Posts Tagged "In Autumn"

Buckeye Update- 12 weeks

Posted on Nov 6, 2008

Buckeye Update- 12 weeks

The girls are growing up! Here’s a Buckeye pullet, about 12 weeks old, out for an afternoon stroll in the leaves..

And here’s the wide angle view of the gals out of their pen and strolling the grounds and nibbling on everything…luckily it’s late enough in the season that the nibbling doesn’t matter… The Buckeyes are comparable in size to the Black Australorps, which is pretty good.

And finally for this quick post today, a shot of one of the random hardware-store roosters I accidentally bought. I don’t know what kind he is, but he is beautiful, if shy. Well there’s a superquick poultry update before I dash off to work!

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What a difference two weeks makes…

Posted on Nov 3, 2008

What a difference two weeks makes…

Still on the subject of time, I look around today at the thinning leaves on the branches, the sea of copper oak leaves on the grass, and I can’t believe that just about two weeks ago it looked like the pictures below.

The fig tree made it up pretty big this year! As I’ve said before, being from Alabama where figs really grow into tree sized, this still seems like a fig bush to me.

It’s a brown turkey fig tree (bush) and this year for the first time we had several handfuls of delicious figs. Incredibly, this hot spot against the south facing wall is still a little too shaded by a neighboring sycamore tree to bear fully. The figs don’t really ripen till October. By that time the sun has dropped low enough for the sycamore to cast shade. Hmmm. I’d like to plant another higher on the property to get *more* sun. Amazing that the Arkansas Ozark sun is still not quite enough for these guys!

This narrow leaf sunflower was a beauty this year.

This was one of the last monarchs to emerge. This was his first hour of morning sunshine. His wings were still soft. I hope he caught a strong tailwind and made it down to warmer climes before the first frost we had on October 25th or so.

So it will be many months till it looks like this again. But there’s plenty to do, designing, reading and dreaming of the garden 2009! Thanks for stopping by Larrapin for a look back to two weeks ago. The next post will be a Buckeye update!

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Where does the time go?

Posted on Nov 2, 2008

Where does the time go?

My Grandmother always said time speeded up when you got older. I guess I thought she meant when I got her age, not my age now! Autumn is here in all her glory. The leaves are full of color and falling on every breeze. This purple birdhouse in the front yard maple looks like a postcard for Autumn to me. Of course it is Arkansas, so I’m out messing around in the garden every day, getting beds cleaned out and covering them with a deep coat of chopped leaves. Ahhh, back to the chopped leaves.

You see for the first time ever, this year I was on the ball enough to plant a cover crop. A lovely cover crop, the “soil-builder” mix from Peaceful Valley Farm Supply. It came up and got about six inches high. Looked completely lovely, like it was doing fabulous things to the soil right before my eyes. Then killer-bambi descended.

We are having deer trouble for the first time in ten years of gardening in two states surrounded by deer. Our big dog Shug is about 13 now. She’s still pretty tough up close – she’s a big chow mix, but her eyesight and hearing have faded enough that she doesn’t see or hear the apparent HERDS of bambi that must march like hungry zombies out of the woods towards the garden while Shug keeps her nearsighted and nearscented watch from the porch many yards away. Ahh, the indignities of old age… Shug would be mortified if she knew there were armies of deer *just* over there in the garden. You can tell them by the crunching…

So anyway, the deer ate the cover crop down to the stubs. Horrors. So I’m back to covering the raised beds with deeps layers of chopped leaves. Not as good for the soil as cover cropping, but the next best thing for me. Sigh… I will get even with killer bambi. I’ve been online and discovered the electric-fence-wire-dabbed-with peanut-butter treatment. Next time I’m at Tractor Supply, a fence charger is on my list. And a big jar of peanut butter. Bambi, prepare for a PB & J (peanut butter & jolt) you won’t forget!

I know this sounds harsh from a person who welcomes (most) wildlife to the garden with open arms. But some wildlife just can’t be good neighbors with the garden. Nevermind there are fields of grass all around that seem fine for cattle. And acres of brushy woods that deer favor. So bambi, please back off a bit. I’ll try the fence and see if that works. It’s not fatal, if a bit startling, no doubt. If that doesn’t work, I may have to sit out in the garden with the shotgun like Ozark gardeners of the past have probably done many a night, protecting the garden, and planning for venison stew!!

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Grow it and they will come: Monarch butterflies

Posted on Sep 28, 2008

Grow it and they will come: Monarch butterflies

Wow! These guys can eat! These pictures are from about two weeks ago, when I noticed that there were DOZENS of Monarch butterfly caterpillars on a tropical milkweed out in the veggie garden that had eaten every leaf on the plant. Here’s a video snippet (1 min) of that plant:

So by snipping off the bare branches loaded with baby Monarchs, I relocated them to a milkweed that had plenty of leaves. They crawled off, eating all the way! The lesson here, same as last year: Plant more milkweed! Below are some pics of the relocated caterpillars…

And here is a tiny video (1 min) after the successful relocation:

Postscript to this story: Since the receiving milkweed plant is right beside the front patio, our front porch is now festooned with little leaf-green cocoons dotted with gold. We kept one (which was on a leaf I accidentally plucked) in a jar with a coffee filter over the top, till it emerged and we released the most perfect Monarch into a gorgeous September day.

Fly hard towards Mexico beautiful friends!

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Buckeyes Play Day in the Big Pen

Posted on Sep 26, 2008

Buckeyes Play Day in the Big Pen

Are these gals growing up or what? From their hatch date on August 6th they have grown steadily and are starting to look like real pullets!

So on days when we’re home to deep an eye out for hawks (since these gals are the the perfect hawk-bait size right now) they get to romp with the big chickens for the day. After we’ve put the big rooster, Red, outside the pen, that is. Red has to go to a new home soon (or the soup pot…) He was a rooster that arrived as packing material with our guinea chicks. He’s a handsome Americauna, but that’s not what we raise around here now…


Here’s everybody on the chick room doorstep. The love to scratch away the straw and take dust baths already.


These girls are serious hunters already.

The Buckeyes are supposed to be a deep red brown (like a Buckeye nut) and some of these are getting a nice deep color. Others are still pretty light. Eventually, we’ll select for the good color and good egg production.

Thanks for stopping by Larrapin Garden! Things have been so busy with work and life I’ve had no time to post, but will give a monarch butterfly update soon.

(Yikes, I had to re-publish this post till I got the pics right. Usually I use Flickr, but was trying to use Blogger images. Tricky! I didn’t know you had to choose, it seems between pics 400px wide OR 640 pics wide, OR, they don’t show up! Live & Learn…may be going back to Flickr pics…)

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