Wednesday, June 21, 2017

Garden: Gettin' the Photos Outa the Camera

Well, I haven't been spending a lot of time in the garden recently.  Thank goodness it pretty much takes care of itself!  I don't have much patience for diva plants, even in the best of times. And this year has been far from the "best of times"!  Spring was one of the coldest and wettest on record and it's only been in the last few weeks that greenery and floral abundance have taken hold.  The photos in this post represent a dump of everything that was on my camera.  Some of the photos were taken about a month ago and I took the remainder yesterday.  I've organized the photos by location, though, so you'll probably get a little mental whiplash from the switch back and forth between early Spring and present. 

Back in May--Geum and Salvia lyrata near the entry path.
Entry path at present.  The geums have passed, but the Geranium "Rozanne" is just coming on.

Across the path (last month) with Allium and Geranium phaeum "Samobor".
Well, maybe "Samobor".

I have an issue with my geraniums.  There are five new plants--sold as "Samobor"-- adjacent to the entry path.  They are big, tall, and rangy--at least hip height on me, or even waist-height in bloom.  Across the garden are four or five geraniums, also purported to be "Samobor" that I planted a couple of years ago.  These plants are small and compact--only about knee height in bloom.  The flowers are paler--more of a rosy violet.  And, the leaves are smaller and more rounded.  Which are the real "Samobor"?  Ideally, I want all the plants to match and to resemble the ones I first planted.  I've already cut down the plants near the entry path--they got waaaay too tall and rangy for my liking--in hope that they will respond with a flush of new foliage.  I've been trekking around to local nurseries with samples of both leaves to compare with any new "Samobor" plants that I might buy as replacements--but I think that, maybe, leaf propagating or dividing the plants that I want to duplicate will be the surest strategy to cultivating a uniform grouping of plants.

Digitalis parviflora with Allium seeded and Clematis.  I love the mix of floral shapes.

Allium, Melica, and Clematis.
Digitalis parviflora (present).
The southwest corner of this garden bed.

Earlier in spring. I think this area will become better over time as the purple-leaved Actaea grows up and fills in. These are the compact and tidy Geranium "Samobor".

Reverse angle--standing outside the fence at the southwest corner.

Standing on the sidewalk (a month ago, and before I cleaned-up the Pennisetum).

Reverse angle of the same.  The geraniums have gone over, but the Astrantia are blooming strongly, now. ( current photo).

Nodding bud on the Allium "Summer Beauty" with Calamintha and Geranium "Brookside".

Geranium "Brookside" in the sidewalk rockery.


Sidewalk rockery at present with Geranium "Brookside", Pennisetum "Little Bunny", Melica uniflora, Nepeta "Junior Walker", Calamintha, and self-seeded lady ferns.








Friday, March 31, 2017

Garden: The Garden is Awakening

It's been a long, cold, wet Winter, but the signs are clear:  Spring is on the way.  

Strong growth on the Allium "Summer Beauty".
Colorful mixed foliage adjoining the entry path.  Geranium "Samobor", Melica uniflora, and Ajuga reptans "Mahogany".
Melica uniflora, sedum, Ajuga reptans, and Geranium "Samobor".

Cardamine trifoliata--a garden-worthy relative of our early spring, annual weed Cardamine hirsuta "Hairy Bittercress".  I thought they were gone--totally consumed by the advancing tide of Sweet Woodruff--but they are back and making a strong showing.

Front garden and entryway.
Lots of baby alliums "Purple Sensation".  I love how the camera can help you to see things--I saw the hair-like seedlings but couldn't see the little seed caps until now.

Across the way, in the garden to the north of the driveway.  (Incidentally, still destroyed by the recent plumbing disaster.)  Allium nigrum is forming robust clumps.  

Darmera peltata and Hakonechloa macra "All Green" are fighting it out in the Arbor Bed behind the house.  I had no idea the Hakonechloa would be such a robust competitor, but I think the Darmera will prevail in glacial fashion.

Fritillaria meleagris in the Arbor Bed--proving that it truly does prefer swampy conditions.
I'm having a difficult time getting enthused about the garden this year.  It is still destroyed by the plumbing disaster that began on December 23rd.  We are considerably out of pocket due to the whole experience and I haven't gotten my head around opening our pockets AGAIN to make the necessary repairs.  Most likely, I will wait until the weather improves and do as much of the work as I can, by myself, in order to save some money.

Since I haven't been out coddling the garden--I never do!--I appreciate the robust plants that are not just surviving but thriving in the prevailing conditions.  It seems like every plant is a thug--the known thugs like Sweet Woodruff, but also some surprising contenders like the Hakonechloa and Melica--and I appreciate them all. The alliums (as a group) are doing fabulously well, too.

I'm also really pleased to see robust new growth on the Sedums "Thunderhead". I purchased three baby plants late last Summer as replacements for S. "Autumn Joy".  "Autumn Joy" was a fantastic plant, but very dense and too frosty green.  The foliage on "Thunderhead" is dark and purple-tinged and the blooms are a very dark ruby rose.  "Thunderhead" was one of three new, dark-leaved sedums that I tried during the last couple of years and it has performed best of all.  Of the others, "Purple Emperor" is alive but struggling and "Matrona" rotted and fell over mid-winter.  

We've had only a day or two of sun so far, but I did manage to take care of most of the annual Spring clean-up.  I hope that we'll see more sun soon--I do need to get on with mending the garden and my mood.

:-)


Tuesday, December 27, 2016

Garden: Plumbing Problems Wreck the Garden

The garden is looking bad.  Not just because it is winter and most of the plants have turned to brown mush, but because it is currently besieged by plumbers. And I have a mini-rant about this:  I know that these guys are going to be a bit rough around the edges--they are blue collar workers, not management professionals--but this particular group of guys are the WORST communicators with whom I have worked.  They grunt and snort.  They make grandiose, apocalyptic statements.  They seem unable, even when pressed, to use language precisely or descriptively.  They are loutish and (clearly) they are not gardeners.  And they are trampling around, digging big holes in my garden, and standing around (in the garden) to talk and just to stooge around. One guy assured me that they would do their best to minimize damage to the garden while standing IN the garden with the heel of his boot directly on top of an ornamental grass.  Aaaaaarrrgh!



Excavated soil.  Did they put it on the driveway on a tarp?  No, they just threw it up on top of nearby plants.

So, all this began on the 23rd when I went out, first thing in the morning, to empty the recycling bin and I saw "contaminated" water bubbling up out of the ground in the middle of the small garden to the north of the driveway.  We called a couple of plumbing companies and got the one that was able to come out in less than three days.  The source of the damage seemed, from the beginning, to be suspiciously close to the location where a soil-sampling company had taken samples to check for leakage from our neighbor's decommissioned heating-oil tank.  (It has since been confirmed to our satisfaction that the soil-sampling company did drill through and collapse our main sewer pipe.    We have yet to know whether or not we can expect financial aid from the soil-sampling company.) The repair contract is about $27K.


Excavations to the north of the driveway.

At present, the worker-men are still on-site and will be through Thursday, they say.  They have dug at least four enormous holes in the garden--one of them in the back patio.  This one caused me the most angst because the guy stood in the middle of the patio, looked around, and said something like, "Well, this doesn't look like any big deal--we'll just dig all this up."  I freaked out about that!  Because it was a HUGE amount of work to install the patio.  (Not to mention the gratuitously offered pejorative assessment!) After some discussion, an alternate plan came to light which necessitated some expensive hardware pieces, but eliminated quite a bit of digging and so was a fairly even trade-off from a costs perspective.  They still wound up digging out about 12 of the concrete slabs from the patio.  And I know that I will need to do the repair/restoration work because I do not think that they intend to do it and neither do I want them to do it!


I numbered the slabs with a china marker and took photos to aid in reinstalling the pieces.




A pretty big/deep hole in the patio.


The path along the side of the house with two holes and removed concrete slabs.
I've been hiding from them--doing the ostrich thing.  I went flying out of the house yesterday to confront them after I heard/felt two huge thumps against the side of the house (still don't know what that was) and, again, when I heard what turned out to be them roughly dragging my patio bench, by one corner, across the uneven cement.  Who does that?  Neanderthals!    I am so disappointed and angry.

Casualties of the excavation.
ETA:  This experience has given me a new appreciation of the importance of conveying at least the appearance of respect for a customer's property :-( !

Monday, November 28, 2016

Travelogue: San Francisco, 2016

Hi, Everybody!  Not much gardening going on, here.  I get envious of the Fall garden pictures posted around the web--our Fall begins with rain and everything soon turns to brown mush.  And, no, I am not going to memorialize the brown mush in blog photos.  Instead, here are some cell phone snaps from our recent, Thanksgiving trip to the Bay Area.

Obaid loves In-N-Out (headquartered in Los Angeles, where we used to live, but unavailable in the Pacific Northwest) and I suspect he chose our hotel based on the fact that In-N-Out was our immediate neighbor.  This important criterion aside, our hotel was well-located--just a block or so from Fisherman's Wharf. 


Zachary is giving us the stink-eye.
This was Zachary's first trip to the Bay Area, so we planned the sorts of sight-seeing adventures that would appeal to an almost-ten-year-old.

A colorful restaurant on Fisherman's Wharf.

Tall ships at Hyde St. Pier.

We chose not to buy tickets to tour the ships, but there were plenty of interactive displays available on the pier.
We'd previously watched a TV Food Network show about the Boudin Sourdough bakery, so we made a special effort to see it "in real life".  We ate lunch there, toured the bakery, and bought a couple of breads to take away.

A tiled entry mat at Boudin Bakery--Fisherman's Wharf, San Francisco.
The bakery makes specialty breads in a variety of decorative shapes--turtle, alligator, fish, crab, teddy bear, lobster, turkey, etc.  We bought a couple of crabs to take with us to Thanksgiving dinner.

Shaped breads displayed at the factory tour.

Bakery workers viewed from the tour catwalk.
Zachary really wanted to go on the open-topped, double-decker bus tour.  It was a good way to see the city and, had we planned differently, we could have bought two-day passes and hopped on and off at each destination around the city.

I enjoyed seeing the city from the slightly different perspective of the open-topped double-decker bus.
Zachary's favorite part about the tour was that the lower-hanging street trees came inside the coach and would whack you if you weren't ready to duck.  

This tree amused us--it was hung with over-large pine air fresheners.  A local resident told us this was a neighborhood protest against the cooking smells (heavy, icky, fried food and super-yummy bbq smoke) issuing from several nearby restaurants.

Air-freshener tree.
The tour crossed the golden gate bridge.

Golden Gate Bridge from the bus top.
This utility vehicle (called a "Road Zipper") was the neatest thing!  It picked-up and then replaced the road median to create two alternate-travel lanes.  It was able to achieve this without interrupting traffic.

Road Zipper at work!
On our last full day in the city, we went to the California Academy of Sciences in Golden Gate Park.  It is a good natural history museum.    We had lunch at a restaurant located just outside the park and Obaid and Zachary took photos at a small magic store.

Zachary and Obaid.  The disco-y magician is funny, right?  The rabbit's got some serious 'tude.
At SFO (the San Francisco Airport), there was a display of flight attendant fashion through the years. This Pucci outfit was kinda eye-popping.  Frankly, I think it's hideous and I wonder why they chose to go SO trendy?  

Emilio Pucci uniform for Braniff International Airways.


And now, safely back home in Seattle.  Happy Holidays, everyone!

Monday, October 10, 2016

Garden: Today's Photo(s)

This garden is planted in the small strip of land located to the north of our driveway.  Fall is undoubtedly its best season.

Cut-leaf Sumac and Aster "Wood's Blue" (I think) looking down our sloped driveway to the sidewalk.
Reverse view of the same Sumac and Asters.
Similar view--looking towards the house with the carport in the background.
Sumac with Calamagrostis "Karl Foerster" and my neighbor's oak tree in the background.  A beautiful, sunny moment.
Bugs.  Once I spotted one, I started seeing them everywhere.
Enjoying the intermittent, bright, sunshine.