22 November 2018

🌿 Shaw Island Grower of Fruit, Vegetables, and TURKEYS 🌿 Marian Lutz


Happy Turkey Day

Vintage postcard dated 1914.

This piece was originally posted for Thanksgiving 2015 but our island has some new residents in the last three years so let us view Marion and Angel's antique oven stuffed with one fat turkey over again for 2018.

"Marian (1897-1981) and Herman Lutz were pretty much dependent on agriculture like everyone else. They raised almost everything they needed on their 250 acres and sold the excess to buy staples. They canned fruit and vegetables and meat for year-round sustenance.
      Thanksgiving was a neighborhood affair. Marian called it a waste of time to have a holiday by yourself. Each family would bring a specialty to whichever house was large enough to accommodate them all.
Angel's restored wood cookstove;
in the Bryant kitchen on the
former Lutz farm, Shaw Island.
Suspected to be Marian Lutz's
turkey cooker many years ago.
Photo 2015,
by Debbie Maxie, Coastal Mission©
      
When Marian was raising turkeys, a turkey was her specialty. That meant getting up at 5:30 a.m. to start the big bird in the wood cookstove because dinner was at midday. There were no electric lights to brighten an evening feast or light the way home.
      After some years of farming on Shaw, Marian's husband left one day. She said that he had a lot of curiosity about other places, and she never saw him again. But she loved the island farm and stayed on and ran it with the help of her daughter and her neighbors. She said she would never have made it without good neighbors within a half a mile or so whom she could call on when she got into a jam."
      Text from news clipping of unknown publisher and date; suspected to be the Friday Harbor Journal. Saved by long-time FHJ subscriber, historian, gardener,  and Shaw Island booster, Gwendolyn Yansen, and shared with this writer/1998.


25 October 2018

OCTOBER on Shaw Island


Japanese Maple "Polly"
(Acer palmatum)


A grown-up maple tree
from a Polly Robertson seedling,
a part-time resident who mailed
 a box ofher seedlings to contribute
to the first fundraising plant sale
on Shaw Island.
A talented gardener with a great heart.
Over $1,000 was raised to landscape
 the Community Building
in the mid-1980s.
Photo anno twenty-five October 2018

Shaw Island, San Juan County, WA.

"In October, a maple tree before your window lights up your room like a great lamp.
Even on cloudy days, its presence helps to dispel the gloom."
           John Burroughs.



26 September 2018

THEY COULD BE WITH US 'TIL FROST

"Nasturtiums, who colored you,
you wonderful, glowing thing?
You must have been fashioned 
out of summer sunsets."
Lucy Maud Montgomery


Offspring of Mary Lou's Nasturtiums
enjoying a visit with Angel's Asters
this day 26 September 2018.
Photo courtesy of Shaw Island grower, Angel.




Tropaeolum majus
There are many varieties. The trailing one Mary Lou shared
from her hothouse liked to climb & stretch to let us know she
was keen to grow and self-seed. But never invasively.
Mary Lou's parent flowers from four years ago can be seen
 HERE

New seeds are for sale in handmade packets
at the Gatehouse, Squaw Bay Road, Shaw Island.




from themicrogardener.com
      


05 September 2018

FLOWERING TOBACCO –– Head of the Class


FLOWERING TOBACCO
(Nicotiana sylvestris)

Nicotiana sylvestris 
'Only the Lonely.’
Blooming in mid-July
at the Gatehouse garden,
Shaw Island, San Juan Archipelago, WA.
At this writing, at least 4' tall, fragrant,
and winning the trial for DEER RESISTANCE
in this fall season when faithful Foxgloves
 have finished with their bloom cycle.
Don't tell me white flowers are boring.
Second generation now blooming
at this garden on Reefnet Bay Road,
Shaw Island, San Juan Archipelago, WA.
Save the packet in the fridge for early
spring broadcasting.

Photo from the Gatehouse garden July 2019.

Botanical name: Nicotiana sylvestris 'Only the Lonely'

Life Cycle: Tender perennial.

Native Growing Region: Northwestern Argentina

Zone: Winter hardy USDA 7 to 10

Bloom Time: Depending on the weather, sometimes from June until frost.

Flower: Showy clusters of pendant white flowers that look like a burst of fireworks. Most fragrant in the evening.

Spread: 1-2'

Foliage: Dramatic. Huge chartreuse to green leaves. Larger in the shade.


Maintenance: Low. Easy, "throw and grow."


Description: Awarded the RHS Award of Garden Merit (AGM.) The stems and root systems are strong enough that the plants can lean at severe angles without requiring a stake, some say, but this 5 footer has a slender stake to 
support her lifestyle.

Tolerates: Shaw Island deer!
Rutgers Agricultural Station has rated this plant as RARELY touched by deer. There are hundreds of island deer who actually do leave this plant unmolested.


Degree of difficulty: EASY.

Garden uses: Good for fresh flower arrangements. Use in masses at the back of the annual or mixed border as a stunning backdrop for smaller plants, as a tall accent plant, or in a large mixed container. It is right at home in a cottage garden and is natural for a moon garden.

Notes: This species self-seeds readily but the seedlings are easy to identify and pull if unwanted. Volunteer plants are not a problem in cold climates. Thrives in all types of soils with moderate moisture but prefers rich soils.

The genus name honors Jean Nicot (1530-1600), the French ambassador to
Lisbon who introduced tobacco to France. The specific epithet means forest-loving.

Uses: Cultivated as an ornamental plant. All parts of Nicotiana sylvestris can cause discomfort or irritation if consumed, according to Wikipedia.


Sowing: It is easily grown from seed, either sown indoors 6-8 weeks before the last frost or sown directly in the garden after the last frost. Surface sow the seeds and barely cover, as they need light to germinate. Germination should take place between 1.5-3 weeks.

Quote:
"I could not live comfortably without flowering tobacco. The best flowering tobacco by far is Nicotiana sylvestris, the woodland tobacco from Argentina. A fine plant either for the mixed border or for pot culture on decks or patios, it rises in a pyramid as much as five feet above its enormous pale green lower leaves. Its pure white, long tubular blossoms are pyrotechnic, exploding in a circle in tiered whorls at the top of sturdy branching stems. Its delicious scent grows stronger at night when the somewhat drooping flowers lift upward to greet the moths that are their pollinators."
Allen Lacy, The Inviting Garden. New York, Henry Hold and Co. 1998.




FLOWERING TOBACCO


Nicotiana sylvestris

The minuscule seeds are harvested, sifted,
& packed 
in glassine paper for sale at 
Gatehouse Seeds, Reefnet Bay Road,
Shaw Island, San Juan Archipelago, Washington.

17 July 2018

❖ AN ISLAND ROSE GIVING UP HER SEEDS ❖


Species Rose

Rosa glauca
Shaw Island garden
June 2012.

Botanical and common name: Rosa glauca

Type: Deciduous shrub.

Active Range: South & Central Europe to Caucasus.

Zone: 6-9

Height: 6-8ft.

Bloom time: May to June.

Bloom Description: Soft pink.

Water: medium.

Maintenance: Easy.

Attracts: birds, butterflies.

Fruit: Showy

Disease resistance: excellent against black spot and mildew.

Culture: 
This rose self-seeds, but not as a pest. Best grown in organically rich, medium moisture, well-draining loam. Best foliage color may be in part shade. At least this is one rose that will tolerate part shade. Water deeply and regularly (avoid overhead.)

Noteworthy characteristics—Rosa glauca is a species rose that is grown in gardens today for its attractive glaucous purple foliage and tiny, soft pink flowers. Many gardeners consider the foliage to be the best ornamental feature. Flowers are followed by abundant orange-red hips that ripen in the fall & usually persist well into winter. Reddish-violet canes have very few thorns.

Garden uses–– Excellent as a specimen or in small groups. Place at the rear of a perennial border. Naturalize in open woodland or shade gardens, shrub borders, hedges.

Introduced in 1789.

The Elizabeth C. Miller Library at the University of Washington includes Rosa glauca on their Great Plant Picks list and recommends Rosa glauca for every garden. 




Rosa glauca
 
with her vibrant autumn hips.

Shaw Island Gatehouse 24 September 2018



Seed packets of Rosa glauca
 now for sale at the Gatehouse shed,
Squaw Bay Road, Shaw Island.
These self-seed under a parent plant
so that means this species is
very easy to casually sow and grow.


04 July 2018

☆ HAPPY 4th 2018 ☆

AULD FRASER
1946 and going strong.
Thanks Bill
for the nice view from the Gatehouse Seed Shed!
4th July Parade 2018.

10 June 2018

🌿 June Blooms from Shaw Island 🌿

Paeonia 'Eve Shaw'
Once growing on Broken Point, Shaw Island, WA,

by the late great gardener, Eve.
This bouquet for seedster-cyclist Rachel, 10 June '18.

01 June 2018

🌿 June in the Woods 🌿


Foxgloves
(Digitalis purpurea)

Making seeds for next year,
Shaw Island Gatehouse
Reefnet Bay Road,
San Juan Archipelago, WA.
Anno One June two thousand and eighteen


"I wonder what it would be like to live in a world 
where it was always June."
L.M. Montgomery.



Digitalis purpurea
 
with Rhododendron 'Blue Frost'
Shaw Island Gatehouse Garden
Foxglove seeds are the easiest to germinate,
a true 'throw and grow" enjoying a touch of shade
and some damp soil. Watch out for slugs.
Anno one June 2018