Planting/Transplanting Perennials in Early Fall Requires a Little Extra TLC
The recommended time for planting or transplanting perennials is late August or early September. This gives adequate time for roots to establish before winter comes. However, like most gardeners, I don't usually think about it in late August and besides, this year was too hot to take on this task anyways.
I finally got around to it this past weekend and the weather was glorious to work outside. I needed to transplant a few perennials as well as plant some that I bought at a plant sale in the spring. Yes, I am a little behind but I really didn't want to plant them...
Mushroom is Magnificent!
A local arborist called me one day and asked if it was possible that I could identify a mushroom. Sure, I said I could do that and reminded him that identification is always much easier if a sample was dropped off for me to examine. Later, as I rehearsed our conversation, I remember hearing him chuckle and then saying, “Well, you’re going to love this one”. I was thinking through a couple of types and shapes of typical mushrooms when I walked into my office the next morning. You can imagine my surprise when I spied on my desk, the huge fruiting body of Bondarzewia berkeleyi ...
Woolly Bears on the Move
From Webworms to "We All Scream": Walks in Wooster
Lazarus Lizards Rise in Cincinnati
Beetles on Goldenrod
Orange Dogs and Family Matters
I recently came across a bizarre looking caterpillar - it looked like bird poo - while looking on a wafer ash (Ptelea trifoliate) for the white, frothy "egg plugs" of the two-marked treehopper (Enchenopa binotata) and admiring some heavy potato leafhopper (Empoasca fabae) damage. I learned the bizarre looking caterpillar has an appropriately bizarre sounding common name: the orange dog.
The orange dog (sometimes called orange puppy) caterpillar is the larval stage of the eastern giant swallowtail butterfly (Papilio cresphontes). As...