Author Archives: Regina

Hi. I’m Regina Fierke. Welcome to our garden. I have a bachelor’s degree in Environmental Microbiology, but for now I’m just a mom and a gardener. I garden with my husband, our six-year-old daughter, her two older brothers (when they are forced to) two dogs, two cats, a bearded dragon and a small flock of chickens. I guess you could call us suburban homesteaders.

Recently, I have been asked by a lot of friends (and even some casual acquaintances) how I have made my garden, so I thought I would start this blog.

First off, I have to admit that I’m a lazy gardener. If there is a way to do something with less work (especially if it turns out to be environmentally beneficial) then that’s what I do. I’m also cheap. I prefer propagating and getting “pass-along plants” to spending a lot of money. I’ll share some of my cheapest and laziest tips and tricks as I go. And, of course, as an environmentalist, I try to go as organically as possible.

My second admission is that I don’t plan a whole lot and I don’t naturally have a green thumb. I don’t plant things that require meticulous and unending care. I’m constantly putting things in, moving them around or yanking them out. I have veggies and flowers (with a fair amount of weeds) all growing together. The garden is never “finished” but it is always a wonderful inspiration.

My third admission is that, even with as much as I garden, I have yet to make myself get out in the August heat to plant a fall garden. Fall is the very best season for gardens here in Texas, but it does take the dedication to brave the August heat and carve time away from back to school preparations to get it planted. Everything perks up in the fall and you usually don’t have the bug problems then that you have in the spring. I swear – this year will be the year.

Our garden has been the source of so many wonderful things to eat and make. We have grown our own sponges, giant platter sized sunflowers, birdhouse gourds and so much more. We have had so many wonderful birthday parties here including a garden tour party that featured a floral alphabet hunt and a cake decorated with flowers from our garden. We have built “sunflower houses” and taken a safari through our own backyard. We have also been certified as “Monarch Waystation number 741” by the organization Monarch Watch (monarchwatch.org).

I hope you enjoy your visit.

Regina

Coppell Farmer’s Market

What a great little market! Some friends and I went out to peruse some locally grown fare and I was pleasantly surprised by how much I found.  There were local meat vendors, fresh eggs, honey, cheese, nuts and all sorts of crafts. I ended up coming home with some honey, some of the most incredible […]

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What’s Blooming Today…

What a busy, crazy week!  I’m so ready for school to be out!  My garden NEEDS me. Spring has taken it’s toll.  All the rain has made for lots of bugs and mildew, black spot and WEEDS!  As much as I love lemon balm, it is going to become a weed if I don’t get […]

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My latest find…

I found him at Pier 1 on clearance! John thinks he’s creepy, but I think he’s fun.  I also think John needs to stop letting little things creep him out so much. I have debated returning him, but I think I really want to keep him! — Weather When Posted –Temperature: 87°F;Humidity: 26%;Heat Index: 87°F;Wind […]

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Crape Myrtle

Crape Myrtles (Lagerstroemia indica) are slow growing flowering trees or shrubs native to China.  They come in all colors… pink, red, white, purple.  OK, so there is not yellow, orange or blue there, but that is still an impressive array of colors, don’t you think?  And they bloom all summer and on into the fall […]

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Hollyhocks

Hollyhocks (Alcea) are perennials that have multiple flower buds on tall central stems (as much as 6 feet) .  They are gorgeous at the back of a border along a fence.  That is also a good place for them because aphids love to chew up the leaves.  You can stop that somewhat by spraying the […]

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Lady Hollyhock

Robert Louis Stevenson (England, nineteenth century) The Flowers All the names I know from nurse: Gardener’s garters, Shepherd’s purse, Bachelor’s buttons, Lady’s smock, And the Lady Hollyhock. Fairy places, fairy things, Fairy woods where the wild bee wings, Tiny trees for tiny dames– These must all be fairy names! — Weather When Posted –Temperature: 78°F;Humidity: […]

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Miss Lilly and the Hollyhock Garden

Samantha got this book for her birthday several years ago and it is still one of our favorites.  The pictures are all of hollyhock dolls. The story was wonderful.  It was about a hollyhock doll that was blown away out of her garden and had the help of many friends to get back.  At the […]

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Thyme

Thyme is incredible stuff!  So is time, but thyme it one of my favorite seasonings for eggs and it is especially good fresh.  I have grown creaping thyme, lemon thyme, wooly thyme and regular common thyme.  My favorite by far is the lemon thyme.  That is also the one that has done the best in […]

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St. John’s Wort

St. John’s Wort (Hypericum) is famous for it’s pharmaceutical properties and it’s uses as an herbal treatment for depression.  There are over 300 species of  Hypericum and I have no clue which one this is.  I think it’s a gorgeous plant, though.  It makes a mounding evergreen shrub about 3 feet tall and it will […]

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Fire Ants! Who needs ’em?

The truth is that fire ant do provide a benefit.  They eat ticks, chiggers, termites, boll weevils, flee hopper, cotton bollworms, pink bollworms, tobacco budworms, pecan weevils,  hickory shuckworms, flies, fleas, tobacco budworms, corn earworms and cockroaches.  Of course, they will also eat baby animals, seedlings and saplings – especially in the veggie garden.  In […]

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