Abundant and fruitful, Quaking aspen (populus tremuloides) covers more of our continent than any other tree.  Aren't we lucky?

"I seem always to be able to find something colorful, something strangely symmetrical, something simply pleasing to the eye about the Aspen tree.  It is a beautiful yet complicated plant."  --John Fielder, photographer

Aspens share a root system, which means that an entire grove of aspens is one single living organism.  One of these large groves--Pando--grows and lives in Utah, and has been tested and proven to have identical genetic markers and one massive underground root system, making it the largest living organism in the world (in regard to mass and weight).  Not only is it the largest and heaviest, but also one of the oldest; scientists and tree experts assert that some of today's aspen root systems are about a million years old!

Aspen root systems can stay dormant for centuries, patiently waiting for the right conditions to grow.  Once the trees push forth, they grow fast and die young (relatively speaking), and their strength and tenacity show in their eagerness to be the first to grow and establish itself after a forest fire, avalanche, or Mother Nature's other fast changes.  (A lonely aspen is not so vigorous, however; an aspen planted from seed generally struggles and suffers; root cuttings fare a bit better.) 

Aspen energy feeds its thirst, so trees thrive with deep waterings each time the soil dries.  Always prune in winter, and never cut their tops off and expect them to stay healthy.  They don't like that.

A tree of all seasons, Aspen's autumn colors are most beautiful on cloudy days, with their overwhleming colors blazing across the landscape.  In winter, the stark parallel trunks of the grove frame the world, and spring's glorious foliage invorgorates everything sharing its space.  Quaking aspen earns her name in summer, singing a duet with the wind on a stage of blue sky.

In days gone by, the aspen was a tree of heroes wearing crowns of aspen leaves which held the power not only to carry them to the Underworld, but to return them safely. Ancient Celtic wisdom favors the aspen for its protective magical powers that sheild us from both physical and psychic harm.  Even today, the Bach Flower Remedies recommend extracts of aspen to treat fears and apprehensions.

Oh, Aspen.  What's not to love?

References: 

Fielder, John.  Colorado Aspen Trees. 1984.  Westcliff Piublishers, Inc.  Englewood.

Leatherman, David.  Heidi E. McNulty.  Michael E. Schomaker.  Dennis L. Lynch  Aspen: a Guide to Common Problems in Colorado.  1996.  Colorado State University Cooperative Extension and Colorado State Forest Service.

http://www.nps.gov/ National Park Service

OCTOBER gardening tips

I would rather sit on a pumpkin and have it all to myself than be crowded on a velvet cushion. Henry David Thoreau

  • Divide and replant crowded fall-blooming bulbs after their leaves turn yellow.

  • If you haven’t done it yet, plant spring-flowering bulbs when the soil is cool. 

  • To get your perennial gardens ready for the winter, remove dead plant debris that could harbor bacteria and fungus, and don’t forget to protect your roses from the coming winter cold.

  • Near the end of the month, mulch perennials and roses using straw, compost, or shredded bark to help protect them through the winter. 

  • It’s a great time to plant trees, shrubs, grass seed, and sod, since plants that are planted in the fall benefit from the cooler temperatures and time for the roots to grow into the surrounding soil. Don’t forget to give them a good start with a starter plant food.

  • Give your trees and shrubs a deep watering so they get sufficient moisture before the ground freezes and they go into dormancy.

  • Fertilize your shade trees and remember that even while they look dormant, their roots are still full of life, and moist of the root is within the top foot of soil.

  • Prune shrubs and trees to remove dead wood.

  • Put in those garlic blubs!

  • Just before a first, pick the largest nearly ripe green tomatoes and put them in a brown paper bag with some apples. They’ll ripen and be vine-sweet.

  • Move old vines of beans, squash, and their relatives to the compost pile, then till the garden.

  • Plant amaryllis in pots early this month for before the end of the month for a Christmas bloom.

  • Bring all your houseplants indoors if you haven't done so already.

  • Repot pot-bound plants.

  • Fertilize your houseplants with a slow release fertilizer through November, and then reduce feeding until spring.

  • Send away for seed catalogs and start dreaming.

OCTOBER

1 National Children's Health Day. By Presidential Proclamation. Observed on the first Monday in October.

2 Happy Birthday, Kathy!
Taos Plaza Live!
Mahatma Gandhi’s birthday (1869)

4 Taos Wool Festival

5 Taos Wool Festival
World Teacher's Day. A United Nations observance.

6 National Storytelling Festival. October 6-8. A three-day festival held in Jonesborough, TN.

9 Taos Plaza Live! 2008

10 World Mental Health Day

11 Eleanor Roosevelt’s birthday (1884)

12 Taos Clay Fall Workshops - Thrown & Altered 2008
National Farmer’s Day

13 Taos Clay Fall Workshops - Thrown & Altered 2008

15 National Grouch Day

16 Taos Plaza Live! 2008
National Dictionary Day
World Food Day

23 Taos Plaza Live! 2008

24 Taos Mountain Balloon Rally-26th Annual!
National Bologna Day

25 Taos Mountain Balloon Rally-26th Annual!
Pablo Picasso. Anniversary of Birth

26 Taos Mountain Balloon Rally-26th Annual!

27 Happy Birthday, Kangarookla!

31 Halloween!

WELCOME to our new yartists

I'll bet living in a nudist colony takes all the fun out of Halloween.
Charles Swartz

On Halloween, the parents sent their kids out looking like me.
Rodney Dangerfield

"There is no season when such pleasant and sunny spots may be lighted on, and produce so pleasant an effect on 
the feelings, as now in October." 
Nathaniel Hawthorne

"Even if something is left undone, everyone must take time to sit still and watch the leaves turn."
Elizabeth Lawrence

"Bittersweet October.  The mellow, messy, leaf-kicking, perfect pause 
between the opposing miseries of summer and winter." 
Carol Bishop Hipps

 "Gardening imparts an organic perspective on the passage of time." 
William Cowper

"Delicious autumn!   My very soul is wedded to it, 
and if I were a bird I would fly about the earth 
seeking the successive autumns."  
George Eliot  

Soup is off smelling the roses this month.

If you have questions you'd like to ask Soup in future issues, send him an email at DearSoup@gmail.com.

He told us to tell you all, "Namaste and Woof!"

ask us about reserving live holiday trees and fresh fir wreaths

 

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Writer : Whitney Glenn
Photography : Jane Glenn
Layout : Emily Bakko

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