It has been a quiet period dominated by lawn and garden work.
We have seen an increase in bird activity, so the suet and nectar get refilled more frequently. I am guessing that we went through a migratory phase that has changed the populations. During the Fall migration, there were lots of seeds available naturally and this seemed to reduce the need for supplemental feeding. The new Winter populations have settled in, the winter pickings are few, the cold raises the need for food and - voila! - we have hungy birds again. The hummingbirds are reluctantly sharing the feeders (they were quite territorial in the Summer months) and the suet is savaged by packs of maurading little birds.The garden work has mostlly been pruning. Our Howe Sound cabin has a rose that has been growing at one corner of the cabin since about 1938-40, planted by Susan's grandmother. This is an original "old rose", a climber that has survived benign neglect and active construction for about 80 years. In advance of the construction, we were unsure if it would survive, so we took a half-dozen clippings back to our Redmond house. Several of the cuttings remain in pots, large pots, and several are in the ground. The grounded roses are very happy. We did not really know what we were planting, how the cuttings would adjust to their new home, but the last few years have shown them to be taking quite well to the new surroundings. for the last couple of years, the one by the back deck has grown up onto the (south-facing) roof and the one by the entrance has tried to capture any number of delivery persons. I pruned both in the past week, completely filling the 96-gallon composting container twice. The thorns on the old rose are quite effective as deterrents; wicked things. This makes pruning a challenge. I have settled on a technique that starts at the edges and prunes inward and downward. This limits me to smaller cuttings and the work goes slowly. Once I have removed a good bit of the rose bush (about half), I can come in from the side and this allows me to cut off larger bits. The composing service is very handy - they use an automated truck to collect the contents of the bin and I can just wave good-bye to the thorns. The alternative would be to run the rose cuttings through the chipper-shredder, and that would be awful. The canes going in would be constantly grabbing at fabric and flesh, neither of which is pleasant. And the service means the rose bits go off to become compost. Win.
I came across a video, now misplaced, that explained a technique for pruning and trellising old roses. It was an eye-opener. I have decided to try its technique. I am now pruning the roses to grow large, healthy canes in a horizontal pattern. From these will grow smaller canes, reaching vertically, that will carry the rosebuds, creating a wall of roses. Nice. We have not had any mildew or pest problems, so these old roses seem quite hardy and the veritcal growth will lead to more sun (mor blossoms) and good ventilation (controlling mildew and pests). I will need to rebuild the arbor so the roses have something to grow on, but that will be another story.
No comments:
Post a Comment