Showing posts with label Asiatic jasmine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Asiatic jasmine. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 22, 2015

2014 - May KARLA'S GARDEN DAY

This post, "2014 - May KARLA'S GARDEN DAY" was written by Glinda/AnnieinAustin for the Divas of the Dirt blog.

Spring 2014 had been dry, but Karla had an unexpected gift a few days before her planned project day... rain! Real, ground-softening, life-giving rain. Weeding, digging and planting is so much easier a few days after a rain.

One of the Divas of the Dirt had to arrive late and one had to leave early, but for most of the day all eight of us were at Karla's - sharing meals, news and many a garden task.

What a cool decoration on Karla's serving table - a gardening bag with plants tucked in... and the food was delicious: Strawberries, blueberries and red raspberries on a glass server, crispy skin chicken sausages and an egg casserole with a base of small rolls.
  

The centerpiece on the dining room table was made of pots of herbs in a basket - it was enormous and the herbs smelled wonderful.


Outside, we had a pleasant surprise - the Asiatic jasmine had been dug up - it was gone! This imported groundcover can work well in a space confined by concrete walks and beds made of cemented stone blocks, but it can be an invasive thug where borders meet lawn.


Karla's idea was that in the long border that was now cleared, we should move, divide and transplant the existing crowded ferns and Heuchera. And look how pretty the bench looks, repainted in a happy new color.


While some Divas worked on the long bed, others might clear out the weeds from the border near the gate - there should be perennials buried under those live oak leaves.


Karla had asked Mindy to bring the tiller - the area to be planted was large enough to need our electric digging assistant.

Waiting in the crepe myrtle bed was a flat of lipstick red Impatiens - that will add pop to the border! And a little pruning of crossed branches on the crepe myrtle can get some filtered sunlight down to ground level.

As long as we're near the patio, let's take another look at the Dish Flowers made by Karla at last September's meeting.

Karla had started the annual oak sprout removal near the patio so it took less time than usual... Oak Sprout team - first to be done.


Some work was being done on the front beds and progress was made in the back - Barbie came with Mattie to help supervise.


The long bed was coming along - those impatiens will look good.


A break for lunch came just at the right time - we were glad to sit on chairs at a table for a while.


On the serving table were bowls of Chicken-Rice salad, a Crunchy Broccoli salad and Rosemary-Raisin muffins, along with Watermelon slices made into 'Sandwiches' - slices of watermelon with Feta cheese and basil leaves inside, dressed with balsamic vinegar. 


This combination made a very pretty plate, indeed!

And dessert was spelled Desserts - the pie had a graham cracker crust and a creamy filling blending pineapple, mango and toasted coconut.


In addition, Karla presented a Heavenly Delight cake topped with kiwi fruit, blueberries and strawberries.


By the time we finished mulching everything and packed up our tools, the left side of the long back bed looked good.


The patio was cleaned and tidied, ready for relaxing.


The right side of the long back bed looked good, too.


Up in front, the borders were renewed and mulched and ready for summer.


Photoshopping Karla's finished garden into a poster was amusing!


While we were working, Mattie drew our attention to a dangerous-looking tree in the next yard. It was actually leaning heavily on one of Karla's live oaks and if it fell, it could land on Karla's house. After our garden day, Karla found out her neighbor planned to have the tree removed in a few months.
But Mother Nature speeded up the timetable! Just a few weeks after we spiffed up Karla's garden, the tree split in a storm, with pieces coming to rest in both yards. The neighbor called Davey Tree service, warning them that they'd be working in the garden of a Diva of the Dirt so Watch out for that Garden! Guess that warning worked because there was minimal damage from the cleanup.

Since the stump was in the neighbor's yard, Karla had no need to buy bags of soil to fill another hole in the ground. Instead, the tree's departure left a hole in the canopy of overlapping tree limbs and leaves. Some sky was now visible and sunbeams reached down to Karla's garden.


This post, "2014 - May KARLA'S GARDEN DAY" was written by Glinda/AnnieinAustin for the Divas of the Dirt blog

Thursday, March 08, 2012

2011 OCTOBER - KARLA'S GARDEN DAY

Karla sent out a note:
Maybe we will have a nice weekend like the past one, but I won’t hold my breath on that... we will probably be cleaning beds, compost/mulching, etc. Glinda, I know you have to leave early – no problem.


Before we met at Karla's an email came from Mindy. She had friends from fire-ravaged Bastrop staying with her and they had all witnessed something amazing:Divasofthedirt,mindy monarch butterflyHey there Divas!!! My friends yelled from the deck yesterday morning ... I saw my evergreen sumac swarming with dozens of GORGEOUS MONARCHS!!!! (After) my milkweed bit the dust during the drought ... couldn't imagine ...such a display of the little nectar sippers... Divasofthedirt, mindy sumac w monarchsequally astonished with the millions of rain lilies that have exploded in the yard after we were blessed with over 3 inches of rain...Can't wait to see you all at Karla's next weekend...Divasofthedirt, monarch by mindy
Karla:
... I’m looking forward to seeing everyone tomorrow – usual tools – I will have breakfast ready at 8:30 so we can make use of the nice cool morning – hopefully some of it will linger into the afternoon!! Have a great Friday and see you in the morning!

Karla's table was a delight - decorated in fall colors with a sense of fun & graceful motionDivasofthedirt, karla beautiful table
The buffet in the breakfast room displayed more delights - granola with yogurt & honey, a grits & ham casserole, a bountiful bowl of berries, kiwi fruit & bananas and tiny muffinsDivasofthedirt,buffet breakfast
In the back garden we admired Karla's pretty Anacacho orchid tree, planted as a memorial to a beloved family member. In spring it had been covered in tiny orchid-like flowers and this Bauhinia gets extra points for being a native tree!
Divasofthedirt, Bauhinia,Texas orchid tree
Every year when we first arrive, Karla's yard looks so neat that we have a hard time believing that it needs our help - but Karla always lets us know we are wrong!Divasofthedirt, asiatic jasmine border needs helpThis time Karla told us that cutting down the native, yellow-blooming Carolina jessamine/Gelsemium sempervirens on the lattice privacy screen was a priority. The vines had become leggy over time while drought and heat made some parts of the vine die and drop leaves. The only new growth was concentrated at the top, where it fluffed out to shade the lower part, making it even spindlier. That privacy vine gave no privacy at all!Divasofthedirt,lattice screen
Karla wanted to chop down the jessamine and rip out the roots, but she was willing to let us try a drastic experiment first. We would severely prune the vines quite low to let the sun back in at the bottom, then wait to see if the promised rains would help it grow and fill in again. We hoped this plan would work, because digging out those entrenched roots to start over with new plants would not only be difficult - digging around the base could make the entire lattice wall unstable. Divasofthedirt,screen not working
DivaAnnie & I went to work with our pruners, but I hung out at ground level while she climbed the ladder.Divasofthedirt,pruning Carolina jessamineSophia took on the congested Canna bed and the other Divas fanned out to to other beds and borders near the house. Divasofthedirt,redo canna bedThe thuggish Asiatic jasmine was once a few small sprigs, but it's hard to control now... spreading and invading the fern bed - Diva Mattie to the rescue!Divasofthedirt,redo jasmine fern bedOctober in Austin can be like summer in other places - Mindy knows that it's wise to take frequent water breaksDivasofthedirt,water breakThe photinias are leggy and need some help from KarlaDivasofthedirt,leggy photiniasThe sunny bed with blue plumbago, Cast Iron plant and ferns will soon look good - more mulch, Sugar!Divasofthedirt,bed needs more mulchNow the roots of the cut-down Carolina Jessamine on the lattice will have a chance to regrow and provide screening. And with luck, when it blooms again, instead of yellow bell-shaped flowers opening high overhead, they will appear where Karla can enjoy the fragrance. Divasofthedirt, lattice vine cut downThe newly done orchid bed looks greatDivasofthedirt, weeded mulched bed
Karla announced lunch - and the main dish was a winner - delectable Chicken Bundles made with crescent rolls patted into squares, folded around a center of cream cheese, butter, onions, and boned cooked chicken, sealed, rolled in crumbs then baked in a 350°F oven.

Chicken Bundles are an old favorite dish in Karla's family, but this version was made even better than the original recipe when Karla's sister, AKA Chef Callie, added her special touch by sautéeing the onions first. This intensified the flavor while making the filling more tender.Divasofthedirt, Savory crescent Chicken squares
A hot work day can make one appreciate a really nice green salad, and this was a REALLY nice green salad.Divasofthedirt, big saladThe sweet endings to our lunch were individual compositions of 3 mini-brownies and what Mattie described as a "mountain of ice cream". Back in April 2002 after a feast at Karla's house, Sugar told a guest that the Divas of the Dirt were not actually a garden club... we were an Eating Club that gardened to work off the calories. We haven't changed much in the ten years since she made that statement!

Karla's house was decorated to celebrate the autumn season. Summer of 2011 had been so horrible that everyone was in the mood to celebrate fall's arrival!Divasofthedirt, Karlas autumn decorI was fascinated by the tiny "pumpkins" used by Karla in glass containers - they looked like some kind of seed pods but what kind of plant were they from? Searching online for "seed pods" & "tiny pumpkins" brought up the information that they were sometimes called Putka pods, and were seed pods of an Australian tree named Glochidion ferdinandi.Divasofthedirt,seedpods like tiny pumpkins
Other sites put them into a different species, but they're probably still genus Glochidion.

There are no end-of-day photos for this project. After lunch I waved goodbye to the other Divas. They went outside to work in the front garden and I went home to my out-of-state houseguests.

Karla:
Thank you so much for all of the hard work and beautiful improvements you made in my yard yesterday - this is the first time all year that the entire yard has looked so groomed. Everything that was moved or planted looked happy today when I watered. The guy across the street said when you all come over, I always have the prettiest yard on the street!!! I will definitely agree with him on that! Ray now knows why I enjoy being a part of it so much. But ...WHEN ARE YOU EVER GOING TO STOP SAYING "THERE'S NOTHING TO DO" WHEN YOU GET HERE??????