Ok, not really a Nutria but a rather
large rat!


I tried and tried to catch Ratatouille in a picture, but either I would freak out, stumbling and knocking things off my shed shelves, or he would,  bolting up through this grate! I did manage to catch the end of his tail though . . . Ewww!  I considered grabbing the tail with a glove on – then I recounted reading about all those rabies injections into the stomach some years ago in a National Geographic magazine – mmm, perhaps not such a good idea.

I hate to whack the little chap, but I have to. He is slowly consuming my shed and filling it up floor to ceiling with crap. . . . .George Foreman Grills, Swiffers, BowFlexes, Putting aids, self-sharpening sushi knives, Cialis tablets etc, etc  . . . no seriously,  he is filling it with. . .  just crap.


more ewww.

Like dealing with Bermuda grass, I do not mess around here, when my 3 year old says “Daddy, is that a wiggily wrat,” my hand twitches immediately for the green poison sticks strategically positioned on the top shelf with my other instruments and harbingers of death: hornet spray, round-up, man-traps etc etc. Sad though it may be, this is to be Ratatouille’s fate – no culinary education for him I am afraid. I am sure he will give me the pleasure of meeting him one last time, floating like Millais “Ophelia”  in one of my ponds, – his brother did.

I hate using poison, and like the previous “Round-Up” tale, I have tried different “more humane” approaches in the past. My expensive, “reusable” electrical rat exterminator touted a “fast and humane” death for the rodent, – “simply tip up the cage and the electrocuted rodent will just fall into the trash can”. . . . mmm, well not from my electric chamber it didn’t.  I remember going in there with an old metal camping spatula, scraping away until I gagged and ended up throwing the whole thing into the trash. Now I want to change the subject. . . . . . . . . .to. .


this “Brundell Fly”.  It was enormous and spiky, it just sat there, someone please tell me it wasn’t created in a pod with some of Jeff Goldblum’s DNA. I got this Terradactyl off the inside of my front door and onto a piece of paper, I released him outside where he cast a shadow as he flew off with obligatory “swooshing” noise. (The photo does not do scale justice to this beastie). What is this?



Now I really want to change the subject!


Cat-tails get their name from their brown cylindrical flower spikes which can be more than 1 ft. long. They are among the most common of all aquatic and wetland plants anywhere. Cattails grow in dense stands. Like most colonial plants, they arise from rhizomes—thick stems, growing in the mud, usually connecting all the stalks. A cattail stand is like a branching shrub lying on its side under the mud, with only the leaves and blossoms visible.Once fertilized, the female flowers transform into the familiar brown “cigars”—also called candlewicks, punks, duck-tails, and marsh beetles—consisting of thousands of tiny developing seeds. They whiten over the winter after the leaves die, and the cycle repeats. I love this plant – and you cannot kill it! – be sure to keep it in a container though. Looks great in a strong breeze.

Talking of breezes . .


Here is my Cyprus tree that was in a container in my pond – the recent winds blew it over and split the pot – just great!. I am thinking of planting it in the ground – totally the wrong time of year I know, but I think I have to chance it. I need to extract it from the pond immediately – hopefully no fish were under it when it fell!.


Must keep swimming, swimming swimming.
“Ahhh! – the great tree, it falls”


Other things worth a second glance:


Amaranth leaf – all colors of the spectrum.

Beach Vitex in bloom. This plant is causing all sorts of problems
in Carolina right now. As the name implies it grows in the dunes,
crowding out the more naturalised Sea Oats – considered very
invasive in coastal environments. I just bought this, did a little
research, now thinking I need a “Sand Dune” to plant it on – does
it ever end?


Santolina is a
genus of flowering plants in the family Asteraceae, native to the Mediterranean region.
Gray Santolina, has many uses in residential landscapes. Also known as Gray Lavender Cotton, this plant is actually a small shrub, but it acts like a ground-cover and smells like an herb. It offers attractive foliage, small flowers, texture and durability. Properly located in the yard, it has no serious pest or disease problems.
A dwarf form of gray santolina called `nana’ grows to about 1 foot. It is much slower growing, this is what I have – I planted 5 more this spring to offer a wave of silver to my decomposed granite pathway. These are great drought tolerant plants for central Texas – the silver feels frosty even in August! think Mexican Bush Sage in the background, Santolina up front.


View from inside the house looking out to the back yard in what feels like a way too early Texas Summer.

My Post Oak has been a trouper through all the recent high winds, hail and more winds.


Henry Fothergill Chorley-from “The Brave Old Oak”

A song to the oak, the brave old oak,
Who hath ruled in the greenwood long!…

Then here’s to the oak, the brave old oak,
Who stands in his pride alone!
And still flourish he, a hale green tree,
When a hundred years are gone!


Stay Tuned for:

“Texas Bugs are from Outer Space”


All material © 2009 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized
intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and
punishable by  late  (and extremely unpleasant)
14th century planet Earth techniques.


"The Bermuda Triangle"


Seems like someone already got to this one before me!

Large decomposed granite walkways have replaced the sea of Bermudagrass – bark chips also work great to keep down weeds, smells good too.

When we first moved in to our house in 2001, the backyard was completely covered with my “favorite” plant – bermudagrass. Well I am happy to report almost seven years later the only bermudagrass that still exists is at the front of my front yard between the sidewalk and the street. I am currently in the process of murdering it to make way for the plan I posted in my last entry.


The termination of my final patches of grass in my front yard.  This combination of Sago Palm, Prickly Pearcactus and Yucca will look a lot better with boulders and decomposed granite around their base. The bermuda patch on the left is going to be really hard to get rid of around the Stargazer Lilly.

You can probably tell from the above pictures that I am not particularly organic in my approach to eradicating bermuda – in fact I am not organic at all. I am afraid that I reach for the Round Up (the very very strong kind) (super concentrate)) every time.  In the old days I did try more organic practices, 20% vinegar, digging it up, weed barriers – the works, but the grass would always eventially return. It is relentless, it never sleeps, it is the Borg – (resistance is futile).



Because bermudagrass has specialized growth stems and a rapid growth rate, it is usually excellent at crowding out weeds. Also, this is the primary reason why bermuda grows back so well when it is injured. Underground shoots (rhizomes) and above ground runners (stolons) help bermudagrass “fill in fast” and I mean fast!.  While these properties are highly beneficial for the plant, it is the reason why bermudagrass is considered an “invasive weed” where it is not wanted, like anywhere on my property.

Is there bermudagrass on Mars?



It has to have spread that far.
I am convinced the new NASA
expidition will find it
in the polar region.


Like almost all of our turfgrass species, bermudagrass is an introduced plant to the United States. The origin of the first introduction of bermudagrass most likely came from contaminated hay, which was used as bedding, when slaves were brought to America. Millions and millions of seeds were distributed initially across the eastern United States. Surviving plants then were able to make more seeds and so on, until my yard was full of the precious stuff.


Here is the front yard Vitex where a small bubble fountain is planned to go. Vitex wants to be a shrub and requires a LOT of pruning to raise up the canopy. It is in full bloom right now and is a great architectural “tree”. I have got rid of the weeds and grass in most of the front yard and covered it all in weed barrier and a good layer of decomposed granite.

Other Show-Offs in the yard right now:

Kidding!

I laughed so hard taking these pictures – look at them now!  ahhaahaahaahaahaa! the first one I think has actually started to grow leaves again! ahhaaaaaa! what is it thinking?.  If you didn’t catch the earlier blog these abominations started out as tomato plants. If you want my opinion, I think aliens abducted them, did the obligatory probe, fumbled around with their DNA, then teleported them silently back into my yard. What else could have cause such a cellular mutation?


Prostrate and upright rosemary spilling onto the sidewalk.

15′ in height.

left: Purple heart grows most vigorously and has the richest color in full sun, but it will tolerate some shade. right: This patch of Aloe Vera just gets larger each passing year. Aloe Vera has a long history of cultivation throughout the drier tropical and subtropical regions of the world, and it is a star when applied to burns.


Stay Tuned for:

“The Bermuda Triangle”


All material © 2009 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized
intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and
punishable by  late  (and extremely unpleasant)
14th century planet Earth techniques.



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