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Hey there, long time no post

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Off Key - General Discussion
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  • rustyfingersR rustyfingers

    I think peonies don't love being moved, but maybe if it is a young volunteer it will be ok.

    ShiroKuroS Offline
    ShiroKuroS Offline
    ShiroKuro
    wrote on last edited by
    #44

    @rustyfingers said in Hey there, long time no post:

    I think peonies don't love being moved, but maybe if it is a young volunteer it will be ok.

    That’s good to know, I’ll tell Mr. SK.

    1 Reply Last reply
    • ShiroKuroS ShiroKuro

      We seem to have a spontaneous peony in the yard, under a tree, that wasn’t there last year. Mr SK wants to move it to somewhere we could see and and enjoy it more readily, but it seems like other spots would toi much sun for it…

      wtgW Offline
      wtgW Offline
      wtg
      wrote on last edited by wtg
      #45

      @ShiroKuro said in Hey there, long time no post:

      We seem to have a spontaneous peony in the yard, under a tree, that wasn’t there last year. Mr SK wants to move it to somewhere we could see and and enjoy it more readily, but it seems like other spots would toi much sun for it…

      Is it certain that it's a peony? I mean, is the mother plant nearby? I always thought they spread out via their roots but I didn't think they cast seeds out that could sprout. One possibility is that there was a peony there before and the previous owner of your house dug it out but left some root bits behind and they've sprung back to life.

      Is it possible it's a bleeding heart? Their leaves have similar shapes, but a peony leaf is sturdier and more leathery.

      Peony:

      alt text

      Bleeding heart:

      alt text

      Bleeding hearts bloom earlier, but a very young plant might not have any blossoms at all. They do spread their seeds around...

      When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier

      ShiroKuroS 2 Replies Last reply
      • wtgW wtg

        @ShiroKuro said in Hey there, long time no post:

        We seem to have a spontaneous peony in the yard, under a tree, that wasn’t there last year. Mr SK wants to move it to somewhere we could see and and enjoy it more readily, but it seems like other spots would toi much sun for it…

        Is it certain that it's a peony? I mean, is the mother plant nearby? I always thought they spread out via their roots but I didn't think they cast seeds out that could sprout. One possibility is that there was a peony there before and the previous owner of your house dug it out but left some root bits behind and they've sprung back to life.

        Is it possible it's a bleeding heart? Their leaves have similar shapes, but a peony leaf is sturdier and more leathery.

        Peony:

        alt text

        Bleeding heart:

        alt text

        Bleeding hearts bloom earlier, but a very young plant might not have any blossoms at all. They do spread their seeds around...

        ShiroKuroS Offline
        ShiroKuroS Offline
        ShiroKuro
        wrote on last edited by
        #46

        @wtg said in Hey there, long time no post:

        Is it certain that it's a peony?

        No, nothing is certain when I am involved in plant identification 😄 I’ll upload a photo in a few minutes…

        I mean, is the mother plant nearby?

        N, but there are peonies all over our neighborhood, and all over town town right now, exploding in blooms…

        One possibility is that there was a peony there before and the previous owner of your house dug it out but left some root bits behind and they've sprung back to life.

        This seems very likely. I’m trying to remember if there was a plant under that tree (where it is now) last year….

        1 Reply Last reply
        • wtgW wtg

          @ShiroKuro said in Hey there, long time no post:

          We seem to have a spontaneous peony in the yard, under a tree, that wasn’t there last year. Mr SK wants to move it to somewhere we could see and and enjoy it more readily, but it seems like other spots would toi much sun for it…

          Is it certain that it's a peony? I mean, is the mother plant nearby? I always thought they spread out via their roots but I didn't think they cast seeds out that could sprout. One possibility is that there was a peony there before and the previous owner of your house dug it out but left some root bits behind and they've sprung back to life.

          Is it possible it's a bleeding heart? Their leaves have similar shapes, but a peony leaf is sturdier and more leathery.

          Peony:

          alt text

          Bleeding heart:

          alt text

          Bleeding hearts bloom earlier, but a very young plant might not have any blossoms at all. They do spread their seeds around...

          ShiroKuroS Offline
          ShiroKuroS Offline
          ShiroKuro
          wrote on last edited by
          #47

          @wtg thanks for the photos of the peony vs. bleeding heart. Definitely not the leaves of a bleeding heart…

          Here are two photos I took earlier this week.

          alt text

          alt text

          My plant identification app says it’s either a “cottage peony” or a “common garden peony”

          rustyfingersR 1 Reply Last reply
          • ShiroKuroS Offline
            ShiroKuroS Offline
            ShiroKuro
            wrote on last edited by ShiroKuro
            #48

            Oh, I just looked at the bleeding heart flower (online), definitely not that! 😁

            1 Reply Last reply
            • Big_AlB Big_Al

              Hello, RF. It's good to catch up with you and your family.

              I've had my portion of tribulation with the knee replacement failure I've recounted here. Nonetheless, my wife and I are still in our home and keeping on with various activities.

              Your saga of instruments prompts me to relate mine. My Yamaha Clavinova began losing notes. A technician determined that the keyboard sensors were failing. No replacement parts were available and no used parts became available on eBay or wherever else the tech looked.

              I'm now looking at a replacement. The leading contender is the Yamaha NU1XA hybrid piano. It has the action of a Yamaha upright piano but with sensors that activate the electronic portions of the instrument. I've been very impressed with the feel of the keyboard and the sound is also very impressive.

              I'm probably going to proceed with my purchase this month.

              Please keep us apprised of events in your household.

              Big Al

              C Offline
              C Offline
              CHAS
              wrote on last edited by
              #49

              @Big_Al
              Hope you enjoy the Yamaha. I like those.
              Had the Kawai hybrid. The action was too heavy.

              “I’m at an age when remembering something right away is as good as an orgasm.”—Gloria Steinem to Julia Louis-Dreyfus on Wiser Than Me

              1 Reply Last reply
              • C Offline
                C Offline
                CHAS
                wrote on last edited by
                #50

                RF,
                Glad you found us. I enjoy your posts. Hope you stick around.

                “I’m at an age when remembering something right away is as good as an orgasm.”—Gloria Steinem to Julia Louis-Dreyfus on Wiser Than Me

                1 Reply Last reply
                👍
                • M Offline
                  M Offline
                  Mary Anna
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #51

                  I didn't know that rose of sharon was invasive. I put them in an area that would be mowed around. (Around which will be mown?) Will that contain them? They do grow in the South, but I've never had one. I don't remember them being invasive there, but I do know that they have a reputation for being unkillable, which is what I need in a plant.

                  I see Solomon seals in neighborhoods around here, so they seem like a good bet for a native that will do well and be pretty. I also see bleeding heart, which I've always loved and never lived in the right place to grow. My neighbors have the exotic variety, but I see on the New York native websites that there are native bleeding hearts, so I'll look for those. And maybe some of the exotics, too, since they don't seem to be invasive.

                  rustyfingersR 1 Reply Last reply
                  • ShiroKuroS ShiroKuro

                    @wtg thanks for the photos of the peony vs. bleeding heart. Definitely not the leaves of a bleeding heart…

                    Here are two photos I took earlier this week.

                    alt text

                    alt text

                    My plant identification app says it’s either a “cottage peony” or a “common garden peony”

                    rustyfingersR Offline
                    rustyfingersR Offline
                    rustyfingers
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #52

                    @ShiroKuro yeah, that's a peony. Pretty. Ours always bloom on Memorial Day weekend, but this year the weekend is early and the weather has been cold. We planted three bare root 7 years ago, and two are just starting to come into their own. One is still struggling--I think I put it too close to the sidewalk and the roots don't have enough soil.

                    I'm fond of them. We got a few as a housewarming gift at the old house and they were pretty spectacular by the time we moved out (22 years later). They are always covered in ants when in bloom so I never cut them and bring them inside.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    • M Mary Anna

                      I didn't know that rose of sharon was invasive. I put them in an area that would be mowed around. (Around which will be mown?) Will that contain them? They do grow in the South, but I've never had one. I don't remember them being invasive there, but I do know that they have a reputation for being unkillable, which is what I need in a plant.

                      I see Solomon seals in neighborhoods around here, so they seem like a good bet for a native that will do well and be pretty. I also see bleeding heart, which I've always loved and never lived in the right place to grow. My neighbors have the exotic variety, but I see on the New York native websites that there are native bleeding hearts, so I'll look for those. And maybe some of the exotics, too, since they don't seem to be invasive.

                      rustyfingersR Offline
                      rustyfingersR Offline
                      rustyfingers
                      wrote on last edited by rustyfingers
                      #53

                      @Mary-Anna ok , I lied. I just checked, and neither roses of Sharon nor lilies of the valley are on the invasive species lists in NY or in MA. My bad, and sorry I rained on your plant choices.

                      My experience with rose of Sharon was that I had to pull seedlings every day or so and during blooming I had to deadhead every day. Jeez they are pretty though.

                      My experience with lilies of the valley is that they formed a matted root mess that is impossible to eradicate even after 8 years of aggressively tackling it. But the flowers are darling and the foliage attractive. YMMV.

                      The big concern with actual invasive plants isn't so much what we see in our own yards but the effect of birds distributing the seeds in wild areas where they choke out beneficial and native species and reduce biodiversity. So I guess I'm a bit overzealous.

                      And of course plants are native or invasive depending on their locations.

                      Here's a better resource than me for checking for natives in North America :
                      https://www.wildflower.org/plants-main

                      And for invasive:
                      https://www.invasiveplantatlas.org/index.cfm

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      • wtgW Offline
                        wtgW Offline
                        wtg
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #54

                        @ShiroKuro said in Hey there, long time no post:

                        @wtg thanks for the photos of the peony vs. bleeding heart. Definitely not the leaves of a bleeding heart…

                        Here are two photos I took earlier this week.

                        alt text

                        alt text

                        My plant identification app says it’s either a “cottage peony” or a “common garden peony”

                        I didn't realize it had bloomed. Definitely a peony!

                        guidelines for transplanting:

                        https://www.thespruce.com/how-to-transplant-peonies-4579809

                        Ya learn something every day. I didn't know it preferred a late summer move, before it goes into dormancy.

                        When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier

                        ShiroKuroS 1 Reply Last reply
                        • wtgW Offline
                          wtgW Offline
                          wtg
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #55

                          Am with @rustyfingers on the rose of Sharon. Pretty flowers late summer, at a time when other plants are winding down. OTOH, seedlings galore. I enjoy them on other people's properties. Maximum beauty, minimum work.

                          I have lily of the valley, with mixed feelings. My mom's favorite flower, and that's the only reason I've kept a patch of it. I have to dig out a bunch of it that has crept into a path.

                          When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          • wtgW Offline
                            wtgW Offline
                            wtg
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #56

                            Whatever anyone does, do not let this plant anywhere near your yard:

                            alt text

                            Bishop's weed. Nearly impossible to rid yourself of.

                            When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier

                            B 1 Reply Last reply
                            😮
                            • wtgW wtg

                              Whatever anyone does, do not let this plant anywhere near your yard:

                              alt text

                              Bishop's weed. Nearly impossible to rid yourself of.

                              B Offline
                              B Offline
                              Bernard
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #57

                              @wtg Bishop's Weed (Ground Elder) is a nightmare. I have found that the variegated variety is not as bad here as the solid green variety, which I would not wish on anyone.

                              wtgW 1 Reply Last reply
                              • B Bernard

                                @wtg Bishop's Weed (Ground Elder) is a nightmare. I have found that the variegated variety is not as bad here as the solid green variety, which I would not wish on anyone.

                                wtgW Offline
                                wtgW Offline
                                wtg
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #58

                                @Bernard The variegated one is awful here. A friend dug up some hostas for me to take to our vacation home in Door County. There was one little tiny bit of the dreaded weed in the clump, which I thought I removed. Every spring it would pop up and we'd dig it out. I was terrified that it would take hold up there and I'd never get rid of it. Took five years of watchful gardening before it was officially and permanently eradicated.

                                It is an evil, evil plant.

                                When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                • wtgW wtg

                                  @ShiroKuro said in Hey there, long time no post:

                                  @wtg thanks for the photos of the peony vs. bleeding heart. Definitely not the leaves of a bleeding heart…

                                  Here are two photos I took earlier this week.

                                  alt text

                                  alt text

                                  My plant identification app says it’s either a “cottage peony” or a “common garden peony”

                                  I didn't realize it had bloomed. Definitely a peony!

                                  guidelines for transplanting:

                                  https://www.thespruce.com/how-to-transplant-peonies-4579809

                                  Ya learn something every day. I didn't know it preferred a late summer move, before it goes into dormancy.

                                  ShiroKuroS Offline
                                  ShiroKuroS Offline
                                  ShiroKuro
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #59

                                  @wtg said in Hey there, long time no post:

                                  I didn't realize it had bloomed.

                                  Yep. Sorry, I don’t think I was clear.

                                  I am not sure if there were blooms last year, but we only moved in in mid-June last year, so maybe we missed it.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  • M Offline
                                    M Offline
                                    Mary Anna
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #60

                                    I didn't buy any bishop's weed. Yay! Who knows what might have come with my friends' plants, but I didn't see any bishop's weed in her yard.

                                    I knew which plants tended to be invasive in Florida. Well, mostly. Now I'm really curious about rose of sharon, because I've never seen it on a list of invasive plants, but I don't think it's heat-sensitive, so maybe it throws off all those seedlings there. Crape myrtle would do that, but I had a big yard when I had crape myrtle, so I just moved the seedlings someplace where I wanted color six or eight months of the year. My next-door neighbor at that time was really into gardening and she loved invasive plants the best. I counted five flowering plants in my yard that had come over from hers, and her four o'clocks looked like an invading army heading out into the common area behind our houses.

                                    My mother is also the reason I got the lilies of the valley, wtg. She loved it, but it wouldn't grow in Mississippi. She did have something that looked similar. It may have been summer snowdrop.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    • rustyfingersR Offline
                                      rustyfingersR Offline
                                      rustyfingers
                                      wrote on last edited by rustyfingers
                                      #61

                                      Isn't it funny how we have fondness for our mothers' and grandmothers' families' flowers? A visit to my Grandma in Medford OR always included a tour of her garden. One time I was struck by her combination of red rhodies and white woodruff blooming together. I vainly tried to recreate that in Massachusetts. They don't bloom at the same time, and the woodruff dried up and disappeared. Duh.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      • M Offline
                                        M Offline
                                        Mary Anna
                                        wrote on last edited by Mary Anna
                                        #62

                                        We lived in the country, sort of. It was the best of both worlds, in that our house sat on four acres, but we were ten or fifteen minutes from town. My parents kept more over an acre of that land as the yard, which Daddy mowed with an old Cub Cadet tractor that came with the house, so Mama gardened with a big canvas. She planted roses and small flowers that you had to get close to see in the back yard. In the front yard, if it couldn't be seen from a car hurrying down a country road, it wouldn't do. Under some truly massive pine trees, she planted tons of azaleas, which grow to the size of a minivan (maybe a school bus) in that climate. They were honestly spectacular. She also moved azaleas and some redbud and dogwood trees out of the woods behind the house into the front yard, and she had a behemoth of a wisteria climbing up one of those pines and a yellow jessamine climbing up another. I remember daylilies, too, and nandinas and a pyracantha and masses of orange cosmos in the fall.

                                        This happened over years, so I don't remember her as being one of those people who was always out in the garden. I think she tended it a little at a time while we were at school, and also she planted things that didn't need much tending.

                                        The subsequent owner clearcut the lot and bulldozed the azaleas early in this century. Nevertheless, this is what people from my hometown still think of when they see me. They say, "I drove by your house and thought of your Mama and her azaleas."

                                        ShiroKuroS 1 Reply Last reply
                                        • M Mary Anna

                                          We lived in the country, sort of. It was the best of both worlds, in that our house sat on four acres, but we were ten or fifteen minutes from town. My parents kept more over an acre of that land as the yard, which Daddy mowed with an old Cub Cadet tractor that came with the house, so Mama gardened with a big canvas. She planted roses and small flowers that you had to get close to see in the back yard. In the front yard, if it couldn't be seen from a car hurrying down a country road, it wouldn't do. Under some truly massive pine trees, she planted tons of azaleas, which grow to the size of a minivan (maybe a school bus) in that climate. They were honestly spectacular. She also moved azaleas and some redbud and dogwood trees out of the woods behind the house into the front yard, and she had a behemoth of a wisteria climbing up one of those pines and a yellow jessamine climbing up another. I remember daylilies, too, and nandinas and a pyracantha and masses of orange cosmos in the fall.

                                          This happened over years, so I don't remember her as being one of those people who was always out in the garden. I think she tended it a little at a time while we were at school, and also she planted things that didn't need much tending.

                                          The subsequent owner clearcut the lot and bulldozed the azaleas early in this century. Nevertheless, this is what people from my hometown still think of when they see me. They say, "I drove by your house and thought of your Mama and her azaleas."

                                          ShiroKuroS Offline
                                          ShiroKuroS Offline
                                          ShiroKuro
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #63

                                          @Mary-Anna said in Hey there, long time no post:

                                          The subsequent owner clearcut the lot and bulldozed the azaleas early in this century.

                                          How awful!

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