It amazes me to step out my back door and see catnip, oregano and feverfew greening up. THIS IS JANUARY!! The plants are amazingly hardy in our cold weather, but truth be told, the weather has been incredibly warm for the season. We've had snow, and we've had a few days of deep cold, but we seem to be going through an unusually early warm spell
The wildlife is happy not to have to deal with brutal snow. It's easier for them to get to the seed that falls to the ground, rather than trying to dig through layers of snow to find the dropped seed. I leave a piece of plywood at the base of the feeder to catch the spill. Right now there's about half an inch of hulls littered over the board and ground. I've seen cardinals, blue jays, mourning doves, blackbirds, a horde of sparrows, juncos and chickadees. I'm not sure we have nuthatches this year. Perhaps they are there, but have moved further away from the house as the trees have died and been removed. We've been enjoying the deer at bedtime. I've been putting out corn while they were short on forrage.
I shouldn't be surprised to see the catnip and oregano greening up. They are both members of the mint family, and mint is incredible hardy. I've sequestered chocolate mint, and pineapple mint in large plastic containers that look like clay pots. I know better than to plan a mint where it might spread! I have so much oregano that I gave away bunches of it to the ladies at exercise last summer. Oregano, any one?? *G*
Comments (2)
ok. hold on a minute....you can get chocolate mint?!
Posted by bod | January 12, 2008 6:06 PM
Posted on January 12, 2008 18:06
Uh huh....it's called Chocolate Mint! You could put that in your back yard and not have to mow again! Unfortunately, it doesn't taste of chocolate.....
Visit this link for a little more info:
http://www.mountainvalleygrowers.com/menpiperitachocolate.htm
Posted by Registered User
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January 12, 2008 9:41 PM
Posted on January 12, 2008 21:41