 © Colehauscats.com

Lastly, we found a good, traditional recipe for Biscotti and made a couple of batches. Ours have chopped almonds, rehydrated dried orange rind, and anise flavoring. Eventually, we’ll explore other ingredients like dried fruits and flavorings. But for now, these baking in the oven while the rain pours outside brought fall home.

Thank you for visiting. Snuggle up!

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A Colehaus Cats flashback:

2022 – No post
2021 – No post
2020Mysterious
2019One Word Wednesday
2018 – No post
2017 – No post
2016 – No post
2015Odd Day
2014 – No post
2013Wee Wednesday Words
2012 – No post

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7 Responses to 11/13/2023 – Around Colehaus

  1. Mark's Mews says:

    We have 4 Autumn Joy sedums here. We love them. We used to have more, but after 20 years, they faded away. But we have 4 rooted cuttings and are nuturing them carefully.

    And it is time for TBT to plant those 100 pansies. Today was cold; tororrow will be nicer.

  2. Rene S says:

    We love homemade biscotti too. Our favorite recipe has chocolate, orange zest, and almonds. We wish you lived closer because we’d totally take some Autumn Joy. We used to have some but they died off.

  3. Memories of Eric and Flynn says:

    Biscotti, yum! I have cyclamen planted in the memorial garden and on the raised border bed and they all do well outdoors. I have tried keeping them as indoor pot plants but they never last long. I have a thing about indoor plants and they always end up dying! My outdoor plants flourish though.

  4. 15andmeowing says:

    Tessa, I don’t blame you for playing with the nuts. The biscotti looks good.

  5. meowmeowmans says:

    Yum. That biscotti looks delicious! Things sure look pretty around Colehaus. Well, except for the shenanigans of the pesky raccoons.

Comments are closed.