Watering the Newly-Planted Silky Dogwoods

Cornus amomum (“silky dogwood”) has beautiful red twigs in the winter. This native forms thickets that are great for all kinds of wildlife. We bought ten 1-year-old specimens at a fantastic price.

pond W end photo
This photo also shows the density of the phragmites resprouts, in what used to be the densest stand, at the W end of the pond. I’ve gradually been clearing out the bittersweet vines from the quaking aspens; there were several layers of it, all mixed in with multiflora rose. I could not have done it without the Kioti tractor!

Bittersweet and Multiflora Rose, Pond West End

There were so many huge multiflora roses invading the west end of the pond, and so many old, huge bittersweet vines strangling the trees, one day I decided to have at them with the backhoe. I carefully positioned the tractor, not sideways, but up and down on the slope down to the pond, then dug in the teeth of the front end loader, to help stabilize it.

This:

photo of multiflora rose

stood no chance against this:

photo of backhoe

roots and all:

WPondMultiflora

Bittersweet:

WPondBittersweet

Now you can at least access the pond, from this side:

WPondAfterJuly2012

 

Removing More Dead Phragmites Stalks

Most of the phragmites we’ve encountered this summer are dead stalks. There are a few resprouts, such as these:

photo of phragmites
Taken from the east end of the pond, looking west

And these:

photo of phragmites
Dead phragmites stalks line the NE side of our pond, below the slope area.

Here’s a closeup photo of pulled phragmites resprouts:

photo of resprouts
Re-sprouted phragmites, pulled, with their rhizomes attached. They are tough to dig! Thick, strong, and smelly. I can’t wait to get them all out of our pond!

As the summer progresses, the level of the pond diminishes, so it’s a good chance to easily reach even more dead phragmites stalks, and get as many as possible of them out of the pond. Here, Steve is working on the east end:

photo of east pond

2012 – A Big Year for Removing Dead Phragmites Stalks

There are so many photos from 2012, I don’t know where to begin! So many people spent so many days, not just removing the tops of the phragmites, which were now dead and brown, but also digging out as much as their smelly and disgusting rhizomes as possible. Now that they had been significantly weakened, we wanted to minimize their re-sprouting. Plus, we just wanted those huge, ugly, thick rhizomes out of our pond, so the plants and animals that belonged there, like this black swallowtail butterfly, could use it.

photo of swallowtail butterfly