NORTHERN FLICKER (Colaptes auratus) Previously known as the Red-Shafted flicker. This beautiful image was caught by Ruthie D. from Orcas Island. For information on attracting, feeding, viewing, and how many insects they eat, see the Seattle Audubon website HERE This bird is protected by the Federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act. |
In celebration of gardens and wild botanicals of Shaw Island, please view photos, cultural, and historical notes for seeds from a cross-section of island gardens and wild places. The posts listed here aid in cultivating the herbs and flower seeds bound in handmade packets at the shed along Reefnet Bay Road, in the spring, summer, and fall. There are also a few articles in the history timeline that help us remember some of the pioneer gardeners and the crops they grew.
07 December 2022
01 November 2022
FLOWERING EARTH
Seed capsules (hips) from Species Rosa glauca Shaw Island harvest October 2022. |
"If there is any living thing that might explain to us the mystery beyond this life, it should be seeds. We pour them curiously into the palm, dark as mystery, brown or gray as earth, bright sometimes with scarlet of those beads worked into Buddhist rosaries. We shake them there, gazing, but there is no answer to this knocking on the door. They will not tell where their life has gone, or if it is there, any more than the lips of the dead."
Donald Culross Peattie, Flowering Earth, 1939.
13 October 2022
"I SING THE FIG"
"Now sing of the fig, Simiane,
Because its loves are hidden.
I sing of the fig, said she,
Whose beautiful loves are hidden,
Its flowering is folded away
Closed room where marriages are made:
No perfume tells the tale outside."
Andre Gide
30 September 2022
HERE COMES AUTUMN
20 August 2022
SEEDS COMING IN –– for 2023
"We are living in a time of unrest and worry, but the same crocus will grow near the Black Sea as grows in Spain, and these flowers don't need passports and frontiers. The seed is beyond frontiers and beyond nationalities, and the growing of things and tilling the earth is one of the most international, one of the most unpolitical things we can possibly do. Don't ever forget that the seed is the most important thing in the whole world." Clare Leighton, garden writer, 1948.
Freshly harvested perennial Sweet Pea seeds (Lathyrus latifolius) A wildflower still growing on Shaw Island, Just barely. Thanks, Louise. |
08 August 2022
"FIREWORKS FROM THE FOURTH" :::::::::: RED POPPIES
"Breadseed poppies" (Papaver somniferum) Red, Red, Red with shimmering, silky petals. A fresh crop of organic seeds, available while they last at Gatehouse Seeds, USDA Zone 8-b. Reefnet Bay Road, Shaw Island, San Juan Archipelago, WA. |
17 July 2022
FOLIAGE
"Lamb's Ears" Stachys byzantina "Helen von Stein" Gatehouse garden, Shaw Island, WA. 16 July 2022. |
"One of the most exciting things about planning a garden is the many and varied ways there are to play with color––from the blending of great masses of color to high-lighting the gemlike gloss of a single blossom.
Even more subtle is the palette provided by the tones of the foliage. Plants have leaves not only in every imaginable shade of green, but in shades of red, purple, blue, gray––even white.
Breadseed poppy pods Papaver somniferum after the drama queens were finished with the Fourth of July. Shaw Island, WA. |
Barbara Damroach. Theme Gardens.
Formosa Lillies with backdrop of glaucous Abies needles. Shaw Island, WA. |
01 July 2022
JULY = = = = = THE MONTH OF THE ROSE
ROSA GLAUCA known for the beautiful blue-green foliage and no black spot. Photographed on Shaw Island end of June 2022. Seeds are available at the Gatehouse Seed Shed, Reefnet Bay Road, Shaw Island, WA. This species rose germinates easily from seed and will often self-seed to supply "littles" to share with friends. This plant is on the Elizabeth Miller Library's (U of W, Seattle, WA.) Great Plant Picks. Click this link for the outstanding qualities. Great Plant Picks |
GATEHOUSE BIRDS ==== JULY first 2022
Plant a few foxgloves and poppies which are not deer food, encourage the native Ocean Spray, Salmonberry, and Elderberry bushes, put out a dish of clean water –– these colorful birds that have occurred in the last month to feed, nest, sing, and fly about the Gatehouse woodland garden will stop over to visit you. All true.
31 May 2022
SINGING OUT THE MONTH OF MAY
Native Crabapple (Malus fusca) A sweet specimen for pollinators and people in early spring; Photographed on Shaw Island, San Juan Archipelago, WA. Two thousand and twenty-two. |
NATIVE CRABAPPLE (Malus fusca) One tree in an unmolested row of native Crabapples going dormant, but laden with ripened fruit for the bird's winter pantry. Click the photo to enlarge. Shaw Island fall of 2021. |
MAHONIA X 'CHARITY' blooming in the winter in the Gatehouse woodland garden with nectar for pollinators and hungry Anna's hummingbirds who now stay on Shaw Island, WA, through the winter. |
Magnolia grandiflora "Kay Pariss" Non-native growing on Shaw Island, WA. Please think about planting for the pollinators. |
25 May 2022
Garden DILL
Garden Dill Anethum graveolens "Hera" Organically grown seed from Reefnet Bay Road, Shaw Island, San Juan Archipelago, WA. |
New Listing for Dill "Hera"
Scientific name: Anethum graveolens "Hera"
The common name of dill reportedly comes from the Norse word dilla meaning to lull or soothe.
Lifecycle: Hardy annual
USDA Hardiness Zones: 02-11
Site: Full sun, protect from wind. Shade can cause plants to flop over.
Dill attracts a number of beneficial insects to the garden: bees, wasps, butterflies, lacewings, tachinid flies, hoverflies, and lady beetles.
Dill is a larval plant for the black swallowtail butterfly.
Sowing: Sow in situ from spring until mid-summer. Thin to 9-11" apart.
Watering: Don't let them dry out.
Maintenance: Low.
Bloom time: August to September.
Harvesting: gather leaves when young. To collect seeds after flowering heads turn brown, hang the whole plant upside down over a cloth or a paper bag underneath.
Preserving: Dry or freeze leaves.
Notes: Early settlers took dill to North America, where it became known as "meetinghouse seed" because children were given dill seed to chew during long sermons.
Uses: Commonly grown in herb gardens, vegetable gardens, or flower borders. If grown in a pot it should be a DEEP one.
More information may be viewed on the highly regarded Missouri Botanical Garden site.
03 May 2022
HEIRLOOM BEANS
HEIRLOOM RUNNER BEANS known in the islands as "BOND BEANS" This strain originates from a long life grown and saved each year by the well-known Bond family on ORCAS ISLAND, San Juan Archipelago, WA. |
The Bond Bean, an heirloom runner bean (Phaseolus coccineus), known for decades on Orcas Island is now available for the first time this year at Gatehouse Seeds.
The tender perennial plant is native to the mountains of Mexico and Central America. The Scarlet Runner Beans have scarlet flowers but this one with white flowers, reported by Sidney on Orcas, is tastier for dried beans for cooking.
They like full sun in rich soil with plenty of organic matter and average moisture.
The seeds of this species are more tolerant of cold soil in the spring than other beans.
The viability of the dried seed is 3-4 years. Harvest in 75 days.
"BOND BEANS " runner type now growing on Shaw Island from seeds generously shared by Sidney on Orcas. They will soon be installed on the rack at the roadside shed, Reefnet Bay Road, on Shaw Island, WA. |