This spring we’re so fortunate to have a few garden visitors, the best of whom is Mr. G who lives kitty-corner down the hill from us, though you’d swear this was his yard. He has a busy, noisy household there and well, our place is quiet and relaxing. And while it may look like he’s relaxing on that outdoor table, he was letting us know things were growing and finally starting to bloom to his liking.
Neighborhood visitor Lloyd glares at Mr. MewMew for taking a gardening break. Lloyd is all work and business and is definitely not a fan of slackers.
Down in the greenspace, the Canada geese are making their pre-migration plans. Hundreds of them fly overhead multiple times a day, strengthening their wings and endurance in preparation to go north to cooler weather once our temperatures start to rise. Next month, they’ll head out and we won’t see or hear from them again until November. Have a good flight, you loud squawking geese! See you in fall!
(Also shown, our Star Magnolia tree in full bloom. Pretty but very messy.)
Last year, Mom planted a batch of mini daffodils and all came up last month. Daffodils are her favorite bulb. We used to have a dozen or more varieties planted here and there but after a few years, they tire out. This was our only big daffodil this spring. If Mom can justify the cost, she might get more to plant this coming fall. So typical of her to always be thinking seasons ahead.
One of the few things left on the garden To-Do list from last year was to repot a big upright rosemary we’ve had for a decade or more. Knowing it would be a big job, Mom finally got on that task but had to saw the old, pretty plastic pot off the root ball to get it out. She says the whole process took way much longer than it should have. Whew! Another thing crossed off the list.
After repotting that rosemary, Mom was motivated enough to get the heavy, potted Japanese red maple out to the curb to find a new home. Grown from a seedling saved from the original tree that had to come down six years ago because the roots were starting to raise a nearby cement walkway, the seedling had grown to eight feet tall in a huge decorative pot. It was a beauty but we didn’t have any space to plant it here and it would be cruel to force this size of a tree to live in a pot all its life.
With a little effort, Mom found someone who was looking for a strong, red maple and off it went to a new home with lots of yard space. Now, she needs the motivation to find new homes for a couple of daylilies and sedums that are outgrowing their areas. Why doesn’t she just dig them up and toss them into the yard debris bin? Because she wants/hopes others would want beauty at their house too.
Mom does have her limit, though. At a local plant nursery years ago, Dad expressed interest in a Vinca plant and while Mom wasn’t a fan, she bought one anyway and planted it with the hope it would become a welcome ground cover.
Nope. It’s just a stringy plant that seldom flowers and tends to collect dead, fall leaves. Mom pulls it out from time to time but it always returns from the roots. And Dad? He’s forgotten he ever mentioned Vinca all those years ago. Look! Its blooming. Okay, it can stay another year.
Neighborhood visitor Colby reminds us that when we’re done stuffing cotton puff in the nest builder’s grape-vine ball, he’d like a petting, a treat, and then to see us get back to work, please and thank you.
Warm weather is coming and we’ll be swimming in flowers before long. Mom has the last of the patio furniture set up (finally down to three chairs from six and a chaise lounge, a bench, and an umbrella table – too much!), and has emptied most of the perennial pots to the new garden bed she created last year.
All the Colehaus Cats are doing well. Pia hasn’t expressed any interest to going back to canned wet food and continues to be the only cat to eat just kibble. And we’re pretty sure she’s ant-free at the moment. We wiped out the last ant invasion fairly quickly. Quint and Tessa continue to alternate between napping together and holding slap-fests. Viola keeps an eye on those from afar. She’s developing a good Patrol Sergeant attitude and we know should they get completely out of hand, Viola would step in and end that business in no time.
Let’s celebrate this Friday with a Flashback on Viola Niblet. This coming October, she’ll be eleven years old. She’s an independent, no-nonsense girl with a budding Patrol Sergeant streak, just like her mama Zuzu had. Viola can usually be found downstairs, napping on a padded kitchen chair where she can keep an eye on things, or upstairs draped over Mom’s wrists while Mom tends to Internet doings. What a pretty girl Viola has grown to be!