Elizabeth Barrette (ysabetwordsmith) wrote,
Elizabeth Barrette
ysabetwordsmith

  • Mood:

Monday Yardening

First round: Planted and mulched two sweetbush seedlings in the forest garden.  I am slowly trying to replace the mess of brittle trees and honeysuckle with something better.

Second round: Planted and mulched three sassafras and one bald cypress.

I also added a couple handfuls of worms to the barrel garden, and have started putting individual worms into flowerpots.

EDIT:
Third round: Planted three prairie plants (purple joe-pye weed, rattlesnake master, and one other) plus one red willow bush. This concludes the batch of tree and shrub seedlings I was working through.  All that remains of the native plants are the six pots of prairie grasses.

Raspberries and blackberries are blooming.  Wild strawberries have been blooming for a while.  :D


Tags: gardening, illinois, nature, personal
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  • 2 comments
I have what may be a silly question - is "brittle tree" a description or a name?

In my defence we have a whole family of trees, shrubs and bushes commonly known as "wattle" because the early colonists found them useful for making wattle and daub buildings.
"Brittle" means trees prone to ice/wind damage. These include hackberry and mulberry. I don't really want them where they are, but neither do I want to cut down the forest garden. So I am trying to replace them with better things. The sweet shrubs, small trees like the redbud I just planted, and something taller but sturdy like a linden (which I had but I think the rabbits have eaten it). This article has a chart of brittle and tough trees.