Saturday, April 27, 2024

Rock Garden in Late April

April 14, 2024

Red Yucca

Katie Ruellia (Mexican Petunia)

Ice Plant Ocean Sunset 'Orange Glow'

  
Ice Plant Ocean Sunset 'Violet'

April 24, 2024 - 'Moonshine' yarrow (right) and Spiny Goldenweed (left) starting to bloom.


Tahoka Daisy

April 27, 2024




 

Saturday, March 30, 2024

Cholla Cactus

Moved my cholla cactus into my Texas pot. Mom got the original start of this from Jon who brought a piece back from his trip to Cibolo Creek Ranch years ago, and I got some pieces from her last year.



Saturday, December 30, 2023

Barricades for TNR Cats

Vicious dogs on the loose killing cats in the neighborhood since at least 11/29/2023. They killed Black Jack on 12/23/2023 and attacked another cat (not one of my TNR's) on my property the following day, 11/24/2023.

I am using this system of livestock panel, fencing, and the benches Scott built to help barricade the shrubbery where the cats live. Their shelters are back behind the shrubbery up against my fence. This may not completely stop the dogs, but my thought is that will will slow them down enough to give the cats a chance to escape. It would be very difficult for a dog to navigate the interior of these Sea Green junipers which I planted in this spot 25 years ago. It is like a labyrinth up in there.

The openings in the bottom of the livestock panels are large enough for the cats to pass through but too small for the dogs to get through. The cats like lounging in this area anyways, so now they lounge just behind the fence of protection under the overhang of the junipers.

The benches are places near the cat entrance to the junipers with their food and water inside to give them a slightly protected spot to eat and drink and where they don't have to emerge far from their hidey-hole for sustenance.

The roll of livestock fencing is just to provide another obstacle for the dogs for the dogs to go over or around if they run up to this area. Again, just trying to slow them down.

I got the livestock panel at Tractor Supply years ago and have found many uses for it over the years. It comes in 16' sections which I cut in half to 8' sections. I've used them for temporary dog corrals, trellises for climbing vines, even for holding down mulch in winter months on my garden (they keep the leaf mulch in place while still allowing precipitation to penetrate).


Ty emerging from his hidey-hole as T.J. and Noobs eat:

The benches won't completely prevent dogs from getting through, but they are large dogs and I'm hoping they'd have to bang and scramble to get past them (as opposed to just having open access). This might give the cats the few extra seconds they'd need to escape in the event of another attack.



Ty lounging behind the fence:

Big Boy, Noobs, and D.J. (in back) lounging:

D.J. deeper back in the junipers:

Three 8' sections of livestock panel used to surround most access to the shrubs. I had to use an old t.v. console I found in the alley this past summer to block the additional space between the shrubs and the neighbors' house. I have notified them that all of this mess is just temporary until both dogs are caught, and all of the neighbors have been very nice about it. They witnessed the dogs killing Black Jack, and everyone is pretty disturbed by it and are worried for the safety of both pets and children. Neighbors on both sides reported the dogs before I even returned home 15 minutes later to learn what had happened.



Not all dogs hate cats...



Saturday, July 8, 2023

Walking Iris (Trimezia steyermarkii)

Mom gave this to me last year, and it just started blooming! She couldn't remember what color it was, so it was a surprise, lol. The blooms aren't overly showy, but I do think they're kind of exotic looking.

A tropical species native to Southern and Central America, it is not cold hardy and needs to be brought indoors in the wintertime in areas that freeze.




Friday, June 16, 2023

Zinnias

Debbi's sister Donna gave me these zinnia seeds, and they have been beautiful!