anke: (Default)

Well, hi! I just dumped 21 photos, mostly of birds or plants, on my website. Have a look if you like. :D


Photo of an adult starling feeding a juvenile one Photo of a wood pigeon sitting in an acacia tree. Photo of a mallerd duckling and its mother Photo of a single, half-open magnolia blossom Photo of a pond showing lilipads and tiny fishes in the water Photo of an adult moorhen and three chicks Photo of a red squirrel foraging on a lawn photo of a red squirrel sitting on a lawn Photo of a single dog rose flower Photo of pale violet wisteria flowers photo of a european goldfinch Photo of a fieldfare flying off its nest Photo of a fieldfare on its nest Photo of a fieldfare foraging on the ground Photo of sakura branches with both blossoms and first leaves photo of young maple leaves against a dark hedge photo of cuckoo flower blossoms against shaded grass Photo of two crows photo of a blue tit sitting on a bare twig photo of a moorhen on an algae-green pond Photo of a male mallard swimming Photo of a ring-necked parakeet in a bare tree
anke: (Default)

Let me introduce you properly to one of my Japanese maples.

This is the one that went feral. It was a grafted one with leaves that had white edges, but that graft died either last summer, or the summer before that, presumably because I too often neglected to water it.

Now, I wouldn’t mind, because the wild shoots are pretty enough, but there’s a problem: It looks like the rot from the stump is spreading.

Since I wanted to try air layering to get a plant to turn into a bonsai, anyway, I guess this maple it now a guinea pig.

The idea of air layering is to have the plant grow roots on a branch, so that that branch can be cut off and planted elsewhere.

I picked an interesting looking part of the plant, removed some twigs that were in the way, as well as an about 1 cm wide stripe of bark and a layer of wood below that. Then I spread some plant hormone that should encourage root formation on the upper edge, and put a loop of wire right below it.

I got a flimsy plastic flower pot (the kind you buy plants in and that are supposed to be thrown away) and cut a slit in the side and a hole in the bottom, so I could slip it around the cut. I placed that pot so the cut was in the middle of it, put adhesive tape over the slit down the side, and filled the pot with potting soil meant for seedlings and cuttings.

We’ll see how this goes, eventually.

I also stuck some onions from the kitchen that started growing leaves in the ground, to see what happens.

One successful experiment is the azalea. It had been a very unhappy plant on the graveyard, and the autumn before last I brought it home, put it in a pot, and cut it down to nothing but two sticks. It looks like this now:

Originally posted at  ankewehner.de. You can comment here or there.

anke: (swirl)

Let me introduce you properly to one of my Japanese maples.

This is the one that went feral. It was a grafted one with leaves that had white edges, but that graft died either last summer, or the summer before that, presumably because I too often neglected to water it.

Now, I wouldn’t mind, because the wild shoots are pretty enough, but there’s a problem: It looks like the rot from the stump is spreading.

Since I wanted to try air layering to get a plant to turn into a bonsai, anyway, I guess this maple it now a guinea pig.

The idea of air layering is to have the plant grow roots on a branch, so that that branch can be cut off and planted elsewhere.

I picked an interesting looking part of the plant, removed some twigs that were in the way, as well as an about 1 cm wide stripe of bark and a layer of wood below that. Then I spread some plant hormone that should encourage root formation on the upper edge, and put a loop of wire right below it.

I got a flimsy plastic flower pot (the kind you buy plants in and that are supposed to be thrown away) and cut a slit in the side and a hole in the bottom, so I could slip it around the cut. I placed that pot so the cut was in the middle of it, put adhesive tape over the slit down the side, and filled the pot with potting soil meant for seedlings and cuttings.

We’ll see how this goes, eventually.

I also stuck some onions from the kitchen that started growing leaves in the ground, to see what happens.

One successful experiment is the azalea. It had been a very unhappy plant on the graveyard, and the autumn before last I brought it home, put it in a pot, and cut it down to nothing but two sticks. It looks like this now:

Originally posted at  ankewehner.de. You can comment here or there.

anke: (Default)
aaagh, more slow going. But the adoption stuff seems to work now. It's not online yet. I started tweaking the stylesheet and placement of links and some info a bit, and it needs cleaning up.

Oh, and the Magical Restart I got automatically overnight fixed the card reader, so here goes:
anke: (Default)

Part two of the whole “catch up with posting images” thing: Photos taken outside of zoos between January and May.

Red Maple Young Maple Transportation Leaf Green Lift-Off Orchid Reflection Stuff It Drifting Clouds Halo Ruin Green Arrow Windmill Weathered Light Patch Bird-Crossing A promise of spring Upside Down

Originally posted at ankewehner.de. You can comment here or there.

anke: (Default)

Part two of the whole “catch up with posting images” thing: Photos taken outside of zoos between January and May.

Red Maple Young Maple Transportation Leaf Green Lift-Off Orchid Reflection Stuff It Drifting Clouds Halo Ruin Green Arrow Windmill Weathered Light Patch Bird-Crossing A promise of spring Upside Down

Originally posted at ankewehner.de. You can comment here or there.

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