We love our technology, but in some ways we are taking the old road.
Showing posts with label trees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trees. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Keeping Trees Alive



The bare-root fruit trees we planted have lived. Not everything we ordered and planted has lived, but the trees have. They all have leaves, and some even flowered.


We're pinching off flowers and fruit when we see them, though, because it's best not to let them grow fruit when they're just getting established.

It's been so dry here that we have to water all the time. We just keep moving the hose from tree to tree every day that we're home. It has been a challenging spring for starting bare-root trees!

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Springier and Springier

I went out in our woods the other day and along the edge of the pond. Things are getting greener!






Some things are blooming, though nothing stunning:



The tiny maple tree we planted (thank you Arbor Day at school) on the edge of the woods last year has leafed out. It survived the winter!

Monday, April 20, 2009

The Beginnings of an Orchard



We decided on a different spot for our orchard. Instead of being in a grassy area that had dead trees, it's going on a slope that was an alfalfa field. It was at the suggestion of the person who hays that field, so it was an acceptable section to take. It will make the trees very visible to our house, which will be lovely when they flower. It will also soften the look of our house and yard to have a collection of small trees on a side of the house that was bare. And it was a spot we could get to work on right now.

My husband spent a muscle-punishing day digging large holes in hard, dry clay. I helped him plant the trees in the holes and fill the holes with rich, loose black dirt mixed with well-rotted cow manure. We got our first batch of trees so early that we couldn't plant them at first (darn Gurney's). Then we heeled them in to try to keep them alive until we had our site prepared. Now we hold our breath until we see if they survived. At least our apple trees haven't arrived yet, so they'll have better odds.

This one is a cherry tree:



Some of them look like sticks (I think this is a pear):



But we planted bare-root sticks before at our old house, and they did grow:




Even the largest tree you see in that last picture was a tiny, limbless stick when we got it, just like the pear tree above.