We (mostly Sarah) have been seeing some beautiful birds on the hill this spring, to include Baltimore Orioles, Eastern Bluebirds, and Indigo Buntings. We looked up the Indigo and found that the male of the species is actually black, and it is the diffraction produced in the feathers that results in such rich shades of blue and purple. Neat. Sarah managed to nab this picture of one on our rotten log pile. (Sarah's note: It was the first time I have ever seen one, but Mick and his family talk a lot about them. I saw a blue brighter than a bluebird, and thought, that's gotta be it, amazing!)
Dad, you'll appreciate how different this looks now. I've cut some smaller trees down and cleared a few limbs, and then used the brush hog to sort of push back the forest.
What a help that thing has been. We put in 25 hybrid poplars this morning, and three chokecherry trees. With the kubota we just went down the line and filled the bucket with the rocks all that digging produced.
We started putting in our annual garden as well. This time last year our tomatoes were about 2 inches high, we're expecting more from them this year.
We did a raised bed with onions and garlic, and boy have the onions really taken off!
Along with the other trees we put in today, we had two Carmine Jewel Dwarf Cherries. They are cold hardy all the way up to zone 2b! Also, they are naturally dwarfing. Gurney's sells them for 30 bucks, but they had a special and sold 'em for seven. We bought two, and mulched them heavily.
All of that mulch has to come from somewhere, and we sure as heck aren't buying it! That rotten log pile that the Indigo Bunting was on, we've been chopping those up with shovels and using it as mulch.
And we've been using the mulch for just about everything we've planted so far. The next picture is taken from on top of the rotting log pile, and it shows the site of our future orchards, with a bunch of mounds and raised beds in between what we already have established.
And now for one of my favourite things, the vineyard. I ordered 11 grapes from Red Dog Vineyard and I'm reasonably happy. Their prices were very cheap, though the root systems on the Frontenac Grapes were very poorly developed. The other varietals were great, though. So I think I've lost one Frontenac and one Sabrevois (great root system, no idea what happened), so thus far I'm pretty happy. The new grapes look great, and with a distinctive look to the leaves that might mean I'm far more accustomed to older, more american grape hybrids.
I had three Elvira grape vines that I nurtured and kept away from freezing weather all spring (I got 'em from Tractor Supply and they had already leafed out), and I planted them...gosh, when was that horrible wind storm with all the snow? Well, right before that happened I planted them, and all the new green growth died. My reliance, concords, and niagaras had begun leaf flush as well, and they lost their primary buds also. Everything but one Elvira is budding out again, and I'm so excited about the poor Elviras that I've got to include some pictures:
Life is just amazing!
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So Glad about the grapes! Great update!
ReplyDeleteAnd yes, life is so amazing. Was thinking that about the bees.