“No hour of life is wasted that is spent in the saddle.” Winston Churchill
Cultivate abundance for people, plants and wildlife - Growing with Nature
A build too cool to miss:Mike's GreenhouseA great example:Joseph's Garden
All the soil info you'll ever need:
Redhawk's excellent soil-building series
Some places need to be wild
A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects.
-Robert A. Heinlein
Cultivate abundance for people, plants and wildlife - Growing with Nature
James 1:19-20
Not all those who wander are lost - J. R. R. Tolkien
“No hour of life is wasted that is spent in the saddle.” Winston Churchill
Daron Williams wrote:I like the idea of cattails and wild flowers--I think that would look nice. You might also want to consider adding some shrubs.
I have a similar area along the edge of my property. I have been using sheet mulch to kill off the grass and then planting shrubs and trees. Right now I have planted a bunch of native upland willows (they will grow to about 40 feet) that won't mind the site drying out in the summer and a few conifers in some gaps between existing conifers. I'm also going to be planting some hardwood trees in a few areas.
Next year I'm thinking about extending the area that I'm sheet mulching and planting a bunch of native roses and perhaps Douglas spirea (thicket forming but only gets about 4 feet tall) closer to the road along the edge of what I already mulched.
My thought has been shorter thicket forming but nice looking (both the roses and the spirea get nice flowers) plants closer to the road and then taller trees and shrubs along the fence. I'm wanting this to provide a privacy screen (my fence is not solid like yours) that can also keep deer out so I can eventually take down my deer fence.
Just another approach to a similar situation
“No hour of life is wasted that is spent in the saddle.” Winston Churchill
Skandi Rogers wrote:Cattails would be a seriously bad idea in my opinion, they will fill in that ditch, turn it into dry land to stop them doing that you'll need to get in with a digger ever few years and yank them out. Here it would also be illegal to plant them as they impede waterflow and that is what the ditches are for.
Also check where waterlines etc run it is often illegal to plant bushes or trees within a certain distance of them (and also a stupid idea)
“No hour of life is wasted that is spent in the saddle.” Winston Churchill
Eric Hanson wrote:Adrienne,
I want to second what Trace said about local zoning restrictions and rights of way. Around me the county has the authority to mow the 15’ of land adjacent to roadside. It kinda bugs me as I think that maintaining 5-10’ is fine and I like to leave as much of my property in a natural state as possible (I do live in the country).
I am just guessing but I suspect that it is not illegal to plant anything on the area you showed, but it might get mowed right down without any warnings. I now maintain 10’ from the road edge and I have spoken to the guy who actually does the mowing and he does not mow any further.
Also, there are bizarre rules about not interfering with a waterway and as the area you described is a ditch, some official might make a stink about planting there if the county has authority.
I don’t want to be a downer, I just would suggest checking with the county first.
Good luck and please let us know how things develop.
Eric
“No hour of life is wasted that is spent in the saddle.” Winston Churchill
Chris Kott wrote:I like the idea of cattails, or any reed bed idea that can stand drying out a bit. You might need to plant things like cattails in a sock-like wrapping, such that the water can get at the root system, but so that the cattails or reeds or whatever don't completely block the ditch. I would actually make little sock peninsulae jutting out past the centre of the ditch from one end, then the other, in an alternating pattern, such that the flow zig-zags, so it will be slow when there isn't much water, but will top the reed socks and flow overtop of them when necessary.
Though doing so ultimately will do as Skandi suggests, filling it with organic matter and trapped sediment until it fills and needs digging out. That could be a really excellent way to build up the soil periodically in this riparian area, but it would have to be planned, otherwise it would result in the destruction of all that was created.
The first thing I would do is start applying oyster mushroom slurries to the area between the roadway and the bottom of the ditch, and maybe add some organic matter atop it beforehand. Grass clippings should do. That will transform the area between the road and the ditch into a fungal filter that will work to break down hydrocarbon pollution, an excellent complimentary stage to the cattail/reed bed idea.
And if the county or whatever comes by periodically to bushwhack, I would go with something willowy that can stand drying out, something that doesn't get too big. If it's a member of the willow family, it will grow right back from the stump, or from any pieces left.
But let us know how you do it, post more pics, and good luck!
-CK
“No hour of life is wasted that is spent in the saddle.” Winston Churchill
Some places need to be wild
Dennis Mitchell wrote:Let it go wild. Don’t do anything.
“No hour of life is wasted that is spent in the saddle.” Winston Churchill
Caleb Mayfield wrote:Another aspect to consider is sight lines. I believe you said the photos were taken standing in your driveway. It would be a shame to go through a bunch of planting to find out in a few months that your ability to see oncoming traffic is blocked when trying to pull out of your drive. Plants on the fence side probably would not cause an issue, but taller things on the the street side could very easily create problems.
In my area of western Illinois a lot of the farmers that do plant something along those ditches will plant a few daylilies and in a few years the whole bank is covered. Orange daylilies.
“No hour of life is wasted that is spent in the saddle.” Winston Churchill
Eric Hanson wrote:Adrienne,
I am slightly jealous of you! My country takes their roadside mowing pretty seriously. If I don’t have my roadside mowed to the required (15’ I think, maybe 20’) distance, then they come in with a large (6’+) mower and will mow past that distance. It bugs me for a number of reasons. Firstly I adamantly believe that as it is my property, it is my business what I do with it. Traditionally I would mow two passes on the roadside (8’) which I think would be plenty of distance. Now I mow 3 passes (12’+) and the county still wants to mow 6’ past that distance. I eventually went out and talked to the guy who actually does some mowing and he told me that the county wanted mowed back even further, but that as long as I was mowing 3 passes he would ignore my property from then on.
Personally I like tall grasses and wildflowers. This used to be pastureland, but I have given serious thought to planting native grasses, and especially big bluestem. I am required to mow once per year and I am ok with this, but I see no reason for keeping a mowed stretch of grassland 20’ back from a road for no reason.
Sorry if I ranted too much. I like your idea of having wildflowers in an area you don’t really use like a lawn. Congratulations on being able to exercise your rights as a property owner to maintain your land as you see fit. Please keep us updated on your future plans.
Eric
“No hour of life is wasted that is spent in the saddle.” Winston Churchill
A piece of land is worth as much as the person farming it.
-Le Livre du Colon, 1902
A piece of land is worth as much as the person farming it.
-Le Livre du Colon, 1902
Timothy Markus wrote:I always enjoy area planted to lilies or other flowers and you've got a lot of good suggestions.
I'm pretty practical, so I'd probably plant it all in comfrey. I'd then set up temp fences and let the animals graze it down or, for more work, chop and drop where you want it. I like the way comfrey plants look, too, but animals love them as food.
“No hour of life is wasted that is spent in the saddle.” Winston Churchill
Joylynn Hardesty wrote:Have you considered planting something for biomass and mulch in this spot? Here crimson clover would be good for over winter. I have a neighbor that uses this self seeding annual on his bank above the ditch. Maybe under seed and follow it with a summer crop as well. Buckwheat? Something else?
Then if they mow it down, just rake it up and use it for its intended purpose!
Deb Stephens wrote:This has some interesting information on rain gardens and photos of ditch gardens that are really stunningly beautiful. You might want to read it ... The Beneficial Beauty of Rain Gardens.
Personally, I would go with a few well-spaced clumps of cattail on the upper portion of the fence side of the ditch, interspersed with the old fashioned tiger lilies (those orange and spotted daylilies), horsetail (Equisetum arvense) and then plant lower-growing plants like native irises that prefer boggy areas such as iris brevicaulis or I. fulva along with native reeds and wetland grasses on the roadside where you need more visibility.
“No hour of life is wasted that is spent in the saddle.” Winston Churchill
Rufus Laggren wrote:Perhaps this would not be a real concern. I've never lived on a road with ditches, so this is pure theory speaking; though just keeping ahead of nature on two small properties, I became very conscious of the importance of managing water. My understanding is that the ditches are a functional part of the road drainage system. Thus, if the ditches fill with soil, they may not perform their designed function and need to be dug out. I'd guess this to be a "natural" process that occurs in any case, but IF plantings lead to this maintenance every 5 years, instead of the previous every 20 years (or some similar of compression of the major maintenance interval), they may not turn out to actually be what you'd call and improvement...
Regards,
Rufus
Rufus Laggren wrote:Perhaps this would not be a real concern. I've never lived on a road with ditches, so this is pure theory speaking; though just keeping ahead of nature on two small properties, I became very conscious of the importance of managing water. My understanding is that the ditches are a functional part of the road drainage system. Thus, if the ditches fill with soil, they may not perform their designed function and need to be dug out. I'd guess this to be a "natural" process that occurs in any case, but IF plantings lead to this maintenance every 5 years, instead of the previous every 20 years (or some similar of compression of the major maintenance interval), they may not turn out to actually be what you'd call and improvement...
Regards,
Rufus
A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects.
-Robert A. Heinlein
All that thinking. Doesn't it hurt? What do you think about this tiny ad?
permaculture and gardener gifts (stocking stuffers?)
https://permies.com/wiki/permaculture-gifts-stocking-stuffers
|