Sunday, June 12, 2016

Garden: Today's Photos--Lilies!

I spent a bit of time today addressing the necessities of gardening:  weeding the patio, raking alder leaves, pruning the neighbor's rampant and invading ivy, and watering thirsty potted plants.  Heck, every plant was thirsty today--it rained a few nights ago, but apparently not enough to yield much accumulation.  I really should buy a rain gauge so I'm not so hit-and-miss about these things.

Anyway, there was just enough time this evening to run around the front garden with my camera.  A few hot days brought out the lilies and the Digitalis parviflora are also blooming:  it's one of my favorite combinations.


Lilium "Landini", Digitalis parviflora "Hot Chocolate", Clematis chiisanensis "Lemon Bells", and Geranium "Jolly Bee" with my neighbor's ancient cherry tree providing a backdrop.

Lilium "Landini" with Geranium "Jolly Bee" and Actaea simplex.

A big mess of stuff, very different from my garden of a few years ago.

The Reverse View--taken from my neighbor's property and facing North.
"Quick Fire" Hydrangea is pinkening already!






Saturday, June 4, 2016

Garden: Holes in the Border

Last time I wrote, I was pondering a mini-remodel of the front garden.  I'd decided to swap out some grasses and replace the orange-ish geums with another color.  It took a while to marshall my forces, but I've done it.  Where craft is concerned, I make no idle threats--if I see something that doesn't work or doesn't fulfill my vision, I ruminate on it (in a frantic, obsessive, not altogether pleasant fashion) until I find a solution and then I get it done.  

So, I decided to swap out the three Pennisetum "Hameln" for Melica uniflora f. albida.  Far Reaches Farm sells Melica, but their website showed "Out of Stock."  No problem!  I sent an email asking if they had any plants that would soon be ready to ship and they rounded up enough plants to fill my entire order.  I really like ordering from Far Reaches Farm! The people are always nice, the plants are always healthy, and the packaging is amazing.  See for yourself:

Big box of plants arrives via overnight.


Each individual plant is lovingly wrapped.


Plant Number One


Soon, there were twelve happy plants (and a GIANT pile of recyclable packaging materials).
This is what the front garden looked like before I dug into it:


Front garden (photo taken a couple of weeks ago).
And here (below) is the "After".  I've removed one of the big sedums and three Pennisetum and replanted with the baby Melica.  I also cut back the spent geraniums with the hope that they'd send up a fresh flush of leaves.  It looks a little choppy now, but I think the change will prove to have been a good one.  I love the airy spangles of the Melica seed heads and I think the Melica will make a nice continuity between the two Calamagrostis brachytricha that also share the space.


Garden after removing the Pennisetum and one Sedum "Autumn Joy" and replanting with Melica.
On the other side of the entry path, I swapped out the Geum "Flames of Passion" for "Banana Daiquiri". "Flames of Passion" was a nice plant--eager and trouble-free-- but it wasn't quite the color that I'd wanted.  I replaced it with "Banana Daiquiri".  (I'd been looking for Gimlet, another yellow Geum in the "Cocktail series", but Gimlet is unavailable locally and I decided to compromise for the locally available plant.)  "Banana Daiquiri" opens to a more sulphery yellow than I like, but it ages to a pleasant margarine yellow.  The yellow is picked up in the back of the planting bed by a Kirengeshoma koreana which will bloom with bell-shaped yellow flowers.  And the yellow is echoed across the path in the flowers of the Clematis chiisanensis "Lemon Bells".  I also prefer the way in which the yellow Geum flowers interact with the spring-green and coral new growth of the Vine Maples planted adjacent.

Geum "Banana Daiquiri"

Well, that's all I've got at the present.  We are enjoying warm, dry weather, so I'm spending a lot of time hand watering the new transplants and water-thirsty specimens throughout the garden.  I'm also working on a totally different, non-gardening project,  Maybe (fingers crossed) I can share soon a finished product post on that project.  :-)  On to those tasks!









Tuesday, May 3, 2016

Garden: New Pictures and New Plans

A few weeks ago, I had a little freakout on Facebook.  I was thinking about removing and replacing the sedums in the front garden and decided to ask the hive-mind for approval and planting suggestions.  

I've two problems with the sedums.  First, they are very dense--artifacts of a previous planting scheme--and I now prefer a wispier garden style.  Second, they are a very pale and minty green for most of the year and do not support the duskier color scheme I've been trying to create.  My initial idea was to remove the sedums and to replace them with something texturally lighter and tonally darker.   But, after thinking about it for awhile and ruminating on the answers I gleaned as a result of the freak-out, I decided to solve the problem in a different way.  I've decided to keep the sedums (at least three of the four) and to switch-out other plants instead.  

First to go were some lovely Amsonia tabernaemontana "Blue Ice" (which I really did like a lot), and also some Geranium macrorrhizum (which I really didn't like so much).  I replaced them with the hardy geranium "Samobor" that I'd already used on the other side of the garden.  (Thanks, Alison, for the suggestion!)  I hope that the dark splotch on each leaf will convey the darker, dusky theme that I'm trying to develop, and I'm happy to reduce the number of species in the garden by two--a small victory in the war against bittiness. 

The usual view.  
At the moment, I also enjoy the color echo between the geraniums and the just-opening alliums.

Geranium phaeum "Samobor"
I was still plotting against the sedums, however, until a post by Scott, who blogs at Rhone Street Gardens, led me to a different solution.  I've decided to switch-out some of the grasses instead of the sedums.  The grasses in this area are mostly Pennisetum "Hameln" which is a densely mounding grass.  I'm planning to replace them with Melica uniflora f. albida.  

Melica uniflora via Wikimedia Commons
Last year, I added some Melica to the rockery area and I've been pleased with it.  It does seem to seed around, but it also stayed green well into the fall, emerged early this spring, and has a much more loosely clumping form--all positives in my book.  I hope that the looser forms of the Geranium and the Melica will impart enough lightness to the planting.  And probably, I should also consider dividing the sedums--I haven't done that for a while and each clump is bigger than a bushel basket.

Here's the same planting area photographed from the opposite side:

Front garden with Geranium "Samobor" and lots of Sweet Woodruff.
And a couple of close-ups of various plant combinations:

Geranium "Samobor", Myrrhis odorata (Sweet Cicely), a branch of Hydrangea "Bombshell",
and Allium "Purple Sensation".  I hate that the Allium leaf tips are already browning--this is why,
for years, I avoided panting alliums.
Myrrhis odorata, Geranium "Samobor", and Sweet Woodruff, with Hakonechloa macra in the foreground.
Allium "Purple Sensation"
Here (below) is how the whole thing looks when viewed from the sidewalk.  One thing that I'd like to change about this view is the clump of coral-colored gems to the right of the walkway.  I've been planning to swap them out for years, but I haven't found the ideal substitute.  I want to replace them with another Geum, probably something from the new Cocktail series.  I really like "Gimlet" (a pale butter yellow),  but I haven't found it available locally.  Plenty of "Mai Tai", yes, but no "Gimlet".  I'm issuing an APB for "Gimlet"--please report all sightings promptly!  Or maybe I'd be better off by placing an-online order.  Gotta make up my mind and act fast while there is still stock available.

View from the street.
Bonus picture of the strip of ground to the north of the driveway.  I removed all the Nassella tenuissima (which never looked very good despite my constant efforts) and replaced it with Sesleria autumnalis.  This is also the new home of the displaced Geranium macrorrhizum.

Grasses, alliums, leucanthemum, and Geranium macrorrhizum on the north side of the driveway.
And that's all I've got at the moment.  Bye for now--if I keep editing, I'll miss the rest of Spring!  

Thursday, April 14, 2016

Garden: Cell Snaps 4.14.16

For the past couple of weeks, my time spent in the garden has been limited. (Our dog has been deathly ill and I've spent an inordinate amount of time on worry, vetting, special care, and more worry...but she's on the mend now, I hope.)  During that time, we've had a few days of really beautiful, unseasonably warm weather, a bit of light rain, and some pleasant, sunny but cool days.  And the garden has responded well.  Here are a few quick photos, snapped this morning with my cell phone.  The first is the usual view, taken from the entry path, facing South.  The dark-leaved plant in the lower right is Lunaria annua "Rosemary Verey".  I admire the dark foliage and the way the plant bulks up fairly early in Spring.  I hope that I can overcome my dislike of its orchid pink/violet flowers--I want to leave the flowers on the plant so I can enjoy the decorative seed heads later on in the season.  And, I have yet to see whether the blooms complement or fight with the flowers of the Allium "Purple Sensation" which will bloom in the same area at about the same time, I think.  Edging the border near the Lunaria are some new hardy Geranium phaeum "Samobor".  I recently added these in an effort to strengthen the dusky theme I've been trying to create.

Front border overview.

Close-up of Geranium phaeum "Samobor" taken about a week ago.  These plants (purchased recently) are blooming earlier than those that over-wintered in my garden.
More early risers in the front garden:  Myrrhis odorata (Sweet Cecily) emerging from a ground cover of Sweet Woodruff,  with Chasmanthium latifolium (Northern Sea Oats) in the background and Hakonechloa macra in the foreground.  I like the purity of the all-white-and-fresh-greens color palette.  Other plants contributing to the ground layer are Anemone blanda, Cardamine trifoliata, and a native strawberry--all with white flowers.  I also planted a bunch of Corydalis solida in mixed colors, but they did not come up and I'm finding that I feel relieved that they did not.  

Early risers.
This (below) is the Carport Bed.  It's always a riot of color in early Spring.  I recently transplanted some of the Ajuga "Mahogany" to the other side of the path to help unite the two planting areas.

Carport Bed.

Carport bed, reverse view.  Later-season interest is provided by Hydrangea paniculata "Bombshell", Geranium "Jolly Bee", "Summer Beauty" alliums, and Japanese Anemone "Honorine Jobert".

Geum "Flames of Passion" with burgundy-leaved Ajuga reptans "Mahogany", and
Ajuga genevensis. (Photo taken about a week ago.)
And, finally, this is the sick dog--feeling a lot better and able to enjoy some time at the dog park.

Frankie.







Friday, April 1, 2016

Garden: Epilobium angustifolium album--Am I Gonna be Sorry?

Remember last Spring when I grew some Epilobium (now Chamerion) angustifolium album from seed?  The seeds were soooo tiny!

Epilobium angustifolium album seeds--each is so tiny that it would barely
 fill the counter in the "8" in the date on the penny.
I grew two batches, one in grow pellets and one in a milk carton greenhouse.  

Epilobium seedlings growing in the milk carton greenhouse.
I got 5 seedlings from each batch, but only the ones grown in the milk carton thrived and grew strong.  It was fortunate that they did as I had hoped to end up with EXACTLY five plants.


Epilobium seedlings potted on.

I lost one of the adolescent plants due to a botched transplant attempt, but four plants lived and each went on to produce a single, wispy stalk topped with a single bloom.

Epilobium angustifolium album glamor shot.
A couple of weeks ago, I took advantage of a sun break to wander around the garden admiring fresh Spring growth.  What are these seedlings?, I wondered.  At first, I thought they might be either lilies or alliums--neither plant has ever self-seeded in my garden, so I have no idea what the seedlings look like.  But, a bit of internet sleuthing dispelled these thoughts.  Then, I realized that they MUST be the Epilobium babies!  Last year's scrawny single-stemmed plants have produced about 10 robust stems apiece.  

"Mystery seedlings" on March 13, 2016, growing among alliums.
Here they are, today, growing strongly.  Am I gonna wish that I hadn't planted them?

A sunny, cell phone picture shows robust growth.
I think I'll be OK for the moment, at least.  I planted the Epilobium with the hope that they would mingle with the out-of-control hardy Geranium "Jolly Bee".  And the runners are supposed to be easy enough to pull out if they encroach on the more delicate garden plantings.  Still...I worry about plants that reproduce by a factor of 10.