Monday, June 1, 2009

Oopsies in the garden...Part One

I was reading a delightful blog today by Stacy called Dirty Little Secrets and it got me thinking about things that happen in the garden we hope no one else notices, but yet want to share our misery with other fellow gardeners at our mistakes. I know this doesn't make a lot of sense, but sometimes, you just want to know you're not alone in your pain.

As she was talking of weeds, I was thinking of all of the mulch laid down and grateful that it wasn't weeds I was dealing with. However, with the mulch, and the rain...I have holes in a lot of my foliage...

In my Alcea...




My newly planted rose mallow



Also in my echinacea, rudbeckia, asters, and any seedlings that I put out this year. I spent 45 minutes squishing the damn things, and then come back and see another one eating it's carcass. Yum.

I then wanted to share what happens when you grow free plants without asking specifics about height. I wanted a pathway that had daylillies growing up on either side. I started out on one side one year, and then added the other side last year. I now have two different blooming times, two different heights and either side of my sidewalk. Oops.




Notice how these are so high and almost in bloom? Not sure how I'll fix this except to just dig up some from either side and transplant to mix. The colors are almost exactly the same...I guess I should be happy for longer blooming time?

My last oopsy to share would be the lovely urine spots left from my dog this winter in our lawn. I thought...for some unknown reason that if the grass was dormant, the urine couldn't hurt the lawn. I was wrong. The grass is slowly filling in, but a MAJOR oops...and I take full responsiblity for this.

2 comments:

Stacy said...

Oh man, the daylily thing sounds so familiar. In my case it's planting a plant destined to grow eight feet tall thinking it was a two foot plant. Oop!

I have the yellow dog spots too. The person that told me that it was a problem confined to female dogs lied. :P
Stacy

Heather said...

There's a product out there called Guard Dog that I've been trying to remember to use. If the spots are smaller (like from a male dog) it works pretty well. I have a female that empties her bladder and kills a spot 8" wide!! Anyway, I don't know if it's the product that is working or all of the rain we've been receiving, but you might look it up!

I'm laughing at your 8' tall remark. I bought a Pacific Giant delphinium that looked so perfect for the front of my garden. So petite. The next year everything died behind it because it shadowed everything. You'd think the 'giant' part would be a clue for me...but NO. The things that make us slap our heads only makes us wiser in the long run, I guess. LOL!