This daylily enthusiast in Carroll County, Maryland, named her collector's garden after the cat's she adores. She grows and sells gorgeous daylilies from her expansive garden as well as offering a traditional English tea on certain dates. Learn more at:
http://www.thecatsmeowdaylilygarden.com/App_Content/home.aspx
Saturday, June 25, 2016
Saturday, June 18, 2016
How to Keep Cats OUT of Your Garden
citrus peels |
Barriers:
- roll out chicken wire
- push pine cones into the soil
- lay down rose bush trimmings
- spread out mesh produce and bulb bags anchored with twigs
Shock and Awe:
- motion detector sprinklers
Smell and Annoyances:
- citrus peels
- highly scented plants like marigolds, geranium, and lemon thyme
Got a humane method that keeps cats out of outdoor spots they should not be in?
Please share it in the comments field below?
set up barriers like chicken wire and plastic "spikes" |
Saturday, June 11, 2016
Rhapsodizing
Colleen Ward of Kensington, MD, shared her kitty, Rhapsody:
"Rhaps is a 10 year old male tabby from Rockville animal shelter. I got him when he was two. Extremely affectionate and loves his tuna from the can at 5:00am before I head off to work. Loves to sun-bathe himself in the garden. And is always close by his big sister Minnie, she is a chow chow."
Saturday, June 4, 2016
Bob the Cat
Jan Emming shared these amazing photo of a new visitor to his desert garden. Jan is Owner and Cacti Wrangler at Destination Forever Ranch and Gardens in Yucca, Arizona.
Jan writes, "The
bobcat wandered down my path and paused to look back in my direction,
although I don't think he saw or heard me inside behind the closed
window. Judging by his, um, anatomy, this appears to be a male. I took a
series of photos of him swishing his short tail back and forth, like
cats tend to do. The short, black-tipped tail looks like it has been
"bobbed" (meaning cut back artificially), and is why we call them
bobcats." Jan asks also to note the white amaryllis in bloom in the background of this photo!
"The
tufted black-and-white ears of bobcats are quite distinctive, along
with the short black-tipped tail I mentioned earlier. They are generally
solitary outside of females rearing their young and have home ranges
that range from 3 to 20 square miles, depending upon the habitat quality
and prey base. The average range of a bobcat is probably around 4 to 5
square miles (12 to 15 square kilometers) in
decent habitat with a good prey base and several denning and sheltering
spots. Males have larger ranges than females do, and ranges of the
sexes do overlap a bit. Wild animals tend to live for not much more than
7 to 8 years. They can weigh from 20 to 50 lbs (9 to 23 kg), with the
larger animals living in more northerly and forested habitats and
smaller ones living in deserts, dry mountains, prairies, and scrublands.
The natural range of bobcats is most of the continental US and southern
Canada down to southern Mexico, with a conspicuous gap in many of the
most agricultural Midwestern US states."
"Bobcats
are closely related to the more northerly-living lynx. But they are
smaller, live in more types of habitat, and are overall quite tolerant
of human activites, unlike lynx. As long as a bobcat can find
appropriate food and shelter, they can easily live in suburban regions
and on the edges of farmland and forest. Dense urban areas and intensive
agricultural regions are not as conducive to their survival needs, but
otherwise these are adaptable creatures that seem capable of living with
humans in at least low numbers."
"The
bobcat finished his pre-sunrise drink and wandered back in front of my
bedroom window. Before leaving, he paused to spray one of my barrel
cacti with his urine. This scent-marking is a clearly territorial
behavior to other cats, letting them know that he owns me. Fine with me
as long as he eats rabbits and rodents. As a carnivore, I welcome
bobcats because they won't show any further interest in my plants. Plus
urea is a good fertilizer...."
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