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asparagus under control this year & landscaping with animals
Well, this year is the first year I have the asparagus under complete
control in that I tomato caged each bunches so that I can easily mow around them. And I transplanted over half into a long line row so that I put a piece of fencing on both sides to keep the stalks upright and easily mow. Happiness is when you are in control. Now for the past several years I have had pony, donkey and Llama on my properties and have come used to them. It means alot of fencing and it means precautions of the plants for the animals. I use concrete block to surround some plants to keep the animals off. Protect the new young tree saplings. The Llama is in a different pasture from the horse since the Llama has a taste for trees more than grass. But I like the idea of landscaping with live animals present because the constant fertilizer and manure and especially the ****. The **** is more important than the solid waste. Every Spring I can tell where the horse ****ed in that the grass is super dense green. And the animals save me on mowing. I cannot get rid of mowing altogether but I do about 1/10 the mowing I previously did. So if one wants a great landscaping and can fit animals into the landscaping is a very valuable coexistence. Archimedes Plutonium www.iw.net/~a_plutonium whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies |
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Landscaping with animals and with the concept of rows as the mostbeautiful
Well, my father was a Landscape Architect and it does not surprize me
to have some shared interests in landscape design. My forte, or strategy of design is that rows are the beauty. Single plants dotted here and there does not make beauty. So for me, the ultimate landscape design is a solid area filled with rows of trees, bushes and small plants. I like to accentuate colors. I like a row of blue spruce and white fir with a row of amur maples on one side and a row of silver leafed russian olives on the other side. So we see a contrast of red-orange-green-silver. Then there is the row of white leafed willows with a row of russian olives and on the other side a row of laurel willows so we see a contrast of white-silver-dark green. Now it seems to me that rows of trees are faster to assemble in a landscaping than is rows of bushes or hedges. So I guess that the master landscaper has mature hedges as the pride of his work and it may take a lifetime to achieve master-hedges. I have a lilac hedges and some buffaloberry hedges but would like to see my hazelnut hedges mature. I tried raspberry hedges but my climate is too dry for them. And I guess in the past centuries where fencing was expensive, that many societies used natural grown hedges for fencing. My lilac hedge does stop the Llama and horse from going through. But there is one feature of my landscaping that was not included in my father's landscaping art. I have come to appreciate having animals graze on the landscaping grounds. It has required me to take out the yew-bushes because I understand they are poisonous, although I hear that on the East Coast, the deer beeline straight to the yew bushes. I have tried getting a mature yew-row, but we have alot of "winterburn". So I have to "wrap in plastic" over the winter. The animals are a overall benefit to the plants because of their constant manure and fertilizer, especially the urine of its nitrogen. So I am rather wanting of the animals in the landscaping, and they force me to clean up the "wild spots" as they wander into them and start eating the grass and weeds and brush. I tried a Scottish Highlander bull this spring but found him too destructive so am waiting for a cow next year and will try to pasture the cow with a donkey. I do not want the animals to be lonely for they are social and need a constant companion. I let the pony interface with other animals across the fence. If I have the pony with the donkey or Llama, the pony does too much running and running hurts the landscaping. And the pony loves a spot near a toolshed that has a window which reflects to the pony his body, so he is fooled in thinking that he is near another pony. So I will try to get a mirror into a window so the pony is even more calm. So in landscaping with animals gives me the practice of getting to know what is best for all concerned, for the plants and for the animals. Archimedes Plutonium www.iw.net/~a_plutonium whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies |
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