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Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Grasses surprise

More grasses to cut, this time in front of the house, closest to the porch. Mexican feather grass so lovely even when quite possibly completely dead -- they don't reliably overwinter for me even in normal winters.


These supposedly do better when not sheared, so I pull out any loose blades and leave the rest long. Since I like the look of even the brown blades of this grass, I don't mind this. It will be a bit of a surprise if these actually green back up though, but they're usually slow to get going so maybe there's still a chance.


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So very thin, so very pretty!


Another new grass for me didn't do terribly well in this spot, but seems to still be alive:


I wish I could remember the name of this one, but will have to look up the tag. It's featured in this post only to illustrate a point:


I'm always a bit sloppy when I cut down the grasses, leaving plenty of blades scattered about for birds to use as nesting materials. If you've never seen a small bird flying across the yard carrying a mouthful (well, couple of blades at least) of long grass blades, it's quite a humorous sight!

Back to the feather grass though:


It may surprise me in the near future by greening up, but it certainly surprised me now with what it was hiding...


It's a bit difficult to see, so how about another look?


It's a huge toad!

I'm not sure why finding a toad in my garden surprised me, as I know there were hundreds of them that made it out of the pond last spring.

After pulling the loose blades from this particular plant I covered the toad back up -- it wasn't quite warm enough for him to be venturing out I think.


Any surprises for you yet this spring?

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1 comment:

  1. What fun finding a toad! No herps in my garden yet but I did see a Dutchman's Breeches in bloom. It was one I thought my DB pulled up last year thinking it was a weed. I was thrilled to see it.

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