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Incredible that the month of June is nearing the end.Robert: this may be a common sight for you?, for us it seems really dry. It reminds me of the dry season landscape look in parts of Mexico. Large areas in Canada are also affected by drought this year, high temperatures as well and various species are under stress.
Robert, your landscape looks much drier, and you are right that my garden does look lush:). The first part of June was quite dry here with very little rain, but last Saturday there was a big thunderstorm and in one hour we got 50mm rain in our garden. My soil is mostly clay so one good rain helps keep it moist for a long time now. It seems that lately there are more periods of drought (but not as severe as in your part of the world) and then one or two days of rain, so I try first to improve the soil and second to grow plants which do better in my climate (though sometimes it is hard to resist temptation to grow something special which may not survive here).I water only plants in pots and vegetable beds, and polytunnel where my tomatoes as such are, so perennial beds mostly have to manage on their own.
Gabriela,Thank you for the weather/climatic report from your region.Yes, the photograph accurately depicts our dry California landscape during the summer and autumn months. My wife Jasmin and I are working on a photo-essay of the on going ecological disaster taking placing in California. The posted photograph makes conditions look good. Wait until you see photographs of the stressed and dying native trees, the hillsides being leveled and carved up for massive developments, the rivers and reservoirs with little or no water, the destructive logging practices, the destructive forestry practices, and the frequent scorched-earth management of public and private lands! It is very distressing and disturbing.
Oxeye daisy doesn't mind whether the grass grows tall or not! This and its siblings has memories for me: a friend and colleague of ours passed away a couple of years ago, and at her funeral they gave packets of oxeye daisy seeds to the mourners. These plants are the result.
What a charming remembrance of your friend. Such a lovely idea to do that. Do you know if other species of Rattle/Rhinanthus have a suppressant effect on grass growth, like R. minor does?
I am not keeping such accurate weather data like yourself Robert but it is impossible not to notice what's happening. For your interest, in case you haven't heard, one locality from BC broke the heat record ever registered in Canada yesterday with 49.5 C !!!! Hard to believe.Unfortunately what you describe is also happening in Ontario, and probably many other places. Just nearby where I live, 10 min. outside the city there used to be farmlands - almost all are leveled now for residential developments; and I could keep going...