Thursday, May 11, 2023

Midwest Gardening 2023: Way Back When...Ivy Tomato Cage Topiary


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Way back when...in 2015, one of my first posts was this how-to make a homemade Ivy topiary. I had roughly 8 inexpensive ivy plants I had put in my floral arrangements that year, and I didn't want to kill them, so I thought what a great idea for a topiary since they had so many long trailers.

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2015, Gosh that was a long time ago in the blog world. Anyway, we are behind in the Spring weather here in Chicagoland, we are having one of those years where we jump from snow last week to the 80's this week. 
Plants and PEOPLE are confused, lol. 
I dread turning on the air conditioning, 
when we have only had a few days of windows open.

Our gardening is way behind, but I had to get the house plants out of my claustrophobic kitchen. Because of our all house mess this Spring, we never got the greenhouse planted, and the weather prohibited taking the fragile  seedlings from the kitchen to the greenhouse.

Anyway...back to the IVY TOPIARY....

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Here it is in 2016...already almost full in the 12" original pot.

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I think this was 2020, thick and full and already on it's 16", third pot.  At this point it was trailing 30" from the bottom of the pot to the ground.

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This year, it was huge, but the pot weighs nothing because the plants have eaten all the dirt...I will have to transplant it to another bigger pot and somehow do an extension? I've done this three other times, and I know the root ball will be all roots and no dirt.

For now, I gave it a huge trim, it was touching the ground when perched on the bar stool. I didn't have my blogger brain on and forgot to take photos today of before...but as you can see all the trailers are cut and on the floor, and I have two glass jars filled with healthy cuttings for rooting.

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It's now in the 16" pot...and it needs to have new dirt in it again, which I will do later when it recovers from the trauma of being chopped.  I clipped anything dead or scraggly off....and it is still so full! 

I'm wondering if I can somehow wire another extension on it. Anyway, it's outside now and will be happy in the corner long as I spray and drown it regularly in water.

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Tools just my scissors. When making cuttings for rooting, make sure you strip all the leaves on the stems below  the water line. I picked only the thick plump stems, and cut off all the woody or thin bits. I had a grocery bag of throwaways, but I think I will have enough new plants for everyone I know for  Christmas.

I'm thinking Holly and Ivy...LOL. 


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Here you can see some of the cuttings that didn't make it...anything that didn't look happy and rich green. The smaller jar is full too.

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I will have my kitchen back...with all the plants wandering to their new locations outside, but these cutting will come inside.
I love my blue jars, this is a two quart Ball jar from upper Wisconsin. I literally got cases of them from my mom-in-law and her friends.

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It was fun to take photos outside, the rich greens and sunlight after such a long dreary Spring.

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The reason these Liatris are on the porch is to harden them off a bit before planting. Inside the house was too warm and not full light, despite our having the huge windows and a fan blowing all the time.

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Broccoli was ready to go into the ground weeks ago--but snow isn't really conducive to planting. Tilling isn't done yet. Hubby has other things he has to work on---we are dealing with construction deadlines, electrical, and plumbing. The all house generator will be installed next week and this week the plumber is coming to check the wall and floor construction for the basement bathroom. 

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That sprawl on the chair is Dahlia bulbs for giant Dahlias? I didn't realize the plants were Giant, I have to figure out a wind safe place to pot these??? 

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The Elephant Ears went bonkers---I have them leaning to the house---but they will shift around with the light...they are like---LIGHT VANES...and sway and grow toward the light. 



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This is my entire collection of other flower/starts..Coleus which are really plants. 
Plantings will be slim this year as I'm used to growing all my own flowers. The budget will be tight. Another project will be these back stairs that need to be replaced with synthetic planking---this area never has sunlight for 9 months of the year and it just is rotting.

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We do have peppers, more Liatris, Japanese Eggplant, Yellow and Red??? not sure, labels got jumbled in the house upset. The Peppers on the left look fab, which is great. Hopefully the Peppermint pots I hid in the compost pile will revive and we won't have to buy any of those. 

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Last look at my Ivy starts, inside my home's color scheme. White clouds, blue sky, green grass and wood tones for the trees.


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Eighty degrees outside today will end our 
Tulips Fast...so they are just saying 
and waving "Goodbye" from 
Midwest Gardening's Spring. 

HOW DOES YOUR GARDEN GROW!

If you enjoyed this post please follow this blog by blogger or FOLLOW IT which you will find in the upper right hand corner of this page. 


Thanks always for visiting. 
I will try and respond to every comment and answer every question.

I will be sharing at these fine Parties!








All the opinions and photographs in this blog are my own, I have not been paid or reimbursed in anyway for my opinions, posts or any products shown. Please do not use photos without linking back to this blog without my permission. Thank you for your cooperation, Sandi Magle

Sandi












 

Saturday, May 6, 2023

My Etsy Shop is Finally Open AGAIN!

 This is NEWS AND AN AD! For my Etsy Shop---IT's Finally OPEN again!

The HUGE jumble in our remodeling is becoming un-jumbled and we finally have a break through!

I finally have my Etsy store open and I have added some dolls and mini's and lots of plates to it as well as other vintage and handmade items for you and your home.

Take a peek and see what we have listed---I'll be adding all the time now---it is a priority in the trimming down of the mountains of stuff I have! Just a few of the new items I've added.  I'm tonight listing miniature florals for you to purchase. 



Who doesn't love Betty Boop!


Some Fun Vintage Barbies!


Classy Doll stands!


A Variety of dolls all clean and freshly dressed!




Isn't she gorgeous and rebodied on a Model Muse body


Classy!


Vintage Hudson, My Scene Mattel


Vintage Aaron Carter (RIP)


I have OODLES of Vintage and Antique plates listed!



Every color and every style.

Muffy to AG to Barbie to 1/12 dollhouse furniture, Barbie furniture, Jewelry for yourself or gifts, and lots of vintage goodies and antiques!

I have over 163 items listed as of 7pm tonight...more on the way! Great things for gifts and home decor! This has been a monumental feat to get this straightened out and have everything inspected, sorted and re-cataloged. 

And YOU DEAR READERS get a 15% discount 
by applying this Code:

OLDNEWBLOG523

So visit BarberryLane on Etsy

 HERE link.
This offer won't last forever! 

If you enjoyed this post please follow this blog by blogger or FOLLOW IT which you will find in the upper right hand corner of this page. 


Thanks always for visiting. 
I will try and respond to every comment and answer every question.

I will be sharing at these fine Parties!


All the opinions and photographs in this blog are my own, I have not been paid or reimbursed in anyway for my opinions, posts or any products shown. Please do not use photos without linking back to this blog without my permission. Thank you for your cooperation, Sandi Magle

Sandi






Thursday, April 20, 2023

Finally a Chicagoland Spring

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 After crazy temps...82 to 26 in one day this last week, rain, snow, wind...such is Spring in Chicagoland. For a few minutes today, the sun was shining...I ran outside and quick took some photos, and then ran back in and closed the windows because of pending rain showers.

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Daffy's that were frosted dead from low 20's temps.

Such a roller coaster. We've never moved into the greenhouse this year, and many plants have not started, I guess it will be a seed garden this year, eventually. We have also been drowned and then dry...crazy!

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Early periwinkle that froze---luckily the thick growth behind protected the plants.

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It's not just frost...we have munchers...a few bunnies. I do have baskets around my Rubrum Lilies, though. We try and not use anything harmful in the garden---and hopefully these late tulips will still bloom.

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I left the Giant Red Sedum plants for winter interest---I haven't finished clearing the beds, You can also see where the ornamental grass has been chewed on, but will keep coming. I constantly have to thin this or it becomes invasive.

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Why Sedums for the upper Midwest?

They are super hardy and drought tolerant---easy to grow in any soil, sun, or shade. They add structure to floral areas, the BEES LOVE THEM, and they are the last thing with color in Fall. 

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This is westside new area we planted near where the neighbors' walnut tree was cut down. Walnut shells kill just about everything. We also lost a wonderful Cinnamon Maple because of the Walnut, not to mention the mess. 

The small bushes are old growth Forsythia we trimmed way back, added two new Cedar, one columnar and one global. Some transplanted striped grass, and I added a bunch of bulbs last Fall, we will see what makes it. I have the Liatris started in the kitchen which will be perfect here for interest.

We have Creeping sedum started on the edges, I will transplant more this year. The dense roots are good soil retention along the beams.


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In front of the house, the old growth Forsythia dies and basically moved. Now it's crowding these fab old Tulips. You can see the nibbles on the leaves. Love the centers and yellow edges.
Mostly I have Iris in this front flower bed and late tulips which are barely up.

“After women, flowers are the most divine creations.” – Christian Dior

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The westside is pretty sad at the moment. This gets lots of shade, has crappy soil (clay based) and is dotted with this and that. I use focal pots over on this side. We plant bulbs, which last a few years if the squirrels don't get them.

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I always plant in groups of threes. Here it looks like two are still alive.
Pretty soft color on this tulip. I hope the others make it!

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The Mound at the front of our lot looks the best, right now. We have planted new bushes in the last two years, so this area gets watered regularly. Here you can see the perennials doing well, despite the crazy weather.

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YEARS AND YEARS AGO ( 20 or more) We planted Periwinkle here because of the shade from the Spruce trees and the crappy soil. Well, who knew I have been moving it around the last couple of years, so with the regular watering and more sun as we lose the trees, it's doing very well. It's hardy--almost evergreen-- in non-snow months, and is the only thing choking the mint I have been pulling for 39 years!!!

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Speaking of Mint, this is just outside the mound bed---so invasive and nothing kills it. We have already applied weed treatment on the lawn. We are in a lake community and we only use the recommended treatments as all run off ends up in the lake.
I wonder if CEMENT would work...LOL.

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The centerpiece of the mound bed is the birdbath. But, these red ladies are stealing the show!

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Our crocus and snowdrops were under snow and barely made an appearance...but these TULIPS are gorgeous, but have to brave some wind and cool temps as well as crazy hot.
The Periwinkle doesn't seem to bother perennials, although it will hamper annuals, so I'm going to stick with pots for color here.

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We have one Peony left. Old ones were replaced with some new columnar bushes.. Vinca vines are also a ground cover, drought tolerant and hardy. I haven't cleaned out any of the flower beds, leaving the waste for the bees and helpful insects for some warm safety from the crazy temps.

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Since most of the Daffodils were frozen, I'm excited at how gorgeous and brilliant these Tulips are...and love the striped foliage.

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Even with the wind, the camera caught their faces staring right back at me.

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These pale Narcissus are the last grouping on the mound. They really multiplied in two years. Whee! I will get to split them in Fall! 

He who has two cakes of bread, let him dispose of one of them or some flowers of the narcissus; for bread is the food of the body, and the narcissus is the food of the soul.    GALEN                           

I will be moving lots of plants: Iris, Daffodils, three Day Lilies, and more giant Sedum, creeping Sedums here. The east flower bed by the house will be taken over for the All-house generator to be installed as soon as the permits go through. 

Hopefully, all those plants will be happy here! 

How Are Your Gardening Plans Doing?

If you enjoyed this post please follow this blog by blogger or FOLLOW IT which you will find in the upper right hand corner of this page. 

Thanks always for visiting. I will try and respond to every comment and answer every question.

I will be sharing at these fine Parties!






All the opinions and photographs in this blog are my own, I have not been paid or reimbursed in anyway for my opinions, posts or any products shown. Please do not use photos without linking back to this blog without my permission. Thank you for your cooperation, Sandi Magle

Sandi


Thursday, April 6, 2023

Midwest Gardening: April 2023

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The entire country has been plagued with CRAZY weather this year. Think, 200" of snow in California to a 1400 mile long front (yesterday) fueled by 60 degree temperature differentiations, tornadoes, 70mph+ hurricane winds, flooding. 

Original planting forecasts said we would be able to plant in Chicagoland by April 15...not a chance. 

We have standing water in our garden, one day it is freezing, the next day its 65 degrees. YES, simply crazy even for the Midwest.

So, I'm still gardening in my kitchen, hoping to move into the greenhouse this week.

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Coleus and Elephant ears are in here...starting to really grow.

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I transplanted tomatoes last week. We have a fan going all the time on them, to strengthen the stalks. (It really works). I use the tall drink glasses with one small hole drilled in the bottom for drainage. The plastic tote is very nice for supporting the cups. 
Special Post HERE on why we use the cups for tomatoes and planting in the garden.


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Green Zinnias from seed, these were planted too early!

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Peppers are thick and green---moving them into 3-4" pots has really helped them.

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More tomatoes and I have 8 pots of 2-3 Japanese eggplants in them.

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This was a huge dahlia corm that would fit into a small pot. In three days it's a foot high now.

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Broccoli plants look stronger everyday. 

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These are small Dahlias, Cone flowers, something else...slow starters, hoping they will take off in the greenhouse.

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I'm using Miracle grow potting soil for these starts. 
I really need to start my trays of marigolds as well as the squash/pumpkin plants. Also the flower boxes with onions, lettuce, and Nasurtiums. We won't be buying many plants this year as the budget won't allow it at all with the basement disaster.

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 Besides our basement disaster, we need to gut the greenhouse. Seems the mice think glass insulation is a great place to live in...and we will switch to thick styrofoam. This was all planned to do in March---but the basement disaster diverted this plan.

This is a photo from last Fall. Now we have standing water in the garden from this week's crazy weather. While today is glorious sunshine, but a bit chilly.

After helping hubby move into his office down stairs, (we laid vinyl sheet flooring in there yesterday). I may venture into the mouse hut (greenhouse) and attempt to pull out all the insulation after removing all the contents first.

Another Fruitbasket UPSET! 

How are your Spring Gardening

 plans going?!

If you enjoyed this post please follow this blog by blogger or FOLLOW IT which you will find in the upper right hand corner of this page. 



Thanks always for visiting. 
I will try and respond to every comment and answer every question.


I will be sharing at these fine Parties!











All the opinions and photographs in this blog are my own, I have not been paid or reimbursed in anyway for my opinions, posts or any products shown. Please do not use photos without linking back to this blog without my permission. Thank you for your cooperation, Sandi Magle

Sandi