Saturday, June 20, 2009

Don't baby it




Returned from CA to find sweet pea mania, happy tomatoes and extra friendly kitties. What’s the saying about thriving off neglect? I am feeling especially grateful, mimicking Christina’s Facebook post of “heart pumps big, big love for her hubs, son, family, friends, home, garden, town, environs ...” Had a great time with Joel (not quite my hubs) and friends in Menlo Park marrying off my lovely and talented BFF Michaela, now Mrs. Pariseau. Love it. Lesson 1 – cherish your good friends and recognize friendships to be pursued. Dan and Bing, Kathleen, Sarah – you are fantastic. Baby Bingham was just about all I needed to kick into Operation Baby Maker. We’re 3 months out – wedding first – don’t mess with the order of things.

Where to even begin? Life is busy. Planning our own wedding for September, in the middle of my Soils class, working on my Organic Agriculture certificate through WSU, flowers blooming everywhere. Chickens – 9 of them. Oh and the seasonal heralding of unemployment. Yes, you heard right. My last day of conventional work is July 2. Nothing like layoff numero deuce to crank up the motivation. Oh vey, didn’t think I would be in this situation again, well so soon. Lesson 2 – don’t work for a Medicaid funded clinic.

What’s next dare you ask? For now, finish planning our September shing ding, keep my hands in the dirt and resist the urge to freak out. Last night I was flipping through HOW magazine’s jump start your creativity edition. It’s for graphic designers but it applies. Lesson 3 – spend less time stewing, more time doing. This guy Randel Plowman committed to making a collage a day for a year – pretty wicked. What he says, “Really, I just don’t like thinking about it. But if I sit down and start doing it, it’s fine.” WORD.

I think it’s feasible to make a bouquet a day for the growing season, but I don’t want to push it. Maybe a bouquet a week? Here’s your first delicious installment. Erin grew these peonies and I shrieked when I saw them. They deserved to be hugged by lady’s mantle and some lipstick colored sweet peas. Happy Julio in the background.



Oh and a personal Lesson 4 – Jill, next time you travel remember your frigging camera, sunglasses and deodorant! Essentials much?!

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Happy New Year!

Back in...Red?! It's a new year and a new name for my creative efforts - Red Clover Creative, the blog (website coming soon!), a sporadic compilation of garden, craft and domestic pursuits!

Up this year, Joel & Jill get hitched - planning has begun!September 2009







Thursday, June 19, 2008

Good things come to those who wait





Did I tell you that I love him too?!

Friday, June 13, 2008

Tosser!



Getting ready for Chelsea and Oliver's big day I made a mini bouquet to keep the hands quick. Diggin' the peonies - hope you do too Chelsea, cause that's what Ma Nature is giving you! And some orchids from Canada eh.

Thursday, June 5, 2008

After




Joel has engineered a tubing system to keep the pots consistently moist. By August 9th these will be tall and lush. I'll be sure to baby them.

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Before




Anne, your future centerpieces smell lovely! What an awesome combo of textures and colors - and they're all edible! We have 60 pots total:

Chewing Gum Mint
Curly Mint
Hidcote Blue Lavender
Baby Blue Lavender
Susan Belsinger Lavender
Curly Parsley
Italian Parsley
Italian Large Leaf Basil
Cinnamon Basil
English Thyme
Marjoram Golden Upright
Rossenkuppel Oregano

Friday, April 4, 2008

A rolling stone...




gathers no moss...but we're hoping these will. Behold the first round of the terracotta experiment. These pictures are pre application. Joel opted for a mixture of stale beer and moss. I walked over to Haggen to get rations for the buttermilk n' moss recipe (supposedly tried and true). Check out Heavy Petal's cool post on moss! These pots are for Anne's herbal wedding centerpieces. I'm growing the lavendar from seed - 'Fernleaf' and 'French Perfume' - so far, so good. The seedlings have about 2 sets of leaves.


Sunday, March 23, 2008

Worky work, busy bee...

No excuse for the lack of posts, well maybe a bit. Got a new job that I love and have been busy with backyard projects. Joel engineered a beautiful cedar fence. I helped! Now I'm overwhelmed with all the extra space. I planted out some zinnia seedlings, but am fearful that the SNOW IN APRIL! killed most of them off.

Pics of the fence and all the other madness to follow...

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

In the Projects






So it's been pouring rain and I think I jumped the gun on the seedlings, but spring is near and I'm trying to finish up some things - with help from the handsome ranch hand of course. Here's what I got:

1. The bed next to the patio originated from an awkward pile of dirt. The flourishing evergreen and large log were illegally obtained from the logging road behind the gun range...shhh! This bed will soon house: leeks, onions, carrots and lettuce and I'll throw a trailing pumpkin in to climb the trellis. Yes, the old toilet still stands, but I can't lift the damn thing on my own.

2. I sectioned off the big raised bed into quadrants for a cutting garden - a la Sarah Raven. I wanted to keep seedlings safe from kitty paws and avoid trampling fluffy dirt. This will be the first year so stay tuned. I'm trying to grow some of the flowers for Anne's bouquet in this space.

3. I found sections of old deck rail from the ReStore that make STURDY trellises for sweetpeas and green beans. I even scored a new gallon of exterior latex paint for $3! Joel lost a bit of blood stapling chicken wire to the back of them. I think my resourceful trellis qualifies as a 'good thing.'

4. The neighbors get to witness my organic grass killing experiment with the blue tarp. But I don't like their dog, so we're even. If we win the lottery, I'd like to replace the fence, but what are the odds? Might have to wait until next season. I have big plans for this bed which is 30 feet long and 5 feet wide. Drifts of annuals and periennials will include - cerinthe, Russian sage, artemesia, 3 blueberry bushes, echinacea, sunflowers, amaranth, miscanthus, nigella and california poppies.

5. And this is the COOLEST! Garden Rant has a category called "I don't have a garden but I watch one on TV" and I was inspired to make a 'food digester' in a 20 gallon galvanized trash can. Hardware Sales had a close out so I got them for $5. Another score for the green team! Joel also made custom tops to keep the rascals out.

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Fall Sowing - 2 Green Thumbs Up

Having some technical difficulties this morning, so I couldn't get all my pics up. Late fall I planted White Bishop's Lace - not pictured and 2 kinds of poppies - 'Hungarian Breadseed' and 'Black Peony.'

Fall sowing works like a charm and now I have some big ol' plants going. I thinned out the poppies and distributed them in the front yard and back - to disquise the neighbors composting barrels. Not like I have anything against compost. However I have too many plants and not enough space.

FREE POPPIES TO GOOD HOME! They have to go quick, or they're getting yanked.

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Interview at 3!


My days are numbered.

Monday, January 28, 2008

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Seed Starting Round 1: I'm going to regret this...







The ground is totally frozen and the cold weather (low of 19 degrees) chipped off all the paint on my newly built sweet pea trellis and planter boxes for the raspberries. Blast! So I decided to rebel against Mother Nature by starting some seeds inside. Last year all of my seedlings got leggy - only the 'Earl Grey' larkspur survived - and it was ugly and gangly to boot! I started leeks, Brussels Sprouts, peppers, cherry tomatoes and artemesia seeds. In January I took slips of geraniums I bought at the end of the season. They look completely dead, but I couldn't get a close up of the little buds starting to emerge - hardy little bastards. I had a light bulb moment (could even be called an Aha moment!) and realized that I should put all of the geraniums in terra cotta this year so both can be overwintered in the garage. Duh! Gardening is true trial and error.

Less than 2 months to go until the Last Hard Frost Date - March 24th according to Farmer's Almanac. Note: Zone 4/5 boasts 232 growing days and the Last Fall Frost is November 11th. So if you don't know now you know, jigga. Also please note: I realize that mortgage is spelled incorrectly - but don't you think it adds a little something...extra desperation?
In other news: Joel had a productive weekend - we visited 3 hardware stores in total to look for a "tap and drill" to fix the boat motor. The garage was spiffed up and organized and the 4Runner was even cleaned out. Had a great dinner with Emily and Jesse and ripped on all of the Miss America contestants. Nice little Saturday...

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Brrrr...

Sunny and 22 degrees - note this picture is from weeks ago. Joel sat in his car listening to sports radio for nearly 15 minutes while I drank coffee, nice and warm inside. Woke up to find that Smidge had shat in my newly repotted tree, so I covered the dirt in tinfoil.

Have been doing lots of garden planning and can't wait to get out there! I think I'm going to build a box for the 4 raspberries to maximize the amount of space for perennials on the side bed. I need to utilize my last 3 weeks of unemployment - but it's frozen tundra out there.
Finally found Artemisia seeds through Bountiful Gardens and they had all the varieties of vegetable seeds tthat I wanted too. Erin suggested that I put the Artemisia against the fence by the neighbor's house to create more privacy - cheaper than building a new fence. Still haven't narrowed down the flower list, but here are the veggies you'll be eating in 2008:

'Hungarian Yellow Wax' Peppers
'Lyon' Leeks
Japanese 'Red Kuri' Pumpkins
'Blue Lake' Pole Beans
'Rubine' Brussels Sprouts
Lettuce Mixes
Scallions
Selection of Cherry Tomatoes - 'Black Plum' 'Gold Currant' 'Chadwick's Cherry' 'Sweet Orange II' and 'Yellow Pear' - (Christina, I grew extras for you!)

Most likely some carrots and beets too! Let me know if you'd like some seeds or plant starts. JM


Monday, January 21, 2008

Utility


Aunt Linda gave me this cool shelf over Christmas which was in the infamous rubber ducky themed bathroom. Not sure what I'll put in the jars - buttons, clothespins, spools of thread? I spent a couple hours hunting down the blue Mason's at the Old Town Antique Mall.