Last post still had that wintry feel, this Easter weekend it was much milder. There was even a bit of sun, but now its raining again - and supposed to continue for 5 days!
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Catalpa from Mohlenbrock 1995 |
However I'm thrilled about the rain, because I got some time-critical planting done just before the rain started. First I put a
Northern Catalpa (
Catalpa speciosa). This is a tree that occurs in Ohio and New York states but was introduced to Ontario many years ago. It's all over the York Univ. campus and is on the City of Toronto's list of recommended "native" trees for street planting. Ours didn't go by the street - it went at the back of our yard to replace a Manitoba Maple (Box elder,
Acer negundo) which was dying. Curiously some Ontario sources list the Manitoba Maple as "invasive introduced species" although its native range includes SW Ontario.
But back to the Catalpa. This tree has wonderful flowers in late May or June which are attractive to bumblebees and hummingbirds, and is a host plant for caterpillars of the Catalpa Sphinx moth (
Ceratomia catalpae) . It also is relatively fast growing as casts a lot of shade, which we hope will compensate soon for the loss of the huge old maple. I had bought this tree to be the specimen tree in the Canada Blooms feature garden, but it was too large to move into a greenhouse and out again in March.
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the pit and the liner |
I warmed up my digging skills making the hole for the Catalpa, as I found one of those city lost rubble layers a foot down and spent hours with a pickaxe taking out old broken bricks and concrete chunks. That was Friday. It was good practice for Saturday, when I dug out 100 square feet of lawn and garden to a foot deep to make a bog garden. I took the pond liner used in the Canada Blooms
feature garden, reshaped it with scissors and contact cement, and put it at the bottom of the gaping pit. Then I put three bales of peat moss, a container of garden sulphur, and most of the soil back in the pit, watered it, and...instant bog!
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the dog helps choose plants for the bog |
The planting happened on Sunday, a fine mild day punctuated by a pleasant garden visit from pollinator artists
Sarah Peebles and
Robert Cruickshank. Quite a few plants from the Canada Blooms pond found final homes in the bog, after being kept alive in the on-deck temporary green house for the intervening frosty month. The bog-bean and the greenhouse are shown in the
previous post.
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planted bog |
I had no sooner finished when I realized the plant list was the perfect answer to an inquiry from
Pollinator Festival organizer Sabrina Malach, who has received
awards for her work on pollinators.
Sabrina sent this question:
"I am planting a large pollinator garden with the
PACT urban peace program. Our site is quite saturated with poor drainage. What native plants, other than monarda, would grow well in soggy soil?"
My answer was:
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Sabrina, I've just planted a 100 sq foot bog in my backyard. I used everything except monarda! Some of the ones I planted:
Bogbean (
Menyanthes)
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swamp milkweed |
Blue Flag Iris (
Iris versicolor)
Louisiana Iris (
Iris garden hybrid **)
Cardinal flower (
Lobelia cardinalis)
Great Blue Lobelia (
Lobelia siphilitica)
Lizard's Tail (
Saururus cernuus)
Lupine (
Lupinus ** - western NA hybrids)
Marsh Marigold (
Caltha palustris)
Monkeyflower (
Mimulus guttatus)
Swamp Rose Mallow (
Hibiscus moscheutos)
Swamp Milkweed (
Asclepias incarnata)
Turtlehead (
Chelone glabra)
Winterberry (
Ilex verticillata)
(** marks native North American plants not native to Ontario)
These give a long period of bloom from the April flowers of bogbean and Marsh Marigold to late summer/fall flowers of cardinal flower and turtlehead. Winterberry is a native holly shrub with bright red berries for winter interest and birds. If there's enough room I'd also suggest putting pussy willow and red-osier dogwood shrubs in at the back (they get bigger).
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Note that all of these plants had either medicinal or food uses among Native North Americans. I won't list them all here but one of the interests of gardening with native plants is the deep well of prior experience that resides in Native traditions.
Most bogs contain an acid soil, due to the accumulation of acids such as tannins from partly decomposed leaves. Toronto water is hard (full of calcium) and basic, so I added peat and sulphur to the bog soil to increase the acidity.I'll return to the bog in a month when the plants are up and growing.