This is a busy time of year but I still find a few minutes each
day to roam the woods surrounding the cabin.
I planted Phragmites australis (carrizo)
rhizomes around the gray water outlet to help keep the pond area clean as well
as provide a steady supply of arrow shafts à la Lipan Apache. We’ll be putting in a second pond after the
first of the year expressly for wildlife.
The birding has been phenomenal this fall and we spent a few minutes
earlier today making a fresh batch of suet for the great kiskadees, green jays
and golden fronted woodpeckers as well as a number of sparrow species and
titmice that ravage our suet stations daily.
We’re lucky because chile
del monte (chile pequin; chile petin), Capsicum
annuum, grows wild around the house particularly in the
granjeno/brasil/mesquite motts that make up this section of the South Texas
desert also known as the Sand Sheet. We
live on the very edge of the desert so there’s a mix of classic Texas Brushland
flora to the south of us and Sand Sheet flora to the north. This makes for an interesting array of woody
plants and herbaceous shrubs as well as a consortium of cacti within a few
steps of my home.
I picked a few chiles the other day behind the house. Mind you, chile
del monte is hot but the mockingbirds don’t seem to mind. Most plants get raided by the birds long
before I spot them. Look for the bright
red dots in shaded areas within the motts.
Now if you live in town and the climate is sufficiently warm for chile del monte then you can have your
own food source within reach. If you’re
a birder then you might consider adding chile
del monte to your garden.
Unfortunately, chile del monte
is susceptible to cold temperatures so that rules out planting in temperate
climates. Growing chile del monte is difficult unless you’ve got mockingbirds in your
area. But here’s how to grow this chile
around your yard in abundance. First you
need some sort of fence or similar object where mockingbirds can perch. Weed the area directly under your fence on
both sides if possible and add a generous amount of potting soil. Chile
del monte is drought tolerant but requires shade and moderately moist
soil. Second you need a preliminary source
of chile del monte. Some grocery stores sell the chile so buy a
large bag full and then place most of it in your bird feeders. The mockingbirds will find the chile soon
enough and gobble it up. Then they will
take a respite on your cedar fence or comparable platform nearby to digest
their meal. In order for chile del monte to sprout it must go
through the gut of a mockingbird or at least that’s the easiest way to
propagate the plant. In no time you’ll
have a line of chile plants growing along your fence or the back end of the dog
house or behind the monkey bars or anyplace the birds can perch. Now and then if you have a hankering for chile del monte you can go out and pick
a couple or three and pop them in your mouth.
By the way, ice tea works well for quenching the fire.
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