Renewing the meadow

Timing is critical: renew too early and there might be some leftover seeds that the birds would have loved to eat. Too late, and you’ll be removing new growth as it starts at the end of winter. Then there’s rain: this meadow doubles as a rain garden, so if you cut too soon after aContinue reading “Renewing the meadow”

Aster chilensis trimming results

Last year, our California asters grew. And grew. And grew. By flowering time, the plants were about six feet tall. Too hard to appreciate the flowers at that height without a ladder, but the plants had a solution: as the season progressed, they drooped. We couldn’t cut them because we wanted the seeds as aContinue reading “Aster chilensis trimming results”

Looks like lawn, doesn’t it?

I was reading about herbivores. Large animals that graze in meadows. They typically chomp everything down, then move on. The meadow regrows; it’s adapted to that kind of treatment. In fact, grazing is supposed to stimulate side growth, otherwise known as vegetative reproduction, since it does tend to eliminate flowering parts that stick up. IContinue reading “Looks like lawn, doesn’t it?”