This time around, I removed the three big "Autumn Joy" sedums which survived the Spring remodel and I replaced them with three new, baby sedum "Thunderhead". "Thunderhead" has darker foliage and dark, rosy-pink bloom. It is supposed to stay a bit more compact than "Autumn joy". I winged it with this choice and have my fingers crossed for good garden performance. Dark-leaved sedums haven't done very well in my garden--they tend to grow half-heartedly, are weak and floppy, and are chewed to death by snails (and that's weird because I never see snail damage on the "Autumn Joy"--maybe it is proof that pests tend to target the weakest or struggling plants).
I also removed a couple of plants (a dwarf purple-leaved barberry and a couple of Sanguisorba "tanna") with the goal of streamlining the planting.
And I moved one of the Calamagrostis brachytricha a bit more to the front to get it out from under the marauding hardy geranium.
Here's the result:
Carnage of the day. The entire right-hand looks kind moth-eaten due to loss of the big sedums and general thinning-out of the rest of the plants. |
Too early in the game to comment, really, but I think the flow and rhythm of the planting is improved. The old arrangement had become noticeably static to my eye.
Another view--picture taken from the front walkway. You can appreciate what the darker flowers of the Sedum "Thunderhead" add to the composition--flower heads of "Autumn Joy" would have been frosty green to palest pink. There are a lot of pale, nondescript colors in the garden at this time of year including the green/buff/rosy hydrangea blooms, the parchment color of the spent allium flowers, and the gray/mauve of the Calamagrostis. I have high hopes for the bolder contrast provided by the new sedums' floral display.
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Remodeled front bed as seen from the entry path. |
And from the street:
Front garden as seen from the street. |
Geranium "Samobor" with melica and salvia lyrata "Purple Volcano". |
Small plants mixing it up along the front of the border. |
I'll leave you with one last garden picture, this time from the other side of the driveway--Guara backed by Calamagrostis "Karl Foerster". From these photos, you may be able to see that the seasons are changing around here! It's a full month early, but rains and cool, overcast days have returned to Seattle and it definitely feels like Fall.
6 comments:
I haven't had luck with the dark-leaved sedums either. I hope 'Thunderhead' works for you - I do like the contrast you've created. I'm also trying to use more swaths of the same plant instead of 3 of this and that. Even though I've had my current, larger garden for 5 years now, I'm still operating with a tiny garden mind-set.
Hi, Kris! I always have a problem balancing the needs of legibility/design from a distance and interest when viewed close-up. I think part of my problem (why this design remain unsatisfying to me) is that I may have short-changed overall design and legibility for the sake of close-up interest. Also, I've been trying to adapt to a new-to-me style of more intermingled planting instead of massing. I don't know if, maybe, I am just not doing it right or if that style is inappropriate for my size/style property and house.
Ah, like me, and most other gardeners, you're always tweaking. I really like that second to last shot of the dark Ajuga with the sedum and the Geranium 'Samobor,' and I think Hakone grass. I never thought to pair that Geranium with a dark Ajuga. I love it. That's a tweak I'll be copying this fall. I hope 'Thundercloud' works out for you, I do like its darker flower color.
Hi, Alison--thanks! The grass in the picture with the Geranium "Samobor" is Melica. There's also Allium "Summer Beauty" peeking into the photo--it has the more succulent looking leaves and you wouldn't probably mistake it for a grass, though :-) The Ajuga I used is "Mahogany"--I find it keeps its dark color pretty well all year round.
I think it looks wonderful, Emily! Funny - that same photo Alison commented on... I have a very similar version of that in my own garden. Great minds...! :)
Hi Anna! It's a good combo, no?
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