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Hi everyone!

I am beyond thrilled to officially welcome you to my new site, the farmgirl diaries! What began as a little blog to share my homemade cards back in 2007 turned into a journal of my city life turned farm wife journey in 2010 and I haven’t looked back ever since! The Farmgirl Diaries is where I share everything I am passionate about and I felt it was time to really make the most of what I love! So welcome to an entire website dedicated to our little life out here in the country! I hope you love it even half as much as I do! I cannot wait to share more on this platform. Please, pour yourself a cup of coffee and have a look around! Categories are easily spread out to help navigate you to your favourite topics (plenty more will be added as the years progress!) and I have also added a few new categories in the navigation links that I hope you will check out as well. So much to explore and so much more to come!!

Welcome to my little life in the country..

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I am by no means a ‘master gardener’ but I do have a passion for growing fruits, vegetables and flowers here on our farm. Every Spring, the excitement builds as I begin planting seeds on my potting bench and watch them turn into seedlings, then plants to pot out in the garden for a late summer harvest that will feed our family and beautify our home.

A favourite annual of many gardeners is of course non other than the simple yet beautiful sunflower. It is a classic annual in the garden..it’s big, it’s bold and it truly is so easy to grow!

Last year I grew a sunflower patch in my garden that yielded 9′ tall plants. I loved walking through there in the morning light as it made me feel so humbled and small. It always amazes me what can grow from a tiny little seed! Did you know the tallest sunflower on record is currently at 27′?! I would have LOVED to have seen that! 

What is great about sunflowers is that they come in every size, perfect for every kind of garden whether that be a small plot, a container garden or a large field. There are dwarf sunflowers, doubles and they even come in a wide range of colours (Velvet Queen might be my favourite coloured sunflower – a dark, velvet-like shade of red)

During the summer months, sunflowers not only bring beauty to your garden, they also attract beneficial “friends” such as butterflies and bees. Of course attracting bees to your vegetable plot is a must to help pollination and as a gardener, you can’t help but attract as many pollinators as possible! As a child I used to be afraid of buzzing bees in the garden but now I realize how beneficial they are and love hearing them work tirelessly collecting nectar. Wasps on the other hand…don’t get me started!

Helianthus Annuus is native to North America and has been grown as a crop for some 5,000 years. At first, the plant only caught on in a modest way but so much has changed. Canada alone is a huge producer of sunflower oil and in many regions of our country you can see fields of golden sunflowers stretching as far as the eye can see from July thru to September. 

Did you know that sunflowers are called as such not because they’re shaped much like a sunburst but because the flower buds actually follow the sun? Turning East in the morning, to the South by noon and to the West by late afternoon. Once the flower starts to open, however, this “daily spin”, stops and at maturity, most sunflowers will face Southeast.

When it comes to sowing these beauties, there are many different approaches (go with whatever works best for you!). Most often I recommend sowing the seeds 1″ apart and 1″ deep in well drained soil. Once the seeds begin sprouting, thin them down to about 2′ for small/medium plants or 3′ for tall, single-stemmed varieties. Full sun is best (obviously) and adding a bit of compost at planting time and watering in droughts is generally the only care you need to give them while they grow. If however you are looking for a prize winning bloom, feed them constantly and never let their roots dry out completely. 

While I have grown sunflowers indoors for fun, I don’t recommend doing this as sunflowers do not like any root disturbance while growing. The plants themselves grow rapidly but the flowers will not begin to bloom til mid-summer. If you are looking to have some for cut flowers, I recommend harvesting when the first few “petals” appear. Otherwise just leave them to do their thing in the garden.

I often will leave a few seed heads over the winter to help feed the birds that stay in our yard (we had quite a few this winter!!) but then chop them down in early Spring and resow them. However, oftentimes the seed heads will drop their seeds on their own and new flowers will start popping up in late May to early June!

Something I just learned last summer myself and I feel it’s worth sharing is that sunflowers are allelopathic: their roots give off toxic properties that either prevent nearby plants from germinating or stunt their growth. This was proven to me when I planted a few varieties in my new zinnia bed. Every seed planted within 18″ of the sunflowers never came up!! Lesson learned..

There are so many varieties of sunflowers out there for you to try and grow. Many hybrids offered are pollen free for cut flower use (florists) and their most attractive feature is that pollen won’t fall (and stain your table setting, clothing etc) However the major disadvantage of this is that they produce far less seeds (some don’t produce any!) therefore I like to plant a vast variety in my yard. 

This year I will be growing at least 10 different varieties of sunflowers. My favourites at the moment are:

– Teddy Bear: a dwarf sunflower that produces fully double golden yellow plants
– Ring of Fire: this is a nod to my husband and his admiration of the “man in black”, Mr Johnny Cash. It is a very different sunflower, a 5″ pollen-less flower with bi-coloured petals
– Lemon Eclair: I am so excited for this new flower to begin producing in my garden this year! It is a delicious lemon coloured sunflower with a chocolate brown centre. Long, cactus like outer petals are grounded by a fluffy centre..very excited!!
– finally, I am also planting Vanilla Ice this Summer in my front flower beds to add height and also to use in flower arrangements for our farmhouse
So there you have it. My first edition of “what I am growing” in 2015. I hope you learned something new about these garden classics and I hope I have inspired you to throw a few of these seeds in your own gardens in 2015!! Happy planting everyone!

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  • dawn - Dawn, I loved reading about sunflowers, as you know we are fans of them too. Thanks so much for the info, I passed it along to Rich. We are growing them again this year too, he already got the seeds. Can’t wait for spring weather and planting time friend. The last week has been cold and windy here and no sun. Hoping the warm temps will come soon.
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we have been home on the farm for a week now from our family vacation in Hawaii and life has been happening all around us. The weather has been unseasonably warm and I have soaked it up as much as one possibly could have, spending mornings letting the chickens out, cleaning their coop, raking leaves up from the beds and pulling foliage from cosmos and sunflowers for the compost pile. I excitedly planted my first tomatoes and flowers on my potting bench and stared thru the plastic dome like an excited child waiting by the oven for that fresh, hot chocolate chip cookie..waiting. We moved our farm machinery back to the yard for its yearly maintenance before we start seeding in a couple of weeks and even spent evenings out on the swing in t-shirts while dinners cooked on the bbq. Its Spring here on the farm..and I love it!

of course with all the excitement that life offers, so comes life’s trials and challenges. this week Hudson is teething something fierce and my heart breaks for this period in his life. Two days ago, he began cutting 3 new teeth..all at once! his nose was running, drool trickled out from his sweet little mouth, a painful diaper rash erupted on his bottom and he was NOT happy!! My poor little baby is growing up!! Its exciting but challenging..
beyond the aches and pains of toddlerhood came even bigger heartbreaks for our family this week. My husbands grandma landed in the hospital near the tail end of our vacation with pneumonia and only recently was released. Then my mom let me know my uncle was hospitalized for stomach pains and was diagnosed with stomach cancer and is needing his entire stomach to be removed quickly. Then a text from my best friend about a personal heartbreak of her own…it was just one thing after another. People around me are hurting and I wish I could take that hurt for them and give them hope.
Then yesterday, I received a text from a very dear friend of mine that finally broke me. Her beautiful daughter, who just turned 1 last week and was born with down syndrome, has been diagnosed with a form of leukaemia. I was shattered. This family has already been through so much and this precious little girl..why? Why is this all happening? What is going on? I know its not for me to question the why’s or the how’s of this world but somedays I cannot help myself. Everyone is going through some form of struggle and I guess thats “just life”..whatever that means..
so here’s to the ups and downs of life. the struggles and the victories. the hurt and the joy.
here’s to life..

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  • dawn - Dawn, I’m so very sorry to hear all this sad news. That is a lot for anyone to take in, sending you lots of love and prayers and hugs friend.
    Poor Hudson, teething is so hard, more for us moms then them I think. I’m sure you’ve tried everything right? Once you find something that helps just keep doing it till he’s all better. Hugs for your sweet boy too.
    Take care and enjoy every minute as you already do, try to catch up on your PL soon and share please, would love to see them.ReplyCancel

we arrived home on the farm Friday evening and I can’t even explain to you how comforting it felt to pull into our yard. My dogs were happily barking and chasing our truck and I understood then how much this farm means to me. this weekend we were blessed with beautiful Spring-like weather, to which we played outside as much as we could. playing with our flock of chickens, cleaning up our yard from winter, swinging off the old tree, cooking meals on the bbq and getting my hands in the dirt to begin seeds again for this summers garden. the birds are happily chirping, the snow has almost disappeared (for now, at least) and our farm smells of musty earth and wet grass..I find myself looking for robins and meadowlarks..knowing that this could all too soon leave us for another wintry spell. but for now..I’m soaking up this sunny Spring weather. here’s a look at our weekend thru my lens..

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  • dawn - Hello Dawn, such wonderful gorgeous and sunshine pictures/memories you have. What a way to come back home, and HOME is always so good isn’t it. I feel the same way after a vacation too. Hudson is the cutest, getting so big so fast, it’s a joy watching him grow up thru your words and lens.
    YAY for digging in the dirt and spring blooms getting ready, so excited to welcome another spring. Our weekend was warm too, still too much snow to go out much but for once we didn’t have the furnace on and I wore short sleeves and didn’t need gloves on. Just those little things made my mood lighter and my smile bigger and my heart more happy.
    We are planning out the garden, Rich said we may have to skip pumpkins this year, they had a hard time last year and they need the break to come back better next year. Not sure I can go without those cuties though. We will scale back a bit more this year, wanting to do more family things this summer so don’t want the garden to be more then we can give time too. I also want to do a flower patch somewhere though.
    Happy almost spring Dawn!!
    p.s. saw your comment on my blog, thank you for visiting. Also, cheering you on during the PL catch up, YOU CAN DO IT!! Do one week at a time and you will get there.
    Have a good week xoReplyCancel

  • Linda - Oh my gosh Dawn i am in awe of your photos, simply stunning. Loved them all. Its great to go on holidays but its always nice to come home. We are going on our holidays on Monday to Penang/Malaysia for three weeks. No children. Eek Even though mine are 22 and 20 if we invite them they will always come however this time they both have work commitments so we are on our own.ReplyCancel