Friday, May 29, 2015

Garden Visit: Head's-Up, Peter!

Today, I stopped by "That Place on 85th" to snap some photos to share with my friend Peter who blogs at The Outlaw Gardener.  For some reason, I think he'd like this shop.

Metal flowers abound!
The real name of the store is Home & Garden Art LLC, but I bet that more people know it as "Hey...yeah, I know that place!"  It's located on NW 85th Street in Seattle--not far from Swanson's Nursery.

Eighty-fifth is a pretty busy street--a major cross-town arterial--but you're not going to bypass this shop without noticing it:  The flock of ten foot tall reclaimed metal chickens will see to that.  And the chicken welcoming committee is just the beginning.  This shop is so crammed full of fun, color, and whimsy that a visit would put a smile on the face of even the grumpiest customer.

Lotsa chickens...

Tell me that you can't find a place in your garden for a metal chicken... 

...or a flying pig...or a dog...or a goat...or a really festive bottle tree...
But I don't want to give the impression that it was all whimsical, animal-themed items.  No--they've got all kinds of stuff.  There was a lot of typography (both decorative, painted metal signs and the three-dimentional letters and phrases that we've all seen somewhere)...and an assortment of furniture...

...and LOTS of gates and arbors and trellises...

Metal trellises representing a variety of more traditional themes. Aren't those bird stakes kind of sweet?

More trellises and gates.  There was a lot to choose from--these two pictures
represent only about half of the available styles.
...rain chains...


...and hardware...


...and concrete statuary...and decorative tiles...and art glass garden stakes...and there were also some clean-lined and modern metal pieces, although those were definitely in the minority.  They buy some items and make others so, if you can't find exactly what you're looking for, you could probably talk them into making or modifying a piece so that it is just right.  

And if you didn't find what you were looking for, maybe you should just buy a mariachi band's worth of metal frogs.  (They are, seriously, better than the real thing.  I mean, have you ever seen those poor taxidermy frog musicians that you can buy in Tijuana?!  Trust me...if your taste runs to mariachi frogs, just get the metal ones.  They've got them here!)  

Frog mariachi band.
My apologies for the cell phone snaps--initially, I'd only planned to take reference photos, but the experience proved to be too much fun to not share!

Thursday, May 28, 2015

Garden: Sign of the Times

The shade sail is UP!

Front entry with shade sail and lawn renovation project.
The sail is not super-visible from this angle, as it shades the small patio behind the fence.  (See it in the reflection?)  It helps to keep the house cool by shading our big windows from the morning sun, but it also helps to keep window glare from burning the vine maple.*

Happy sunny day, people!

*That reminds me--I should buy some anti-dessicant for use on the same tree.  Poor thing, it needs all the help it can get.  I'd no idea the sun glare would be so vicious.

Thursday, May 14, 2015

Garden: A Tale of Two Seeds

One night recently (in the middle of the night!), it came to me in a flash of clarity that the plant I need in my front garden bed is Epilobium angustifolium "album" or the white form of fireweed.

My front garden features plants that have (generally) one of three shapes:  dense, mounded plants that come from a tight crown (like Sedum "Autumn Joy", hardy geraniums, Amsonia "Blue Ice" and even some of the grasses and Allium "Summer Beauty"); then there are the tall verticals, my favorite of which is the Digitalis parviflora; and, finally, the weavers, creepers, and ground covers which are supposed to knit it all together and to provide a light and airy counterpoint to the rather solid mounds of foliage.  It is within this group that I have had the most difficulty in choosing the right plants.  I tend to choose annuals for this and, in the past, I've used Ammi magus, Ammi visnaga, Euphorbia "Diamond Frost" and various other things.  While there have been some successes, I have not yet come up with a combination that really hits the target.  

I devoted much time during the winter to solving this dilemma--surfing the internet and paging through seed catalogs.  As a result, I ended up with TONS of seeds--too many seeds, too many varieties, and just too many half-baked ideas.  So I decided to back away from the seed stash and think things through.  I knew that I wanted, maybe, just three varieties of filler plants--one taller, one shorter, and one as an accent.  I already had Nigella "African Bride" in mind as a shorter filler and a really dark purple/black breadseed poppy as an accent plant.  What, then, would be a suitable taller plant with ethereal white flowers--preferably spikes instead of umbels (because I already have a lot of umbels)?  And that's when I decided that I needed the Epilobium 'Album" to complete the picture.  I found seed at Plant World Seeds  and ordered it (two packages plus a third one free with purchase) and in a week or so I had yet another three packages of seeds to add to the collection.  Ironic, isn't it, that my solution to having too many varieties and too much seed was to buy more seeds?!

Tiny, tiny Epilobium seed.

Wow.  Those seeds were really tiny.  I had to use a dampened metal skewer to lift small groups of them into the planting pellets.  I have no idea how many seeds were included in the package, but I struggled to plant-up 20 individual grow pellets.  I sprinkled a second package of seeds into a milk carton "greenhouse" and I put those in a somewhat protected area outside.  And then I waited.  I pretty much ignored the seeds in the milk carton.  But I showered love on the seeds in the grow pellets--I misted them lightly with spring water,  monitored and adjusted the heat of their grow mat, and pushed them around the dining table to make the most of the available sunlight.  

So... I expect that you know how this turns out.  The seeds in the grow pellets sprouted a couple of days before those that were planted in the milk carton, but since then they have struggled and dwindled.  The seeds in the milk carton have thrived.  In each case, five seeds sprouted.  I thought it was a bit weird that the germination rate was that consistent (more than likely a coincidence), but it was also low--I read online somewhere that germination rate is about 1/5-6 and I have to believe that there were more than 25-30 seeds per packet. 

April 19th -- Here is the one of the first sprouts from the planting pellet group.  This was several weeks after planting and it was still so tiny that I had to use the macro lens to photograph it.  I've got my doubts about the paternity of this one--I think a white-flowered form would be pale green in all parts.  At first, I thought the red might be due to sunburn or to some other cultivation issue, but I now suspect that it might be a rogue plant due to open pollination.


Baby Epilobium angustifolium "album" (?) in a grow pellet on April 19th.

Grow pellet group on May 13th.  Only the one red seedling and one tiny green plant remain.

Milk carton group on May 13th.  Five healthy babies.  Time to pot them on, I think.  They grew pretty dramatically during the 2-3 warm days we had recently.

Tiny seeds equals tiny plants--I guess that's just common sense.  But I can't get over how tiny these plants still are eight weeks or so after sowing.  I'd hoped to see flowers this year, but now I just hope that I'll be able to find the plants themselves after planting out! 

The Epilobiums will go in the bare areas towards the bottom right of the photo--
mixing with the lilies.

The wide view shows our grass-renovation effort in progress.  Fingers crossed, the Epilobiums will go in the area to the far left and the Nigella and whatnot will go in amongst the sedums and Pennisetum "Hameln".





Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Garden: Today's Photo from the Carport Bed

I wonder if this will be the height of the bloom for plants in the Carport Bed?  While this planting will be less floriferous in Summer and Fall than it is at present, I hope it will  continue look nice as the grasses predominate and the Sweet Cicely and "Jolly Bee" geranium come into flower.  Here's a photo taken today from a bee's ankles point of view:

Lots of bee-food in the Carport Bed.

Sunday, March 29, 2015

Garden: The Monster on the Other Side of the Street

The die was cast about fifteen years ago when my neighbor Jean decided to forego regular maintenance on her modest, mid-century home.  So it was probably inevitable that, last year, she sold her home to one of those developers who post "Cash for Ugly Houses" signs on telephone poles and bus shelters.  No one knew that she was going to sell her home and, as far as we know, it never went on the market.  As her neighbors, the first sign we had that something was afoot was a 1-800-GOT JUNK truck pulled up out front, closely followed by a team of surveyors who scouted out the property boundary markers.  It was pretty obvious what was going to go down and it was Jean's house.


Jean's house bites the dust.

Fast forward to today, when the new monstrosity goes on the housing market.  I view the new house with more equanimity than most.  Although I feel crowded by it and rue the loss of the view of morning sunrises, it is not looming over my home as it does its immediate neighbors.   But it is painful to look upon it and to reflect on the poor design, the missed opportunities, and the builder's failures to make the most of the architecture and the "landscape".  I could go on and on (and, in fact, I have--to whomever would listen) about the lack of thought that went into the design of the sides of the home, the bilaterally mis-matched windows, the inclusion of the gimpy bathroom windows which completely ruin the appearance of the facade, the poor design of the enclosed roof-top deck, the (to my mind) incorrectly built stoop, the unlivable floor plan, and the complete failure to honor the "paperclip" design motif--but I won't.  Today, I want to focus on the failures of the "landscaping".  It's just so bad.  And the coup de grace is that I overheard the landscaper and the builder in discussions and one said, "Well, it's all going to die anyway, but it looks good now." And the other one said, "And that's what's important, isn't it?!"  Enough said!  Well, maybe not.  Judge for yourself if it looks "good" now.


This is the new house in all its glory.  The planting on the left includes a small maple, a pieris, and a cordyline or dracaena of some sort,  On the right there's a weeping pussy willow planted about six inches from the foundation.  And on the very far right...

Look at the poor azalea that's squeezed into a square foot and a half of soil to the right of the stoop.  Do you see why I think they built the stoop incorrectly?  Wouldn't it make more sense to align the top of the deck with the outside of the wood paneled portion of the facade?  If done that way, the little bit of unclad foundation wouldn't be exposed, the line of the deck would make much more sense in relation to this portion of the facade, and the step would extend all the way to the driveway--thereby negating the need for the odd little bit of mismatched paving and the azalea.  Mistakes were made, in my opinion.

So sad azalea.  Infill patch of random, tumbled pavers.

Along the sidewalk--boxwood, vinca, ajuga, boxwood, vinca, ajuga... (and horse-tail).
Along the driveway--juniper, skimmia?, vinca, ajuga, juniper, skimmia, vinca, ajuga... Don't forget to check out the swale in the Home Depot paver walkway (top of the photo)--that first step's gonna be a doozy when it rains.  And why didn't they think ahead to pour the walkway (and maybe other landscape features) at the same time as they poured the cement driveway?

Potted arrangement of dracaena and Clematis armandii (I think).

SO.  That's the new house.  I'm going to start working (right now) on keeping my opinions to myself.  If past experience serves as a guide, the new residents will have an uphill battle to become part of the neighborhood.  Most neighbors feel as though purchase of a home like this is a public display of moral failings.  And, certainly, it will be hard to respect the design sensibilities of people who can not immediately register the shortcomings of this construction. But not as hard as it has been to ignore the recent, chipper remarks of the real-estate agent who thinks we should all be happy that this new home will raise our property values! And that's debatable because it is cheaper (in every way) than is our home on a per square foot basis.