Category: July 2012
Junipers and Arborvitaes Instead of “Lawn”
Teeny tiny young arborvitaes and junipers are planted in what used to be a “lawn.” It hadn’t really been a lawn of grass. Though it was kept mowed most of the time, calling it a lawn would have been stretching it. We don’t really need a lawn there, anyway. The turtles, snakes and groundhogs seem to prefer the plants, also!
Looking Across the Slope Toward the East in July, 2012
To the left of this large willow, we discovered another small (and non-invasive!) shrub. You can barely see the tiny young groundcover junipers. In the lower right is a variegated red twig dogwood I got for a great price at good ‘ole Costco.
Native Birch Tree Grove Planted Over Knotweed Area
From the first big plant order, we sited 3 Betula nigras on the slope, over the area where the knotweed infestation used to be. I hope to add more in the future, of these beautiful NE native trees. They’re just whips in this photo; see the round circles of mulch around them:
Young Princeton Elm Newly Planted on Slope
Willows, Juniper and Little Bluestem
Little Bluestem, the Slope’s Best Friend
Little bluestem is a beautiful, native grass that turns many colors, not just blue. When I found out that its roots can go down as much as six feet, I started planting them on the slope, to help with erosion. The only place I’ve been able to find them around here is the Garden in the Woods. Here’s one of the first batch, newly planted, by the highbush blueberries.
You Can Never Have Too Many Wood Chips
Our first pile of wood chips went right into our front yard. A friend had given us some magnolias, redbuds and dogwoods. Still in their pots, I buried them in the wood chips, where they successfully overwintered.
The second big pile of wood chips we scored from a tree person was placed in the back acre, which we now owned. Now we had chips closer to where we needed them the most, where the ground was flatter. There are only a few little areas on the slope where wood chips work as mulch, without washing away in the rain.
Real Mulch for the Slope
I called around, trying to find the exact right kind of mulch for the slope. It couldn’t be wood chips, because they’d just wash away in the rain. It couldn’t be fine pieces, either. Instead, I found the biggest, most irregular pieces of bark, that would sort of hook onto each other, and stop from sliding down. It was hard to find mulch that hadn’t been treated with color, for a reasonable price.
We had an entire team of guys come over and help us plant all the plants we ordered, and also do some weeding and mulching.
It almost looked too manicured. I actually prefer a more naturalistic design. But at least the knotweed was being kept at bay (not to mention the bittersweet, multiflora, tartarian honeysuckle, autumn olive, grapevine and spurges).