How are you coping with winter blues?
5 years ago
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- 5 years agolast modified: 5 years ago
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How are you and your garden coping with the heatwave in QC & ON?
Comments (18)Oh dear, just reading some of these posts is most disheartening. I am in Alberta and it has been non stop rain for the majority of the spring and summer. I wish I could just move the sprinkler out east! If it's any consolation, I can't do any gardening for the rain and the mosquitos. The dogs don't even want to go outside cause they are not water dogs, I raise shelties, and 7 wet shelties in the house is not a fun party.The basement is flooding constantly! Never mind the basement, the whole yard. Guess we just have to grin and bear it. Lets hope the weather trades places for the month of August! Under the apple tree July 22 in the dog run...See MoreHow are you all coping?
Comments (19)i'm coping by giving up, it sounds like i'm not alone! i had given up earlier in the summer but finally in july i gave up on everything and it looks now like it was a great decision. we still haven't had rain, i would be crazy by now if i had tried to save everything. now that most of my more expensive/favorite plants are dead i don't seem to care as much. this spring i spent tons of money (as usual) planting all kinds of things and they all got fried, i could never get them established. i had to let them all die and become crispy. the last thing i tried to do was to go out and get a lettuce patch growing for autumn but by watering the lettuce to get it to grow i attracted deer to the yard and they have eaten it all, the deer will come right up to houses in a suburban neighborhood and eat when the drought is this bad. now my only projects that require water are a small 4x4 bed of evergreen bunching onion seeds that i have been watering, they don't seem to want to germinate though, and also a small patch also about 4x4 foot of corn that i am watering as an experiment to see how late in the year i could grow corn to maturity. oh and i planted a bed of kale as well, it too hasn't yet germinated but i expect it to. one of my few successes is a single rose that i grew from cutting this year, it was the only rose to live out of about 15 cuttings. this one rose i keep watering out in the vegetable garden and it is happy as a clam lol. my one bright spot! people not in the drought i know they must think right you people just should not give up like that all you have to do is go out and water everything, they just don't understand that you can't keep tender plants alive when the drought is killing TREES. this place is like a desert that doesn't know it is a desert yet, we just haven't had any rain....See MoreHow can I attract blue birds to my yard in the winter?
Comments (12)kendra2 i was surprised to see that you are in MA and in zone 5 and have year round BB's. I am in SW Vermont in zone 4 (or 4B depending on where you look) and have been seeing BB's later and later each year and wondering what is going on as i thought they went south for winter. It is hard to tell from the posts what is happening because not everyone identifies where they are located and what zone they are in but it appears they will overwinter wherever they can. It seems unimaginable that BB's would overwinter in my region because it can go to -20 here at night and be in single digits for days at a time. Typically there is a stretch of 2 or more weeks in winter that don't exceed the teens. These temps are mitigated only slightly till one travels at least 75 air miles to Albany and the lower Hudson valley. Nevertheless, I have seen BB's later and later in the year on nice days until I eventually stopped seeing them in late November. This year I saw groups of BB's around the nest boxes on nice days several times in November and December. On Christmas eve I saw a pair perched near the house going into the snow to pick up something. This weekend is supposed to be in the high 40's and i kind of expect to see them again. So my question is: are they overwintering here or making "day trips" to their nesting grounds and why on earth would they be doing that in such a difficult environment when they could be in Carolina eating fresh fruit and bugs? Lou...See MoreAaaaack!! Demo. What was your reaction to your demo? How did you cope?
Comments (32)UPDATE: We are moving along, but ever so slowly it seems! I think that is the way it might feel for some time : ) Working on other areas of the house, inside and out, has taken us temporarily away from the kitchen, but we are getting back to it now! I've been in the process of setting up our temporary-temporary kitchen in the breakfast nook, which is in the current kitchen. DH informed me it'd have to be moved soon so he and I could begin demo of the kitchen... I am clearly too tired to think straight - he's right! He suggested we move it to the dining room-to-be TV room for now... but first we had to remove his widescreen TV, which he seemed unable to live without (sports fan that he is). This was a sacrifice for DH. Bless his heart! Yesterday we began to set up the temp-temp kitchen (2 temps) because eventually it will be taken down to remove and rebuild a wall between the future tv room and kitchen... My prep space, and only a few of many storage units... The water source is all the way across the house... I'll be keeping a jug nearby! The only problem? We removed the only light in that room... this is the scene from early this morning... making DH's lunch using an emergency light! Felt a bit like camping days from the past! We'll be adding a cheap light pronto! coffee stations are all the rage now... and we have one! Living the life! I have double ovens! (ancient toaster oven sitting on top of old microwave). I'll sure miss that "feature" as our new kitchen will only have a slide in range. ; ) The microwave came from DH's bachelor pad, and to my dismay still had 'gunk' in it, after it'd been sitting for 2 years! I used a flame torch to sterilize it. We put an old rug on the plywood subfloor for now... it adds a certain je ne sais quoi to our formal dining area, don't you think? Things I've learned thus far: 1) When vacuuming plywood sub-flooring, always vacuum with the grain. That way you'll get up half the dirt as opposed to none. 2) Those plastic drawer storage containers won't open if you put anything heavier than 15 paper napkins and a single plastic fork. 3) Keep a plastic drop cloth over everything when not in use... demo dust can find it's way into anything! 4) Maintain a sense of humor, maintain some semblance of order amidst the chaos, and always, always, have a hot pad ready for hot casserole dishes! Best wishes to those going through the process - or preparing to!...See MoreRelated Professionals
Edmond Landscape Contractors · Bellefontaine Neighbors Landscape Contractors · Galveston Landscape Contractors · Paso Robles Landscape Contractors · Champaign Decks, Patios & Outdoor Enclosures · Crystal Lake Decks, Patios & Outdoor Enclosures · Jupiter Decks, Patios & Outdoor Enclosures · Reisterstown Decks, Patios & Outdoor Enclosures · Stoughton Landscape Contractors · Fort Atkinson Landscape Contractors · Mission Viejo Landscape Contractors · East Patchogue Landscape Architects & Landscape Designers · Arlington Landscape Contractors · Petaluma Landscape Contractors · Vancouver Landscape Contractors- 5 years ago
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