
On The Extension Line
K-State plant expert outlines best way to control moles in home lawns
K-State plant expert outlines best way to control moles in home lawns
I would describe our homeschool schedule as...erratic. I tried for a more consistent schedule at the first of this year, but it’s truly hard balancing everything we like to do and school must-dos. Friday, I took time to refill some feed tubs before coming back in after chores. My youngest had gone in ahead of me and I was pleased to see she did get started on her math while I was out, sometimes I never know what she’ll do without my instruction. She was piddling around as I finished washing up milking equipment, so that prompted me to ask how math was going. She brought me her papers and said she needed help, I could plainly see that she wrote “help” on several areas of her paper, along with drawing what appeared to be an angry bunny. After telling her to please come tell me when she needs help, I told her I needed a little bit more time before I could sit and help her, so she could help me by skimming some cream off of a couple jars of milk while she waited on me. I wasn’t gone from the kitchen but for maybe two minutes, when I came back in, the jars still sat untouched with their cream tops and my youngest was gone. I hollered for her, nothing. Hollered again, but louder, still no reply. My son wandered in, and I asked if he knew where she went, nope. Even though neither of us heard her go out, she must’ve been outside. I went to the back door and instantly saw the reason she wasn’t in the kitchen where she should be. She was just leaving the barn with Pistachio the baby goat in her arms and was grinning wide as she approached the house. She came in, set the goat on the kitchen floor and began skimming and giggling while watching Pistachio mosey around the room. Needless to say, we didn’t get math started right after the skimming was done, but we got in some goat play time, and that is definitely worth putting math off for.
If homeowners hoping for a lush green lawn are now starting to see little purple or white flowers in their yard, there’s bad news: there’s not a whole lot you can do about it.
Coyotes are far and away are the most important predator affecting livestock in the Midwest and the Great Plains.
Once the darling of the nursery industry, the Bradford pear, Pyrus calleryana, was originally heralded as the ideal landscape tree. Although researchers at the USDA worked to develop what they believed was the perfect tree, the Bradford or ornamental pear is now a plague unknowingly released upon unsuspecting homeowners and the environment. It’s time to take a stand and cut down ornamental pears in the landscape.
We kept up our momentum in the garden after planting potatoes and onions the weekend before last. Before planting anything at all though, we had a rusty stock tank to remove from the garden. When we took possession of our home nine years ago, we had an infant baby along with painting and remodeling projects and much more outside upkeep. I used mineral tubs for a garden that year, they fit the amount of time I’d be able to contribute to a garden. The next year my dad brought up an old stock tank to be used as a garden, which was tiny compared to the garden I used to have, but it was the size I could handle with the rest of life. The next year, I had two stock tanks, the year after that the tanks were fenced in with a decent area of tilled yard. Every consecutive year after, my husband would expand the fence, ask me if I was going to want it bigger next year, I’d say no, and he’d cement in the fence, just to take it out again the next year, because of course I wanted it bigger. We left one tank in the garden before fencing it back in for the last time, I can say last time, because there is no way to expand it anymore. We made this fun herb spiral in the tank the spring after my mom passed and completed it with a concrete angel in the center. It was such a pretty sight in a place that already brought much comfort. The herb spiral did well the first year, the years after it just seemed to collect all the blowing grass and weed seeds, sadly it eventually became unmanageable. It was easier to keep the huge area around the tank weed free than the tank itself, I guess raised beds aren’t for me. The tank sat there last year, taking up room, but not our time, I just let it be. So, before planting this year, my husband emptied it and drug it out before tilling with the little tractor. After he was done, my oldest and I walked out and were just amazed at how big the garden looked without the tank sitting there in the middle. I couldn’t help but think when the tank was initially put in, she was just a little thing, now she’s almost as tall as me, things change so much over the years. We now have an area in our garden that we will reserve just for perennials. I had a ton of bricks from dismantling the herb spiral, so last week, I made a stair stepped herb garden in our perennial area, not without my two homeschoolers. They helped move bricks, helped me fill the wheelbarrow several times, and even helped get the wheelbarrow moving out of the soft dirt when it wouldn’t budge! When I finished filling the new herb area with dirt, my youngest said it wasn’t really done, not yet. She grabbed the concrete angel and placed her on the top step, officially completing the shell of the herb garden. We transplanted some of the herbs coming back from last year into the herb garden and can’t wait to fill it with more. We picked a spot around the herb garden to have an asparagus patch and got it in the ground along with garlic and rhubarb. We have a few more things to plant before we stop and wait until the ground warms up.
Spring-bearing strawberry plants that were set out this spring should have blossoms pinched off. New plants have a limited amount of energy. If blossoms remain on the plants, energy that should go to runner development is used to mature fruit instead. Plants that are allowed to fruit will eventually produce runners, but those runners will not be strong enough to produce a good crop of berries the following year. For an adequate strawberry plant population and a good crop next year, early runner development is necessary. Early runners will produce far more strawberries than runners that form later in the season.
March 9, 1842
Wait until mid-April to apply crabgrass preventer, plant expert says