A pothos at Patch Plants
08.07.2023 - 05:45 / hometalk.com
Do You Have a Chain-Link Fence – Hate the Look, But Love the Enclosed Protection?
Me Too.
Here’s a Simple, Easy Way to Jazz Up the Chain-Link, Without Loosing the Enclosed Safety.
Hello Santa Fe Coyote Fence!
What You Need: Branches. Baling Wire. Wire Cutter. Work Gloves.
These Branches (often called “latillas”) are Fir and Spruce. 8 Feet Long. Cut into 4 Foot Lengths.
These should cover a 20 foot span of fence.
A Roll of Baling Wire Goes a Long, Long Way. The Wire Cutters are for Cutting and Twisting the Wire.
Wire Cutter — Amazon LINK.
Baling Wire — Amazon LINK.
Lay out the Branches.
Cut a Length of Wire to Go Around the Branch and the Chain-Link Fence.
Tie the Wire to Secure the Branch Against the Fence.
Then Twist the Wire Tight to Hold the Branch in Place.
One Wire to Secure the Top. One Wire to Secure the Bottom. Two Wires on Each Branch.
Spacing of the Branches is Up to You.
Here’s the View from the Back of the Coyote Fence.
A 10 Foot Section can be a 2-Hour/2-Person Job…With Lots of Goofy Chatter and Silly Laughs.
Drink Plenty of Water. This Job is Best Done Early Morning in the Shade.
Simply Santa Fe. Simply Fabulous!
And All it Took was that Old Chain-Link, Some Branches, Wire, and Lots of Giggles.
A pothos at Patch Plants
Gardening in the winter is somewhat challenging but doable. Many of the greens, some of the root vegetables, and herbs can be planted in the fall and will grow through the winter months. The saying is that greens are better after a frost.
I PUT MY BEANS UP ON A PEDESTAL because they are one of the crops that’s finally producing here in the Year of Big Rains. In fact, I just planted another whole row of bush beans, along with more collards and kale, among many things. Welcome to Week 3 of the cross-blog Summer Fest 2009: Beans and Greens Week, a perfect time (if you hurry) to fine-tune the vegetable garden and eke out some produce for late summer, fall—and beyond.
EXPLODING Eremurus, why vulnerability is good for us, and the answer to why bird poop is white—all, and more, in the latest collections of links I’ve loved lately while staring into my computer screen (which I alternately do between long gazes out the window). Five links worth exploring:
THE TOPIC OF GNOMES is a popular one here at A Way to Garden (or should I say an unpopular one in that gnomes rate high on collective our Garden No-No’s list?). Whether he is trying to stir up trouble or simply get in the holiday spirit by conjuring images of Santa and his elves, daydreamer Andre Jordan offers this latest in our garden doodle series.
SO WHAT IF IT’S A COUPLE OF MONTHS OLD–positively ancient in internet times. Watching this short film of a murmuration, or gathering, of starlings lent perspective and poetry to the start of a new day.
I HAVE NEVER had a pair of boots that wasn’t hunter green or just plain black, but the madcap, cotton-lined, waterproof boots from Oregon-based Jessica Swift (top left of top photo) made me smile—and $5 from each pair sold will go to helping Charity: Water, a non-profit bringing clean drinking water to developing nations. The boots’ creator runs a new one-woman, crowd-funded business, and inside each boot is as brightly patterned as outside—plus Jessica has added a positive message like “this is the moment—your moment” to the lining, too. Not sure what my dairy-farming neighbors will think if I show up in these babies at the Post Office or General Store, but maybe I’ll take a walk on the wild side and find out. Happy feet, anyone?gold standard: hose of my dreamsEVERYONE WHO VISITS the garden on Open Days wants one: a super-lightweight, drinking-water-safe, beautifully colored hose (many hues to choose from, including olive and cranberry, shown above, and purple and more). No more dragging around heavy, kinked-up traditional hoses for me the last few years, since I found the made-in-America ones from Water Right Inc., an Oregon-based family business.stocking-
Birds are a particular passion, and bugs. “Instead of gardening, or lawn mowing,” says John, a native New Zealander and amateur filmmaker, “I find it far more interesting to treat my backyard as a habitat for the remarkable highly specialized but very small animal life that general goes unnoticed by most of us.”His images quickly bring scientific concepts like predation, mimickry and symbiosis to life—and though admittedly less technical, you get to see the real meaning of a “hairy eyeball,” too, all up close and personal.But what in the world was going on between those two big birds up top, anyhow? Ever-curious John thought the person to ask would be the raven expert and author Bernd Heinrich—who impressively had a look and wrote right back.“I think the raven was having fun, and then also starting to have some respec
You know me: I like to know my weeds—rather than just have a fit about some infestation or other, to actually find out what they are, and where they are native to, and what their role for better or worse is in the bigger picture is (other than to irritate me).I don’t know which liverwort I have, but it is what’s called a thallose species—made up of flattened tissue that looks almost rubbery to me. You might think at first they were some kind of moss or algae, and in fact like those other Bryophytes the liverworts have no vascular system, and they repro
Its story – how it got here, and what it’s doing and what is being done about it — is also the story of the unwelcome arrival of other invasive exotic organisms that have come to our shores unexpectedly, and found no natural predators or other mechanisms to keep them in check.I got a 101 on the beetle from Lisa Tewksbury, manager of the University of Rhode Island’s Biological Control Lab in Kingston, where she coordinates research on the lily leaf beetle among other invasives. Learn what’s being done by scientists seeking solutions other than chem
Many companies ship extra-early, based on rough frost-date estimates for each area that may not be exactly what’s going on at your place, but is that really when I want the starts to arrive? I asked for advice from Alley Swiss of Filaree Farm, a longtime certified-organic farmer in Okanogan, Washington, whose main crops—garlic, shallots and potatoes—are favorites in my garden, too.(You might recall the popular garlic-growing Q&A Alley and I did together, and our later garlic-growing piece in my column in “The New York Times.” I’ve learned a lot from our ongoing conversations–including that it’s OK to wait a little while for the seed potatoes to arrive.)how to grow potatoes, with alley swissQ. When is the right time to plant—is there a cue in nature to remind us, or a
Transform your home into a flourishing garden with the Most Productive Vegetables for a Balcony and Patio Garden, ensuring a plentiful yield in limited space and enhancing your green thumb experience.