Before I start up with my Sunday afternoon ramble, I want to thank you new subscribers to Lottarock. This is the weekly newsletter that keep you up to what is happening on the farm. This is different from the newsletter that goes out the evening before each open flower shed day, which reminds you of the hours and what will be available in the shed the next day. The blog post, which this is, is much more chatty, and the newsletter to the point. Again, Welcome.
So long tulips, hello peonies. I have been harvesting peonies by the arm load twice a day, and with the warm weather, I check them three times a day, and when I am harvesting them it is by the arm load.
So many colors, shapes and sizes to choose from. I would say so far I have harvested about half of the crop, so there are many arm loads left to harvest. I don’t expect to be running out of peony offerings anytime soon.
All of the seedling are in the ground. Yay. Well, not quite all. I had to do another sowing of zinnias because the first batch was devoured by the slugs. Damn things. I am now setting out beer traps with PBR, (Pabst Blue Ribbon for those of you not in the know). The slugs really go for it so if I have to spend 10 dollars a week buying PBR to get my flowers to grow, so be it. Most of the dahlias have sprouted above ground, so now their irrigation can be turned on. Before I know it I will be putting in more stakes to start trussing them up.
In the harvesting department I am still cutting the anemones and ranunculus, and now added to that is the phlox, some dianthus, as well as orlaya, nigella hopefully by Friday the feverfew and agrostema will be added to the list. One has to love the diversity of what is being harvested now. Speaking of diversity, check out this bouquet that I made just cause i could. Tulips, iris, peonies, daisies, valerian and beauty bush to round it out. It is now sitting in the kitchen going strong.
I participated in a pop up on Saturday that was a lot of fun, and got to meet more flower lovers. I had my normal offerings, buckets of flowers, arrangements and posies, but during all my conversations I started to call the posies starter posies. If you don’t know where to start with your flowers, start with a starter posie and add to it from the many offerings and create your own masterpiece. I think that is a cool way of looking at it. You can also just enjoy the posey as it is. Anyway.
I am running out of things to say, so I will leave you here with last week’s #windowframethursday.
The first of the garden roses, with peonies, honeysuckle and Calycanthus “Athena”
Until next week. Allie