Friday, October 28, 2011
Scarth Exhibit
If you’re in the Baraboo area tomorrow, come check out Linda & Robert Scarth’s DEEP NATURE: PHOTOGRAPHS FROM IOWA (as well as some of their other work), which will be on display at the Aldo Leopold Foundation’s Art Discovery Day. Hope to see you there!
October Gardening Tip
As the frost kills plants, remove them. Annuals should be dug up or pulled out by their roots. Perennials, except for roses, should be cut off an inch or two above the groud. Put undiseased plant material in a compost pile, chopping up large pieces. If plant material is diseased, put it on a special, seperate pile to prevent disease from spreading.
-- Veronica Lorson Fowler, Gardening in Iowa and Surrounding Areas
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Gardening in October
Wednesday, October 25
To wrap or not to wrap. That is the question I was suddenly pondering in the clear, crisp air of the setting sun, the needles of the bald cypress glowing gold just a few feet away. Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous weather, or to take cloth against a sea of troubles and by opposing block them, at least for another week or so. Balmy weather back in the forecast after tonight's cold snap. Not much time to ponder, so I went with my deepest instincts. Wrap for the night is coming wherein you cannot wrap. Then I hustled around, harvesting the last of the pepper crop and a few zucchini still blossoming and fruiting under four layers of cloth. On the way in, I picked out three bright red Enchantments from the table of green and pink tomatoes ripening on the back porch, covered the rest with some old bed sheets, and then set out to make something of all my summer vegetables.
To wrap or not to wrap. That is the question I was suddenly pondering in the clear, crisp air of the setting sun, the needles of the bald cypress glowing gold just a few feet away. Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous weather, or to take cloth against a sea of troubles and by opposing block them, at least for another week or so. Balmy weather back in the forecast after tonight's cold snap. Not much time to ponder, so I went with my deepest instincts. Wrap for the night is coming wherein you cannot wrap. Then I hustled around, harvesting the last of the pepper crop and a few zucchini still blossoming and fruiting under four layers of cloth. On the way in, I picked out three bright red Enchantments from the table of green and pink tomatoes ripening on the back porch, covered the rest with some old bed sheets, and then set out to make something of all my summer vegetables.
Carl H. Klaus, My Vegetable Love: A Journal of a Growing Season
Monday, October 24, 2011
Tree of the Week
DISTINGUISHING CHARACTERISTICS: Leaves once-pinnately compound, opposite, 12 to 16 inches long; leaflets 7 to 13 in number (usually 9 to 11), oblong lanceolate, 3 to 6 inches long, not stalked, conspicuously toothed, glabrous except for tufts of orange-brown hairs where they join at the leaf stem. Winter twigs moderate to stout, gray, glabrous; leaf scars half-round to nearly-round; bundle scars numerous and close together, forming a fine curved line. Buds similar to green ash but usually black. Flowers very small, polygamous or dioecious, apetalous, appearing with or before the leaves in spring; staminate in short, compact panicles, pistillate in open panicles. Fruit a paddle-shaped samara 1 to 1 1/2 inches long, often persisting in winter; wing notched at apex, surrounding the flat, indistinct seed cavity. Bark gray, scaly, becoming shallowly and rather indistinctly furrowed on large trees.
SIMILAR TREES: Green and white ash have stalked leaflets, brown buds, and samaras with distinct seed cavities that are rounded in cross section.
IOWA DISTRIBUTION: Native as far west as the Des Moines River Valley. Not commonly planted.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)