Honey Bee
Our Yard from the Southeast
Hoe Down
I See You!
Our Yard from the Northeast
Clinton Trail
Tiny Pink Roses
What Do You Do with a Baby Raccoon?
Sometimes Fire Trucks Need Repairs
Two Woodpeckers
Guess Who's Back?
Grand River
Stella
Trellis Rose
Red & White
Clean Sweep
Gulls are a Feature
Common Loon
Entropy at the Chief Wawatam Dock
Tern Steals Rock from Duck
Bentley's B-N-L Cafe
Holy Name of Mary Pro-Cathedral
The Bridge Crossing the Straits at Mackinac
Morning, Kitchen
Theresa's Invisible Rose Garden
Mr & Mrs Woodpecker's Suet Cake Reduction Service
The Front Garden
The Broken Sunflower
Planters
Joel's Got Peonies on the Brain
The Window Garden
Peony
The Daylilies Around the Wellhead
Chickadee
The Trellis Garden
Lines on the Sky, with Train
The Diamond in the Corner
Poppy
The Garden Beside the Daylilies
Cages for Tomatoes
The Daylily Bed
Doors
The Rose Garden
Drama in the Clouds
The Rose Bush by the Garage
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Joan's Little Garden


While I was working over the flower beds last week, Joan was whipping this garden into shape. Obviously this isn't a flower garden, despite the best efforts of the Sage and the Chives. But for a time this was a flower plot.
About a year after I moved in I planted a hundred or so Lilies and a similar number of Tulips in a rectangular space behind the garage. The result was very colorful, but the tall plants and high-density bulbs proved difficult to maintain.
After Joan moved in she planted a very small vegetable garden directly behind the Lilies. This was obviously a temporary measure, and we considered a number of alternate locations. All had significant drawbacks.
Eventually the difficult flower garden became an unholy mess. So we ripped it out, transplanted some of the flowers, and gave a few away. And Joan's veggie garden doubled in size.
It's not without problems. The clay seems impervious to improvement, and the Forsythias guarantee that the southern edge is in permanent shade. It remains a small garden.
But from time to time we've fresh broccoli, lettuce, green beans, peppers, onions, and tomatoes. It's a good thing.
About a year after I moved in I planted a hundred or so Lilies and a similar number of Tulips in a rectangular space behind the garage. The result was very colorful, but the tall plants and high-density bulbs proved difficult to maintain.
After Joan moved in she planted a very small vegetable garden directly behind the Lilies. This was obviously a temporary measure, and we considered a number of alternate locations. All had significant drawbacks.
Eventually the difficult flower garden became an unholy mess. So we ripped it out, transplanted some of the flowers, and gave a few away. And Joan's veggie garden doubled in size.
It's not without problems. The clay seems impervious to improvement, and the Forsythias guarantee that the southern edge is in permanent shade. It remains a small garden.
But from time to time we've fresh broccoli, lettuce, green beans, peppers, onions, and tomatoes. It's a good thing.
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