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Beekissed
Garden Master
Some pics of the garden and flower beds...after they recovered somewhat from deer eating them down to the nub in many places. They do not eat zinnias or marigolds apparently, but will chew impatiens and portulaca off to the stem. They also ate a good bit of my squash, tomatoes, a lot of my beans, etc. So, slow recovery but they are coming back.
This is a spaghetti squash I stuck in the flower bed...the deer had eaten all the leaves at one point but it's growing back and actually producing something now. All these impatiens were also eaten down to the stems as well but are now coming back to fullness.
My arch collapsed under the wt of the vines and also due to the hay bales disintegrating behind it, removing it's support. But, lo and behold, the butternut squash that was torn from its roots and I thought had died from it all is starting to recover after I just plopped the rotten hay bale it had been on top of the exposed root ball.
These zinnias were planted in the place where a wood chip pile had been for a year...they look better than all those actually planted within the garden, wouldn't you know.
This year I did something different with my zinnias in the front bed and in the garden...I didn't broadcast the seeds and let them just grow willy nilly. I planted them to flats and planted them out as seedlings, spacing them so they would have more space and be more evenly distributed across the bed. That worked out great, both in this bed and also in Joel's garden.
The whole garden...it's starting to die off and I need to get in there and pull out a lot of vines and such. Fall is upon us!
This is a spaghetti squash I stuck in the flower bed...the deer had eaten all the leaves at one point but it's growing back and actually producing something now. All these impatiens were also eaten down to the stems as well but are now coming back to fullness.
My arch collapsed under the wt of the vines and also due to the hay bales disintegrating behind it, removing it's support. But, lo and behold, the butternut squash that was torn from its roots and I thought had died from it all is starting to recover after I just plopped the rotten hay bale it had been on top of the exposed root ball.
These zinnias were planted in the place where a wood chip pile had been for a year...they look better than all those actually planted within the garden, wouldn't you know.
This year I did something different with my zinnias in the front bed and in the garden...I didn't broadcast the seeds and let them just grow willy nilly. I planted them to flats and planted them out as seedlings, spacing them so they would have more space and be more evenly distributed across the bed. That worked out great, both in this bed and also in Joel's garden.
The whole garden...it's starting to die off and I need to get in there and pull out a lot of vines and such. Fall is upon us!