Showing posts with label straw bales. Show all posts
Showing posts with label straw bales. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 28, 2016

If You Can Stand It...

More garden pictures! 


Who says you can't garden in containers? 


I got these seeds as a gift from a friend 3 years ago.  They are re-seeding... and they took a beating this morning in our short rainstorm.  By this evening, they were coming back up. 


The straw bales are going great guns!  The vines are a little sun-burned and I'm going to 
get some shade cloth in the next few days. 


There are tomatoes on all four plants, we are going to be inundated. 

As you see, the pickling cuke vines are doing great. 

The remaining watermelon vine is doing great, too. 


It's way in the distance, but the little library at the Basehor City Park is 
now on a masonry base. 


And this is one of six trees that is changing color at the same park.  My guess is 
it's transplant shock, but six!!!!

Our walks have been curtailed in the terrible weather of the last ten days, 
but we expect a few days of respite the rest of the week, so will try to walk again, and take some pictures of nature. 


Tuesday, April 26, 2016

A Stormy Tuesday

Storms have come to Northeast Kansas today. 


That was this evening, but we had a storm come through early this morning. 

Lilly ended up in the basement with Keith, she hates them.  He makes a place for her to go down and get in the darkest corner of the basement, where she can't hear thunder or see any lightening. 

Here was our side yard... the one I had tadpoles in last year. 


That was from the morning rain. 

It has been raining for the last 30 minutes right now. 

The entire yard was sodden.  (and thank heavens I cut last night). 

See my perennial garden in the background????  Coming up great!!


I saw this in a pasture as I came down a gravel road from the park.  Four ducks and at least seven different kinds of shorebirds!  That is not a pond, just a wet spot.  I got home, dropped the dogs, switched to the long lens, and went back on my way to the store.  The ducks were gone. 


I think these are all upland sandpipers or upland plovers, the birding group calls them yellowlegs. 

There were three more in the field on the right, but they are colored just like the dirt. 

See the corn coming up???


Something had died across the road.  The fourth had just flown. 


There were three more above them. 


Roadside phlox is blooming. 


And look at the creeks!  Wow!  

See the phlox along the banks? 


Our park is waterlogged, too. 

(I am switching back and forth from big camera to little Canon) 


Our straw bales are under tarp tonight because we don't want the 
fertilizer we have put on them to wash through and out. 

However... we had a harbinger of spring here tonight who serenaded us merrily




Be safe, everyone in the storm's way. 

I am going to get off this thing while it is storming! 


Monday, April 18, 2016

We're Back!

I can't believe it has been since Thursday that we have posted! 

I don't know where the days go. 

Catching up on the straw bale garden: 


The bales are on Day Five, and they are starting to SMELL, 
which is a good thing.  That means urea is working inside them, 
and they are beginning to turn into compost inside. 

They are pretty saturated, but I put out a half cup of fertilizer on 
each tonight, and went ahead and put two gallons of water on them. 

I should mention that it rained last night, our first rain in a 
while, and they got pretty wet already. 

I am also following the directions in Straw Bale Gardens by 
Joel Karsten, and the wonderful Straw Bale Garden and Straw 
Bale Miracle Garden groups on Facebook, who will 
answer any questions for you. 

I also discovered another wonderful Facebook group, 
and here let me make a comment about Facebook. 

I don't think any young people still use it... but man, 
I have made so many contacts through it, and found so much help. 

I discovered "Kansas Birding", and did it ever open up a door to me! 

The people who post pictures in it also give the date and the place
where the pictures were taken, and many are right around here, so a 
whole new area of birding has opened up to me. 

Having said that, I will be at the Ag Hall (National Agricultural Center 
and Hall of Fame) this week almost everyday, as we are getting ready 
for our opening on Saturday "Barnyard Babies", the first of our four 
big "Days" this year.  

Look at this: 


Darn, I didn't realize I got in the wrong angle to show you her beautiful face. 

This wonderful Harvest Queen mural has been hidden behind another mural for many years, 
and never on display. 

The former gift shop has been remodeled into a gallery and she has the 
pride of place. 

We actually have several original paintings on display, too. 

I am so glad she was brought out.  I took this with my phone today, 
but will get a better picture with the camera.  The "official opening" of the 
gallery is on Thursday evening this week. 


Gratuitous picture of Jester.  We are still struggling with the infection in 
his left eye, the right on this picture.  

Hopefully we will get it all cleared up quickly. 


I so enjoy taking pictures of the ducks on the little pond, like these blue-winged teal. 


And look who is back in the Little Pond Pasture!  

Remember I took so many pictures of the little Angus herd last summer, and 
there was one white cow which I realize now was actually pale brown and white. 
Last year, she had a white calf. 

I think that cute little brown and white calf is hers now. 
I did not get out of the car to take pictures, because their Big Daddy was 
close to the fenceline! 


It is getting warm enough some days for bathing to have started.  You see how 
low the little pond is.  


This was a bigger group in a different pond the next day, and I thought it was interesting, there were far more drakes than hens in this group. 


This little guy sat up at just the right time on my way home from church that night! 

How I love squirrels, and miss having them here.  

There are no large trees in this 3 street subdivision we call home. 


Big Mama is still hunkered down on her eggs... and I hope so, because we had 
steady rain last night, with more in the forecast. 

Back to gardening for a minute: 


These are the only two tomato volunteers left inside... the mice got three.  Hence, they 
are now on my Halloween Chair in the window, with no supplemental light. 
(Which I think is incredible!) 

I despaired of the lower one, because it was all bent around and looked as if it were 
dying... it has revived! 

I have no idea if these are large or cherry... I am going to look at my pictures of 
the seedlings I started under light last year to see if I can tell. 

I think I also caught sight of one outside tonight when I was doing chores... I'll check 
tomorrow. 


Yes, these are balloons, probably from someone's birthday party. 

Folks, don't do this. 

When they finally deflate or pop, they are 
huge hazards to wildlife.  Many birds have died 
from ingesting balloons.  


Turkey season here opened on the 15th. 

I have been seeing this big girl in the yard of a house where 
no one lives, but someone cuts right around it.  You see there is a
creek that flows along there. 

She's a beauty, isn't she? 


The heron was back in the Big Ditch. 

Everyone thinks the Big Ditch is a creek. 

It's a big .... ditch .... . 


I leave you with this picture I took coming up our street tonight... 
this is a setup in one of our neighbor's driveways.  This man 
walks every morning in the neighborhood, so I am going to look for 
him tomorrow and talk to him about it.  It's... NIFTY!