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Rhodochiton bells with Rhododendron leaves for M. Santerne (sp?) Thanks for the note and seed purchase at the Gatehouse, July 2016. |
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.
22 July 2016
🌿 Bells to ring thank you 🌿
11 July 2016
🌿 IN A VASE ON MONDAY 🌿
21 June 2016
🌿 Lou's Summer Rose 🌿 2016
18 June 2016
🌿 LOU'S LUNARIA annua & Frog Hunting 🌿
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LOU'S LUNARIA seed pods ripening for 2017, paired with Broken Point Juniper maritima (Seaside Juniper) With Glassybaby "Frog Hunting." Anno eighteen June 2016. |
Seaside Juniper (Juniper maritima) is a newly named species as of 2007, with botanists separating this species from Juniper scopulorum.
On the site, Consortium of Pacific Northwest Herbaria, there is a list of recorded observations of this Juniper maritima on the following islands in our county: "Broken Point Island", Posey, Reef, Gossip, many of the the Sucia Island group, Turn, San Juan, Coon, Skull, Cliff, Nob, Oak, Fawn, Victim, McConnell and little McConnell.
No Juniper seeds for sale at this time.
The Juniper sprigs used in the bouquet came from private property on Shaw Island. We are not on the herbarium index and we don't mind.
30 May 2016
🌿 SHAW ISLAND GARDENER EVE SHAW 🌿
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Peony 'Eve Shaw' Home grown spring bouquet for TC. Unenhanced photo from Shaw Island, Anno thirty May two thousand and sixteen. |
She got herself a Rec Vehicle and traveled. She took Clayton out of his armchair, away from his views of Wasp Passage, away from his recording weather devices. And when her pet died on a trip, she simply wrapped and froze the body aboard the R.V. and brought it home for proper burial on Shaw Island, the Valhalla of the San Juans.
She once told me proudly that her family fortune was derived from a chicken business in the South––big enough to supply KFC.
At heart she was a kind and good friend, a stingy pioneer, on whom the Great Goddess could look with envy."
Words by Leon Fonnesbeck, Shaw Island gardener, friend, and neighbor to the Shaws. April 1995.
No peony seeds for sale.
25 May 2016
🌿 SUMMER ROSE 🌿 2016
14 May 2016
PUMPKIN SEEDS
1. JACK-BE-LITTLE
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Jack-Be-Little pumpkins Unenhanced photo from Shaw Island. 2015. |
Cucurbita pepo "Jack-Be-Little"
aka–– "JBL"
Plant 1"-2" deep in a mound 2-3 ft apart in May-June in Northern states with rich soil of compost and manure. They are big feeders.
This vine can grow on a trellis or fence or in large pots to hang down from your deck.
Place straw or cardboard under each pumpkin as they are growing.
Keep soil moist but not wet.
Harvest: when fruits are completely orange and the stem has dried and turned brown. Cut stem near the vine with a sharp knife. Be careful not to break the stem; never lift a pumpkin by the stem. Great for decorating color, then when you are tired of all the orange in your life––roast them! Yes, they are edible. Invited to roast in the oven with seeds removed last winter, they were sweet and delicious. A pleasant surprise.
Days to maturity: 90-100.
Yield: 8-20 fruit per plant.
For more reading on the culture of pumpkins see this site
2. JACK TEMPLE's Gourds.
Jack, former caretaker of the UW Preserve on island. Remember the large garden he and Bess tended? These seeds are from his crop growing along the driveway, in his Seattle garden.
Same culture as the mini pumpkins listed above.
Gourds are used mainly for interior decoration, but they are edible.
aka–– "JBL"
Plant 1"-2" deep in a mound 2-3 ft apart in May-June in Northern states with rich soil of compost and manure. They are big feeders.
This vine can grow on a trellis or fence or in large pots to hang down from your deck.
Place straw or cardboard under each pumpkin as they are growing.
Keep soil moist but not wet.
Harvest: when fruits are completely orange and the stem has dried and turned brown. Cut stem near the vine with a sharp knife. Be careful not to break the stem; never lift a pumpkin by the stem. Great for decorating color, then when you are tired of all the orange in your life––roast them! Yes, they are edible. Invited to roast in the oven with seeds removed last winter, they were sweet and delicious. A pleasant surprise.
Days to maturity: 90-100.
Yield: 8-20 fruit per plant.
For more reading on the culture of pumpkins see this site
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Mini-pumpkin "Jack-Be-Little" seeds available, while they last, at the Gatehouse, Reefnet Bay Road, Shaw Island Spring 2017. |
2. JACK TEMPLE's Gourds.
Jack, former caretaker of the UW Preserve on island. Remember the large garden he and Bess tended? These seeds are from his crop growing along the driveway, in his Seattle garden.
Same culture as the mini pumpkins listed above.
Gourds are used mainly for interior decoration, but they are edible.
06 May 2016
🌿 ORANGE HONEYSUCKLE 🌿
"If you look the right way,
you can see the whole world is a garden."
Frances Hodgson Burnett
you can see the whole world is a garden."
Frances Hodgson Burnett
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