ANNUAL SPRING SACRIFICE

My annual digression into gardening. Apologies if you came looking for needlework content. I must document my annual Rite of Spring, otherwise I’ll never remember what went in where. Please bear with me.

Spring finally arrived here in the Boston, Massachusetts metro area. It snuck in two weeks ago after an extended bout of “Are we Spring yet?” weather. And we have now performed our annual rite of sacrifice, cleaning up our planting beds, destroying invasive weeds, dividing and moving the overgrown, spreading 6 cubic yards of mulch, and otherwise adding to the plant population and general ambience.

First the front view:

The mountain laurel in back of the mulched perennial garden is on its last legs. I will do everything possible to keep it going because it’s my favorite, but it’s no where near as impressive as it was eight years ago. I added to the perennial collection, a Trollius Europaeus – a compact yellow flower variety, dead center, next to the tall peonies. The other plantings from last year did appear to survive. On the far side of the steps from right to left are Spike, our rugosa rose, and two blueberry bushes. We hack Spike back every other year to keep him contained, otherwise he’d devolve into a tangle of lethally thorned and whippy stems. He doesn’t seem to mind.

Those who have visited us may note that the giant grass that usually sat behind the blueberries is gone. It got too unruly, and given its fairy-ring growth pattern, was more an empty hole with scions invading the rest of the bed than the rustling clump it had been. There was really no way to take it back and rejuvenate the bed, so we excavated and removed it. Next year we will put something else there. Perhaps a dwarf tree or tall shrub, preferably flowering, and a bit out of the ordinary. No rhodies, arbor vitae, azaleas, or cherries. It’s fun to branch out (pun intended).

The side bed. Always a problem. It had been totally overrun by goutweed. All the plantings in there were shot through with the stuff, with no way to pull it without massive collateral damage. So I finally conceded defeat and yanked everything. Then I sorted through, carefully detangling white-stripe hostas, fern clumps, and daffodils from the carnage. I split up the hostas and put them all around the property. With one exception every white stripe you see in these pix is a transplant from the tree bed. The ferns I put under the mountain laurel. The daffodils (if they survive being moved at the wrong time of the year) will re-emerge in front of the blueberry bushes. Here you see the side bed, reduced to JUST the Hawthorne tree, now in early flowering, surrounded by stones unearthed from the bed, and mulch around that.

Continuing up and around the southern side of the lot, more goutweed was cleared. The elderberries we put in two years ago continue to thrive in spite of the shade. We gave them friends, adding low growing Japanese clumping grass and some of the transplanted hostas in between.

Now for the corner. Last fall the mighty maple that defined the corner of our lot had to come down. Here he is on his last day, in early October 2023.

I was heartbroken but knew it was for the better. He never recovered from the abuse suffered when our side neighbor took out the in-ground pool in her yard. With half his root system compromised, he lost a major side trunk, and became severely rot-damaged on the side away from the camera. He was a looming threat our backyard neighbor’s house. Luckily we were able to get him tended to before last winter’s major storms. So there was a big empty spot that needed to be filled. We opted to put a witch hazel there. Eventually it will be 12-15 feet tall. And of course, more hostas. I am looking forward to seeing the blooms of the witch hazel come October. It will be the only late blooming thing on the property.

Oh. The witch hazel’s name? June of course. After June Foray, the brilliant voice actor who provided so much to animation during my kid cartoon years. Including this character – Witch Hazel, an occasional nemesis of Bugs Bunny.

Continuing to the next major improvement, we come up to the space where I used to plant our scarlet runner beans, climbing up an improvised trellis made from giant grass canes and cable ties. Now that there is more sun and less volunteer labor here, we decided to make life easier. Fernando built me a raised bed. I’ve populated it. Rosemary in back, with parsley, some marigolds, then a big space, and in the front, three varieties of mild and medium hot peppers, plus Japanese eggplant. Since the photo was taken I’ve added established clumps of chives and oregano to that barren spot, overflow gifts from Neighbor Kevin’s prolific garden.

Obviously there is still some work to be done. Weeds sprout in the narrow path between the lawn and the garage. And there’s that one last bastion of goutweed, lurking at far left. I will savage that sometime this week.

So there is the summary of what we have been up to the past three weeks. With luck everything will survive my ungentle hand.

4 responses

  1. My hybrid Witch Hazel – now over 35 years old is about 25 feet tall, and about that in spread. It did take quite a few years to get the bit in its teeth and delights me from January into March most years. It has a lovely scent too.

    1. Sounds grand! The variety we bought was described as topping out at around 12-15 feet, with an 8to 10 foot canopy. Since it’s overshadowed by a couple of taller trees I suspect it will get to the lower range of that scale.

      1. When I bought mine the label said 8 to 12 feet! Also its planted in a rather shady area. It took quite a few years to get the bit in its teeth though..I’m beginning to think that garden center max height labels reference the last measurements that were made before they got bored with the process.. My twisted Hazel was also supposed to max at 8 feet. It is now 16feet and reaching.

  2. I’m trying to get enthused about going out to do garden battles. The arguments I have with myself about going out there are not going well. Let’s leave it at that. 🙂

    Bummer about the maple tree. But I do I love the part about the witch hazel’s name! The yard is looking good!

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