Showing posts with label wildlife habitat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wildlife habitat. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 16, 2016

Negotiating With El Nino

El Nino playing it coy with a rainbow before a winter storm.

El Nino has come through these parts big time thrice since I've lived here in the High Mojave Desert of SoCal. In the 80s, I recall heavy rains and a bumper crop of tumbleweed. Living on a hill, the yard began to slide down the cul-de-sac. In the late 90s, it was a real doozy:  long and violent seasons with thunderstorms, monsoons and floods. Being a military family, we actually had lived in hurricane locations, and I recognized the storms of the 90s were definitely tropical storms at the very least. I recall coming home one night from grad school--and as we live in a valley, we have a big sky--and the lightning looked like someone was playing ping pong with it. There was so much standing water, we jokingly called them Lake Central and Lake Kiowa, after the streets they engulfed. Then came the wildflowers (the good part of El Nino) and the mold, weeds and rodents (the bad parts of El Nino.) More of the yard slid down the hill.
Slowly down the run-off.

Not a giant gopher--just me.
But this year El Nino has been helpful. The rains, rather big in November and smaller in December and January, softened up the sand and clay soil that becomes like concrete in the frequent 100-plus degree weather of the summer and autumn. So, I've been digging, and the yard looks like a giant gopher moved in. First, a trench filled with large river rock because the yards to the east of us, up the hill, provide a river bed of rushing water in a big rain. This tactic is working, no torrent going through our yard.

Then, as our yard is a Certified Wildlife Habitat and Butterfly Garden,
Rich, mulchy 3 year-old berm--notice the mint taking over!
I've built up natural berms and shelters for birds and bugs and butterflies, using the limbs and branches of our trimmed trees, and mulching the leaves from the fall.  I do not live in a gated community with rules about dignified landscaping, so it looks a little wild. But, I must say, our garden community of birds, bugs and worms loves it, and it is both a natural way to provide more soil as it mulches, and prevent further erosion. I have rescued plants (buying them on sale) to provide a line of privacy so we and privacy in our home, and the neighbors don't have to view our wild yard. Unless they want to, then they can visit.
Filling in the gaps.
Iris-functional and lovely.
I am slowly filling in the parts of the western part of the yard that have eroded with sandy soil which slid down from the neighbor's yard into the eastern part of our yard. It is going to take a long time, but there is progress. I am also planting drought resistant trees and bulb flowers, like iris. Why iris? Aside from my devotion to Van Gogh? Anyone who has attempted to dig up iris (or daffodils, for that matter) knows they really get entrenched. and are a task to dig up. So, they are also great at stopping erosion--and are so magnificently beautiful. They are already coming up.

Prelim veg patch.
There is one section of my yard that adjoins the neighbors, they have a lovely tiered vegetable garden. I've always wanted to duplicate it on my property--now that the soil is softer and I have designated time digging this--that's just what I'm doing! But not as fancy. And there will be less run-off when it rains. Thank you El Nino, for softening up my yard.
Beginning a berm with roadrunner approval.

Climate change in general means drought here in Cali. The natural berms, et al, are vibrant, growing parts of the yard that discourage fire. That's the big threat here. I'm considering creating a hugelkultur, meaning hill culture or hill mound http://www.inspirationgreen.com/hugelkultur.html . That keeps in the moisture. All the garden creatures would love it.
It may seem that Californians are so obnoxious bragging about the warm weather, but too many sunny skies brought the drought that created epic fires over the last several years. Hoping El Nino will change that.

Wednesday, January 13, 2016

Winter Bird-A-Palooza!

So many robins enjoying the wildlife habitat in my yard. They joined the finches, chickadees, sparrows and ravens.

Thursday, October 29, 2015

A-Mulching We Will Go




I am a self-confessed sloppy gardener. But that seems to benefit my vibrant garden community, because their natural cycles of life are undisturbed by chemicals or conformity to strict neighborhood standards of conformity (I live in the country, you could say.) 

My beloved well-developed heap.

I have big trees and enjoy making huge piles of leaves that biodegrade into some really good mulch. Of course, my 3/4 acre yard truly does not look Martha Stewartish. But I am happy to be with my butterflies, bees, birds, critters in the soil, and Van Gogh-looking trees and plants. Some butterflies use the mulch heap to go through metamorphosis. I love it. 

Maple and mulberry leaves, waiting to be mulch.

So I'm spending  time this autumn to tuck the garden in for the winter with a snug blanket of mulch; some those piles have been processing for several years. Its fun to get out there with a spade and my old wheelbarrow and be like all my farmer ancestors. I'm digging it! (Sorry about the pun.)

 4 Ways to Mulch Your Vegetable Garden

http://www.gardeningchannel.com/4-ways-to-mulch-your-vegetable-garden/ 

All About Garden Mulches

http://www.bhg.com/gardening/yard/mulch/all-about-garden-mulches

Choosing the Right Mulch
for Vegetable Gardens

 http://www.gardeners.com/how-to/mulch-for-vegetable-gardens/5013.html

Using Mulch Wisely  

http://www.gardensalive.com/product/using-mulch-wisely/you_bet_your_garden

How to Make Compost

http://www.bhg.com/gardening/yard/compost/gardeners-gumbo/

Love this title. And joining nature in a cycle of growth!

Compost Gardening:  Welcome to our dirty, rotten neighborhood!

http://www.compostgardening.com/ 

 

Proud to be a Certified Wildlife Habitat as well as a Certified Butterfly Garden.

http://www.nwf.org/How-to-Help/Garden-for-Wildlife/Create-a-Habitat.aspx
http://nababutterfly.com/butterfly-garden-certification-program/