in the pond

When we pur­chased the house it came with a nice, deep pond that was per­fect for waterlilies. It also came with an upper pond with a water­fall into the lily pond, and two other small ponds. Two decades later, one of the small ponds has now been con­verted into a planter, and another into my bog gar­den. Remain­ing are the two largest ponds, the lily pond and the upper pond, which we reduced in size by half.

lily

We’ve had waterlilies bloom­ing since the end of April. I have no idea what vari­ety this one is–It came with the pond that came with the house. But it’s a tough and reli­able plant.

cattal-plant

The ponds are mostly John’s ter­ri­tory, but I’ve sneaked a cou­ple Cal­i­for­nia native species into them. The first is a cat­tail (Typha sp.), one of my favorite water plants.

cattail-running

If you’ve ever grown these, you real­ize quickly that there’s a cer­tain amount of main­te­nance that goes with them, mainly in deal­ing with their spread­ing rhi­zomes. If the plant is pot­ted, it’ll soon escape and will require fre­quent trim­ming when grow­ing actively. Here are a cou­ple of shoots that have escaped into the fer­tile pond scum. In the past the shoots got tossed, but I just read in an excerpt from Steve Brill and Eve­lyn Brin’s Iden­ti­fy­ing and Har­vest­ing Edi­ble and Med­i­c­i­nal Plants in Wild (and Not-So-Wild) Places how they’re totally edi­ble and are nick­named “Cossack’s aspara­gus.” The next trim­mings will be going into the skillet.

scirpus-californicus

A new native to the pond is Cal­i­for­nia bul­rush (Scir­pus cal­i­for­ni­cus), a replace­ment for a giant papyrus that finally suc­cumbed after two decades. Although the new scir­pus is called a rush, it’s actu­ally a sedge. Two months ago it was a one-gallon plant. Now it’s eas­ily twice the size.

scirpus-californicus-blooming

Its lit­tle flow­ers aren’t spec­tac­u­lar, but a mass of these lit­tle bloom clus­ters could be a nice effect once it gets a lit­tle larger.

The clos­est canyon is about an eighth of a mile away, but var­i­ous crit­ters find their way to the water. Rac­coons, opos­sums and tracks from a cat larger than a house cat, smaller than a cougar have been sighted over the years. Dur­ing the first years a cou­ple of vis­its from a great blue heron finally dis­cour­aged John from try­ing to raise koi in the lower pond after they ended turn­ing in expen­sive birdfeed.

sparrows

These days the main vis­i­tors are spar­rows, which blend so well with pond scum and the sur­round­ing rocks that they’re hard to see…

lesser-goldfinches

…and these days we’re see­ing a lot of these lesser goldfinches.

Now that our day­time tem­per­a­tures have finally been climb­ing into what you’d expect dur­ing the sum­mer, I think I might be frol­ick­ing in the water if I were one of these birds.

July 21 2009 | Categories: gardeningmy garden | Tags: | 6 Comments »