How to divide Iris

Iris is my favorite flower and over the years I have grown thousands of them, probably.  They are perennial and easy to grow, little maintenance is needed.  Typically every 3-5 years I will dig them up and divide them because they get crowded and won't produce blooms.  So this was the year to do it.  Here are photos on what I did and the end results.

This one was probably 5 years old and did not flower this year.  I took off all the side stuff and broke off three of the bumps.  

A typical iris bed around my house.  See how they are clustered and crowded.  I dug all this up with a pitch fork, so as not to break the roots, and divided them all, throwing away the small side plants and trimming the leaves into a fan shape.  

This is one cleaned-up flower bed.  The iris now have shorter leaves and no side growths.  The roots are buried but the rhizome is above the ground, as if it gets too much water it will rot.  Not a pretty smell, either.  The other plants are columbine and lily.

Pitch forked this clump.  Notice the middle rhizome has no leaves.  Time to throw it out and keep some of the larger side ones. 

This same clump broken up.

A very mature iris.  The roots were cut back, then replanted.  Dig the hole deep enough for the roots to fit below or behind the rhizome.  Then cover them with dirt and pack lightly.  Sometimes these things look like really ugly bugs  :-)  

These are some of the many larger iris I decided to keep, all trimmed and ready to replant.   I threw away a bag of the discarded leaves and plants.  Sad to do it, but I have no space for all that I would like to grow.

About 8 years ago I counted in my garden 100 iris growing!  They were mostly purple, but also a few other colors.  The thing is you can't tell what color the flower will be just by looking at it.  I have given away lots of iris by putting them in a basket out at the street with a sign stating they could have as many as they want.  

New Homes being built


This new housing development is about a ten-minute walk from us.  It will have 200 single family homes eventually.  Construction started in September 2016 and progressed to model home being built and opened in August 2017.   An opportunity for more families to be reach for Christ.
Streets were started in the summer. 

The back end of the development.  The park was the first thing finished. 


Photo taken from building across the street.  

The only street entrance and main street back to the park.

This sign showed up about August 25 announcing the model home opening. 


Outside the sales office, hence the "circus land" name.

View from second floor to living/dining room. Tatami room to right. Kitchen is typically small;  extends beyond the bottom of the photo. Bath and laundry would be to the right opposite the tatami room. 

Master bedroom decor.  There was a huge walk-in closet here, plus two other rooms upstairs.