Days of DRY (part 2)

How did I omit “heat” from this blog post title? God knows. Its been inhumanly hot. The kind of hot where you go outside and whatever you were planning on doing just melts your brain along with your resolve about being ANY kind of productive. (okay, never mind my goal, turn around, go back inside, just get me out of this heat!).

Ahhhhhhhh. Get some cold water. A/C. Okay. Now I can think. And here is what I think: I.must.remain.inside. Standing at the window looking outside seems an awful lot like looking through the glass panel in front of a hot oven watching things slowly cook to the brown and crispy state. Here is what my new azalea bushes look like.

I have been watering them, you can tell by the green grass near them. Sadly, said grass has not been cut for a long time due to our lawn mower breaking down. I need to check out some Battery Powered Lawn Mower Reviews fast! Anyway, those leaves should be just as green. Doesn’t matter. The heat fried them anyway.

Here is a lovely sweet smelling Japanese flowering tree. It stays under cover on our deck, out of most of the day’s sun. I water it every day. Doesn’t matter.

I didn’t take a photograph of the baby phoebes that got fried, open mouthed, in their nest by our back door. That was just too sad to document.

So, its hot, but, where was I? Oh yes, I was talking about our native pasture project. Give the pasture back to Mother Earth. Native grass. Yes, let’s have a native prairie again, please. I look forward to the day where I can look for the most recent cordless lawn mower, discovered through Coolest Gadgets or somewhere similar, to tame the natural grass. All while enjoying the beautiful garden breeze.

John our hay man is very accommodating. When we had the, ahem, “Roundup conversation” early on, I told him very clearly: “John, I know your farmer friends and you would normally spray herbicide. I promise you, am not going to get angry with you or blame you, if our project fails. We just cannot use poison on our land. We are going to have to give it a go without that. I hope you understand.”

He said that he did. He said he, and most of his friends, made most of their decisions primarily because of economics. Who can blame him? John has a wife and three very young children. And a second job. He didn’t say it outright, but I knew John’s farmer friends had a snicker or two about our plan. Conventional wisdom held that without Roundup first, the fescue would prevail and our expensive native prairie seed would simply blow away in the persistent Kansas wind.

But we went ahead with grass plan number one anyway. John plowed under the fescue and planted our native seed in early Spring. We did get a hard two inch rain two days later. The seed was pounded in and watered. Thank you! But, other than that rain, and the Solstice Eve rain, there has been no rain to speak of. Officially we have gotten 1/2 inch of rain at Atira Moon in the last 90 days.

Dry ground, plowed mature fescue, fresh native seed, pathetic amount of rain, extreme heat. That’s truly a recipe for no grass.

Except. We do have grass. Somehow, the praire grass grew. In the terrible conditions offered, the fescue faltered, and the prairie grass grew! The prairie grass actually grew.

This is a photo from about mid May.

When John was here haying last week, he told me some of his farmer pals found themselves wondering what was happening in our field as Spring turned into Summer. Some would slow down and look and others would actually park along the road to have much better view at our newly planted prairie grass. I didn’t happen to see any of them do this, but I am sure, they had to be scratching their heads while they were looking. It did not make sense, what they were seeing.

I was scratching mine as I walked through the pastures. For a while I thought the green shoots must have been the fescue re-emerging. But it wasn’t fescue, the blades of grass you are looking at in the photo are primarily a native orchard grass.

There is very little reason we should have a living prairie in these conditions with only the morning dew to sustain it. The only thing I can come up with is this: It’s because this grass belongs here, and Mother Earth is pleased.

The Days of DRY are not yet done, and neither is this story. John was here to cut and harvest hay from our established hay field which left him wondering where to find a high quality machete? This would help him to slash through the crops more easily and even help to cut away at any undergrowth standing in his way. Haying has been a grim task around here (And in Oklahoma and in Texas). It remained to be seen what our field would produce.

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4 Responses to Days of DRY (part 2)

  1. We understand your pain but so happy to hear that prairie grass is coming back where it belongs.

    The wind in Oklahoma is like a wind off Hell as I’m sure Kansas is no better.

    Thanks for your story.

  2. Kaye says:

    I love the way as conscious farmers you are leading a new path of conscious farming – and as you continue you cause all the others to take another look at and question their own practices that are so far out of alignment with Gaia.
    Brilliant!
    Love
    Kaye

  3. Prairie Princess says:

    Prairie is amazing. Sometimes it is the only green around. It would be great if your baby plants get some rain. Even the prairie needs it when it is young.

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