One of our new nucs is arriving today and I ran down to Arcadia to make sure the Artemis hive was clean and ready to go. Here it is!
I’m really happy we managed to get one nuc right as we move into the tulip poplar nectar flow. This is the big flow in our region and all the nectar gives the bees the ability to build comb and numbers to carry on into summer. We have a dearth in July and so this early start is key to a good start to the season.
Our two nucs coming in May will likely miss this flow and we’ll have to feed them to help them make up for what they missed. If this new hive gets a booming start we will be able to feed their excess honey frames to the “younger” nucs instead of sugar water.
My goal this year is to end up with at least three very healthy hives going into next winter. If we’re lucky we will need to split Artemis and end up with four.
Sunday, March 29, 2020
Friday, March 27, 2020
What’s Coming Up In The Garden, 12: elderberry
In December we purchased 30 live stake elderberry plants and put them in along the areas of the farm where we get a lot of rainwater run-off during storms. This was one of the recommendations made by a consult I got from our local native plant nursery. Elderberry was something I’ve wanted to put in on the farm for years, and this was a great, and inexpensive, way to do it.
The live stakes were bare sticks bundled together. We tapped them in the ground with a mallet. There they stood all winter long, an experiment in faith. The idea being that they quickly grow vast root systems, securing and stabilizing the soil around them in the process.
We weren’t able to get them as deeply into the ground as I wanted, but we did our best.
This is what they look like today:
These bushes will be wonderful for wildlife, pollinators, and us, and they will also thrive in the areas we put them. They love getting lots of water at various times and can easily tolerate drought in between.
The live stakes were bare sticks bundled together. We tapped them in the ground with a mallet. There they stood all winter long, an experiment in faith. The idea being that they quickly grow vast root systems, securing and stabilizing the soil around them in the process.
We weren’t able to get them as deeply into the ground as I wanted, but we did our best.
This is what they look like today:
These bushes will be wonderful for wildlife, pollinators, and us, and they will also thrive in the areas we put them. They love getting lots of water at various times and can easily tolerate drought in between.
Plant Details
Sambucus canadensis
Common Elderberry
Scientific Name: |
Sambucus canadensis
|
---|---|
Genus: |
Sambucus
|
Species Epithet: |
canadensis
|
Common Name: |
Common Elderberry
|
Plant Type |
Shrub
|
Life Cycle |
Perennial
|
Plant Family |
Caprifoliaceae (Honeysuckle Family)
|
Native/Alien: |
NC Native
|
Size: |
6-12 ft.
|
Bloom Color(s): |
White
|
Light: |
Sun - 6 or more hours of sun per day, Part Shade - 2 to 6 hours of sun per day
|
Soil Moisture: |
Moist
|
Bloom Time: |
April, May, June, July
|
Growing Area: |
Mountains, Piedmont, Sandhills, Coastal Plain
|
Habitat Description: |
Streambanks, thickets, marshes, moist forests, disturbed areas. Common throughout NC.
|
Leaf Arrangement: |
Opposite
|
Leaf Retention: |
Deciduous
|
Leaf Type: |
Leaves veined, not needle-like or scale-like
|
Leaf Form: |
Compound
|
Life Cycle: |
Perennial
|
Wildlife Value: |
Important for Wildlife
|
Landscape Value: |
Suitable for home landscapes
|
Notes: |
Plants can be vigorous growers and may need more management to control. Attract butterflies and birds.
|
along the highway and railroad right-of-way, Black Mountain
© MB Baumeister |
Thursday, March 26, 2020
What’s Coming Up In The Garden, 11: narrow leaf mountain mint
I give you the most popular pollinator plant in my gardens, narrow leaf mountain mint:
This becomes quite large as it matures and drapes beautifully over the edges of my terraced bed. The tiny white/pinkish flowers are abuzz with activity for months. Every kind of bee there is gravitates to this plant. If you’re aiming to provide bee forage, plant lots of this. I aim to put it down by the bee hives so they can get to it even more easily.
It’s a delicate, subtle plant but when you see how popular it is, it becomes quite dramatic in the garden, a real show stopper.
More info:
This becomes quite large as it matures and drapes beautifully over the edges of my terraced bed. The tiny white/pinkish flowers are abuzz with activity for months. Every kind of bee there is gravitates to this plant. If you’re aiming to provide bee forage, plant lots of this. I aim to put it down by the bee hives so they can get to it even more easily.
It’s a delicate, subtle plant but when you see how popular it is, it becomes quite dramatic in the garden, a real show stopper.
More info:
Pycnanthemum tenuifolium
Pycnanthemum tenuifolium Schrad.
Narrowleaf Mountain Mint, Slender Mountain Mint, Common Horsemint
Lamiaceae (Mint Family)
Synonym(s): Koellia flexuosa, Pycnanthemum flexuosum
USDA Symbol: pyte
USDA Native Status: L48 (N), CAN (N)
This stiff, erect, compact, clump-forming mint has narrow leaves subtending the flower clusters. The minty-smelling plants are 20-30 in. tall and have terminal flower clusters composed of numerous, small, two-lipped corollas varying from whitish to lavender, with purple spots.
Wednesday, March 25, 2020
What’s Coming Up In The Garden, 10: spotted horsemint
This is my absolute favorite plant in the pollinator beds. I fell in love with it in a pollinator plant class I took with our local extension agent Debbie Roos, and managed to get three plants at the North Carolina Botanical Garden’s annual plant sale that fall. It has spread and done beautifully in my garden. Pollinators of all kinds love it.
Here it is today, coming up in the foreground. The tulips were there when we bought the farm and while they are of course not native, I have let them remain. They bloom early and I can remove the stems before the spotted horsemint comes all the way in.
Below is a nearly mature flower from last year’s horsemint, in the same part of the garden bed. I cannot tell you how much I love these - they take my breath away when in full bloom. A friend who lives on Hatteras says they grow everywhere there, and recommended I manipulate the seed pods in late fall to encourage more growth. I did it the first year and now have many, many more than the three I originally planted. They encompass an entire swath of one pollinator bed now. This may be the year to transplant some of them. For now I’m just enjoying the anticipation.
Here’s more info:
Here it is today, coming up in the foreground. The tulips were there when we bought the farm and while they are of course not native, I have let them remain. They bloom early and I can remove the stems before the spotted horsemint comes all the way in.
Below is a nearly mature flower from last year’s horsemint, in the same part of the garden bed. I cannot tell you how much I love these - they take my breath away when in full bloom. A friend who lives on Hatteras says they grow everywhere there, and recommended I manipulate the seed pods in late fall to encourage more growth. I did it the first year and now have many, many more than the three I originally planted. They encompass an entire swath of one pollinator bed now. This may be the year to transplant some of them. For now I’m just enjoying the anticipation.
Monarda punctata
Monarda punctata L.
Spotted Beebalm, Spotted Horsemint, Horsemint
Lamiaceae (Mint Family)
Synonym(s):
USDA Symbol: MOPU
USDA Native Status: L48 (N), CAN (N)
An aromatic, erect perennial ranging from only 6 in. to almost 3 ft. tall. Rosettes of yellowish, purple-spotted, tubular flowers occur in whorls, forming a dense, elongated spike at the end of the stem or from leaf axils. Each whorl is subtended by large, conspicuous, whitish, purple-tinged, leaf-like bracts.
Linnaeus named the genus Monarda in honor of a 16th century Spanish physician and botanist, Nicolas Bautista Monardes (1493-1588). Monardes never went to the Americas but was able to study medicinal plants in Spain.
Tuesday, March 24, 2020
What’s Coming Up In The Garden, 9: wild bergamot
This is a favorite in my pollinator garden, both mine and the bees. I planted three small plants two years ago and it’s nicely bunched and spread now, and is a delight once it blooms. It lasts a long time, too. Although it’s not blooming yet, it has leafed out nicely this spring and I look forward to see it in another month or so.
I planted it at the front of the bed, just under the huge butterfly bush that has been here since we bought the farm, and while I do have to trim the butterfly bush back to keep it from taking over, the bergamot grows right up into the bush’s lower hanging branches and later in the season the blooms intermingle. It’s very pretty.
More info:
Monarda fistulosa
- Phonetic Spelling
- mo-NAR-da fist-yoo-LOW-suh
- Description
- Monarda fistulosa, commonly called wild bergamot, is a native perennial that occurs in dryish soils on prairies, dry rocky woods and glade margins, unplanted fields and along roads and railroads. It is a clump-forming, mint family member that grows typically to 2-4' tall.
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