Showing posts with label sunchokes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sunchokes. Show all posts

Saturday, October 26, 2024

October Colors

October harvest.

 


With the month of October coming to a close, my garden has been keeping me very busy! At the beginning of the week I harvested the Sunchokes (Jerusalem artichokes) and sweet potatoes that I'd been growing in grow-bags. My sunchokes had reached lofty heights in September, with lovely blooms. I don't know if it can be seen clearly in my photo below, but those flower stems on the left reached nine to ten feet in height!

This year's Sunchoke harvest is the best thus far, enough for quite a few meals. The sweet potatoes were an experiment--I wanted to see how much I could get from a grow-bag of the same size. Not bad, but the yield may not be cost-effective, depending on the taste, I'll have to think about whether to grow them again next year.


Veggie pagoda with Sunchokes inside.

The nights are getting chilly, and our trees have been changing colors: the hickories have turned to gold, the maples red, and even the oaks are starting show a bit of color now. The back yard at sunrise this morning was completely transformed!

 

The back yard at sunrise.

My 'Autumn Blaze' maple is in its glory on the west yard, and the Kwanzan cherry in the front yard has turned to gold. The witchhazels have turned yellow and and starting to show some of their flower buds.

Fall being the best time to plant in our area, I've been expanding my beds, adding new plants and trees wherever I can find space. The badlands were extended to make room for some elm-leaved goldenrods that I acquired at our recent VNPS chapter meeting. Other native plant buys included a small spicebush sapling, two elderberrys, Sedum ternuum, a seedbox plant and a narrow-leaved goldenrod.

In addition, I had three tiny dogwood saplings that grew under the cherry tree in front and need new homes somewhere--one went in behind the elm-leaved goldenrod, the other two will get planted in the side yards, one in the east and one in the west. It will be interesting to see how these plantings develop over the next few years.

 

'Autumn Blaze' maple and dwarf Japanese maple Acer palmatum var. dissectum 'Viridis'
 Front of the house with cherry tree.

 

Not many flowers are left now--the snapdragons I planted this year are still blooming, but the aromatic asters (Symphyotrichum oblongifolium) were nibbled a lot by the deer, so the blooms are not as full as on other years. In the past deer stayed away from the aromatic asters, though they ate all the smooth asters (Symphyotrichum laeve) but I guess deer will eat anything when they're hungry.

These late-season flowers attract many insects: little skipper butterflies, moths, wasps and bumblebees living out their last days.

 

Snapdragons
Aromatic asters

Aromatic asters

The seasonal changes in my flower beds always bring out some surprising color combinations, like the yellowing leaves of the Amsonia hubrichtii with the rusty flower heads of sedum 'Autumn Joy.' A few flowers of Agastache 'Blue Boa' in Herb's bed contrast with the dusty-green foliage of lavender--speaking of which, there are still a few flowers left.


Flower beds in the back yard
Late-blooming lavender

 

The Kousa dogwood is displaying its fall color, though this year it's hard to compete with the colors in the woods behind.


'Kousa' dogwood fall foliage

The pink Mums I bought this year are still looking good planted next to a clump of Muhly grass--such a beautiful color!

 

Pink mum planted near Muhly grass

 

Although the temperature has been dipping below 32 degrees these past nights, there is still no sign that a hard frost has hit any of the plants, I'm still waiting for Jack Frost to make his appearance. When that happens--and it will--I'd love to have it be a picturesque hoar-frost such as we had a few years back in early November. We shall see.


Sunday, October 24, 2021

Fall Sketches and Harvest

Crabapple Branch, colored pencil on cream Stonehenge paper, 14" x 11"

 

 Even when staying busy in my garden, I try to devote some time to my artwork. Above is a colored pencil piece I'm working on. It's not finished yet--the colored pencils need to be burnished, and I think that adding a bird to the branch might provide a focal point. Perhaps adding a cedar waxwing, or another small native that likes to snack on crabapples.


Sassafras Leaf, watercolor, 12" x 9"

This sassafras leaf just starting to turn was painted at Lynne Frailing's workshop in Bath County back in September. I drove down to spend the night at the Sycamore Bend Cottage on Amanda's farm so that I could make it to the workshop in Warm Springs the next morning on time. We had a lot of fun with the material Lynne brought in for us to paint, but I didn't have time to finish the leaf during the workshop--I finished it later here at home. It's still a very loose painting, not exactly polished--really just a sketch.


Magnolia Seedpod, pencil with watercolor pencils, 5" x 7"

 

The weather has been so glorious recently, that I've been stopping by Blandy Farm/Virginia State Arboretum frequently to take walks and sketch. On this occasion, I came across a group of magnificent Magnolias, both the M. grandiflora seen above, but some other more exotic varieties, including one called Veitch's Magnolia. This one has some very unusual seedpods, irregularly long and thin, with very pronounced aril bumps. Unfortunately, by the following week when I went back there, this deciduous magnolia was completely bare! I guess I can do a sketch from my photo, or wait until next year!


Veitch's Magnolia

 I started harvesting my Jerusalem artichokes (AKA sunchokes) and fingerling potatoes last week, and enjoying cooking these home-grown veggies. My sunchokes, part of the sunflower family, never had a chance to bloom--the deer kept eating the buds until I finally moved the grow-bag into my fenced enclosure. I'll definitely grow both of these again next season, they are delicious!


Jerusalem artichokes from my garden.

Fingerling potatoes.

As the colder weather approaches, I'll be spending more time in my studio. I've so many new projects to look forward to!