The 15-Minute Gardener

Aug 1, 2020

25 yr- 2 inch
Editor's note: Master Gardeners are keeping busy in their own gardens during the Covid-19 pandemic. Summer is here and there's a lot going on in the garden! Here's how Master Gardeners are spending their time:

Cindy Watter

About twenty five years ago I had a garden helper who very kindly arranged a river rock edged garden bed--of about 50 foot circumference--in my backyard.  I didn't ask him to do it, but I filled it with flower beds anyway that my giant black dog lay in, then a viburnum that I tired of, then a miscellany of flora. Next the eau de cologne mint took over and vanished, then the lemon balm mint took over and vanished, but the wild onions took over and stayed. My husband forcibly removed them this spring. Suddenly I had a large patch of empty ground edged by a now sunken rim of rock that, twenty five years later, was a tripping hazard for the two old people (that would be us) who lived there.  

rock pile
I can put off a tedious task indefinitely. Moving a river rock edging is a tedious task. All the life coaches say, "Do it," claiming that you will feel so accomplished when it's done. I don't agree. I would feel accomplished if I could afford to pay someone else to do it.  However, I can stand almost anything for a short amount of time, so I told myself I would spend fifteen minutes a day removing the rocks. I figured by summer's end I would be finished.

I put the hose on drip to dampen/loosen the packed soil around the rocks.  At first I used a shovel to lift the rocks, but soon found a garden fork was more efficient.  (I also found it was really foolish not to wear a pair of heavy gloves while doing this sort of work.) Another discovery was those rocks were two and three layers deep. However, I could move quite a pile of rocks in fifteen minutes.  Soon I was working for half an hour, then forty minutes.  No, it was not exactly fun, but the weather was wonderful and I was getting some outdoor exercise.  It was such mindless work that I was able to plan new garden arrangements and make lists of the things I forgot to do this spring but will certainly do next year.  

The short bursts of concentrated labor meant that this chore took much less time than I had thought. Near the end, my husband pitched in and we were done in about twelve days.  Now I am going to use my fifteen minute plan for all sorts of tasks, and not just in the garden.  

 

Information links:

UC Integrated Pest Management Viburnum-Viburnum spp. http://ipm.ucanr.edu/PMG/GARDEN/PLANTS/viburnum.html

UC Master Gardeners Sonoma Co.

Mint http://sonomamg.ucanr.edu/The_Kitchen_Garden/Feature_Vegetables/Mint/

Hardscape-river rock http://sonomamg.ucanr.edu/Sonoma_Gardener_Articles/Hardscape/

Herbs- Eau De Cologne Mint-Mentha x piperita citrata

http://www.naturalmedicinalherbs.net/herbs/m/mentha-x-piperita-citrata=eau-de-cologne-mint.php

North Carolina State Extension Lemon Balm Mint-Melissa officinalis https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/melissa-officinalis/

Wild Onions Calflora https://www.calflora.org/cgi-bin/species_query.cgi?where-calrecnum=238

Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allium_triquetrum

 

Master Gardeners are following recommended social distancing guidelines that keep everyone safe, Napa Master Gardeners are available to answer garden questions by email: mastergardeners@countyofnapa.org. or phone at 707-253-4143.  Volunteers will get back to you after they research answers to your questions.

Visit our website: napamg.ucanr.edu to find answers to all of your horticultural questions.

Photo credits: Cindy Watter