Tag Archives: deer resistant

Hens and Chicks – – & Roosters

hens & chicks cu
photo by SVSeekins

There’s something very alien yet oddly appealing about hens & chicks.

Is it because they cluster together in such a tight & tidy clump?

Is it because their turgid leaves are so different from the regular ones?

Or maybe because they choose the most inhospitable places to bring up their broods?  Check out them partying it up in these rocky crevices !!  Isn’t that the true meaning of ‘drought-tolerant’?  &  ‘well-drained”  !?!

hens & chicks on the rocks
photo by SVSeekins

I’ve admired sempervivum for ages.  To start, I tried to grow some myself but over-cared for them to death. (some succulents are tricky that way – – although I have a pretty good history with jade plants).

Several flocks were already established on the rocky mountainside when we moved to the Richmond house. I can just let them completely alone & they happily do their thing.  They prefer being ignored.  So I ignore them.

cu hens & chicks on rocks
photo by SVSeekins

The deer seem to ignore them too – – or at least they must ignore them enough that the hens & the deer coexist comfortably.

Occasionally I’ll stumble over a mat of the little guys, which gives them a good squish, but they seem to recover & carry on.  If any of the chicks are knocked loose, they just seem to roll down the hill & set up another colony wherever they land.  Cool.

They even carry on after being covered by snow, which we occasionally get here on the west coast.  I like a plant that just keeps on surviving.  🙂

Can it get any better:
– evergreen
– funky looking
– deer resistant
– drought tolerant

Oh yeah – – check out the hens & chicks when the roosters come to visit !!

hens and chicks and ????
photo by SVSeekins

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© SVSeekins and Garden Variety Life, 2013

Other post in series:
Roosters On The Chopping Block
Blooming Roosters

Let there be Day Lilies

spring blooming Daylily
photo by SVSeekins

Day Lilies are easy to grow & are dependable spring & summer bloomers.  They’re also edible.  I’ve heard that the chefs at Sooke Harbour House like to stuff the blossoms & serve them at dinner.

Well, that might be interesting & all, but I still have a hard time even picking the flowers in our garden.  They’re just so decorative as they are!

Most often the choice is not mine.

sharing our garden with deer
photo by SVSeekins

For several years I’ve watched the lilies develop promise.  The bud just starts to turn colour, & I think, “Tomorrow it will open into a beautiful flower.”

It turns out that the deer think, “‘Today it’s at its peak tastiness.”

the Daylily bud has been harvested
photo by SVSeekins

Midnight snack.

This year it’s different.  This might not look spectacular as a botanical garden display bed of day lily, but in a yard that’s shared  with deer, I’m pretty excited to see so many blossoms at one time.

spring blooming Daylilies ws
photo by SVSeekins
lupin blooms
photo by SVSeekins

So what’s the deal?  I’m not really sure.  I haven’t sprayed any stinky deterrent around the place.  Perhaps the lowly day lily is just out of fashion for deer this year?

Yeah baby  🙂

One thing I have noticed that’s also unusual, is that the lupins have been nibbled instead…    OK… 

the fresh tasty top of the lupin is harvested
photo by SVSeekins

Lupins are easy to grow & are dependable spring bloomers.  Fair enough.  This year I’ll enjoy day lily blooms & consider it a fair trade-off.

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© SVSeekins and Garden Variety Life, 2013

Meadow Blooms 5 – Camas

The camas meadow swaying in the spring breeze is like no other.  Suddenly I’m walking in a fairytale instead of strolling in a Victoria park.  Has my mind gone wild?  Could I ever have come up with a dream so lovely?  No.  It must be real.

No gardener created this scene, either.  This is Nature’s beauty.

Camas Meadow - Beacon Hill Park 3
photo by SVSeekins
camas at Mt. Tolmie Park 2
photo by SVSeekins

Camas meadows have flourished on South Vancouver Island longer than memory reaches into the past.  The southern slope of Beacon Hill has been a camas meadow for centuries.  It’s probably one of the key reasons it’s preserved as a park today.  The same goes for the Garry oak meadows of Mt. Tolmie Park.  At this time of year, they’re magical places.

Early peoples saw more than beauty in the camas; they saw food.  I wonder who it was to first realize the bulbs are delicious?

Camas at Mt. Tolmie Park 1
photo by SVSeekins

Perhaps she had gardening tendencies like mine; seeing a lovely flower automatically triggers an urge to have that flower in my own garden.  (I’m known to dig up plants from roadsides.)

Before we moved from the Cedar Hill property to the Richmond house, I dug up as many camas as possible.  The Garry oak meadow in the backyard was a great natural source for them, but the digging wasn’t so easy.

When I was able to dig deep enough, I often found the bulb tucked securely in a tight rocky crevice.  Un-obtainable! I did manage to get a good number of bulbs (perhaps 2 dozen), but there was no risk of over-harvesting that hillside.

camas blooms cu
photo by SVSeekins

There was certainly more risk of starvation if camas had been my only sustenance.   A good deal of effort for a very small reward.  That gardener from long ago must’ve had more ingenuity than I have.

Apparently, she figured out a method that includes burning the meadow first. (?!?!…)  Perhaps that was a way of cooking the camas in the process? By the time she got one out of the ground, it was already transformed into a sweet treat?  I just can’t figure it….

Happily, after all my sweat equity, I now enjoy blooming borders.

  • snowdrops in January… 
  • crocus in February… 
  • daffodils in March… 
  • hyacinth in April… 
  • and camas in May… 

It times out nicely.  When the foliage of the spring bulb dies back, the daylily takes over for the summer.  And from all that bounty, it’s only the latter that the deer like to feast on.  🙂

a bit of history on camas
a camas recipe
growing camas

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© SVSeekins and Garden Variety Life, 2013

Camas Meadow - Beacon Hill Park 1
photo by SVSeekins