Category Archives: fellow gardeners

Local Open Garden 1.2

The Master Gardener Association for our area of the state recently brought back “Open Garden” visits. Members of the chapter are invited to attend a social evening of touring a peer’s garden. This garden was the second in a series of 3 for this season. It contained a shade/woodland garden and a perennial garden.

Here is some lungwort (Pulmonaria) greeting us in a bed at the front of the house.

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The property is surrounded by woodlands, with a large clearing holding both the house and the sunken perennial garden. This photo was taken from the shade garden at the edge of the woods looking across the bit of lawn to the back of the home.

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The woodland garden was full of textures not only from the plants, but also from sun puddles created by the tree canopy. Sweet woodruff (Galium odoratum) was the main ground cover, combined with an assortment of hosta, coral bell (Heuchara), ferns, brunnera, periwinkle (Vinca), japanese forest grass (Hakonechloa macra), bugleweed (Ajuga), and impatiens. Placed fieldstone covered in moss and metal sculpture served as hardscape elements.

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The path winding through the woodland garden was mulched with pine needles. I liked how the red of the needles echoed the rusting, metal sculpture. When I asked the gardener about the longevity of the needle color, she said the color will fade to a gray after a season or two.081015-DSC_0006 081015-DSC_0012

The main perennial garden at the back of the house was built into an incline created by large stones.

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I like when all the little details in the garden are considered. Here I thought the gardener did a great job blending something as utilitarian as a water drain into the rest of the garden.

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Containers of annuals were tucked away here and there throughout the perennial garden to add pops of color to areas which may not provide blooms all season.

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This rue was stopping every gardener as we all wondered at first what it was. I’ve never seen a meadow rue so large. I think it may be (Thalictrum rochebruneanum) which is native to Japan.

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There was also an eastern redbud (Cercis canadensis) cultivar in the garden whose leaves I thought were quite lovely.

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A garden bed I really enjoyed was this one.

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And the reason I enjoyed it was because of this sign posted at its front.

081015-DSC_0017I am guilty of doing the same thing, though have yet to come up with a clever title. At times a gardener brings home a plant when there isn’t really any plan on where to put it. In our host’s own words, this bed is “a holding garden for those plants that haven’t found their forever home in the main gardens.”

Oh, and it happened to be National S’mores Day. Bonus.

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Finally, a feature that made this garden even more special is that it is a certified wildlife habitat. Along with beautiful plantings, this gardener made choices with wildlife in mind. Food sources (pollen, nectar, seeds), water sources, shelter, and places to tuck away for cover were all present in the design. Many birds and pollinators were darting around the garden during our visit.

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To find out more about the National Wildlife Federation’s Certified Wildlife Habitat program visit http://www.nwf.org/How-to-Help/Garden-for-Wildlife/Create-a-Habitat.aspx.

Local Open Garden 1.1

This season, the Master Gardener Association for our area reinstated “Open Garden” visits. Members can spend an evening together while touring a peer’s garden. Carol DeVries’s garden was the first in a series of visits scheduled throughout the summer and contained a lower garden at the roadside, a small veggie patch, and both sun and shade perennial beds. The property is situated in a very rural area about a 20 minute drive from our city.

When approaching the drive, we were immediately greeted by a cast of colorful lilies.

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Some other perennials were mixed in as well. I like these daisies against the blue of the evergreen.

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These lovely, hybrid coneflowers are Echinacea ‘Cleopatra.’ They were glowing with the early evening sunlight.

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This plant is Stachys officinalis ‘Pink Cotton Candy.’ Whenever I see blooms atop thin stems in a dense planting, it seems to me the flowers are floating.

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Here is a snapshot walking up the driveway from the lower garden to the home. Off to the left is an extensive shade garden while straight ahead are the full sun perennials.

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A gravel path curved through the left area of the shade garden while stepping stones bridged the space between the drive and walking path. The main mix of plants throughout this shade bed was a variety of ferns, hosta, and astilbe.

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This Geranium ‘Sambor’ had uber cool foliage.

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This is an overall shot of the full sun bed off to the right of the top of the driveway. The hollyhocks were a nice touch to give the bed some height.

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The color was fantastic. Look at the contrast of those yellow blooms and dark stems. I love how the fine texture of the grass in the background ties in with the fine-leaf foliage of the purple Liatris in front as well.

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Here is a closer shot of the blood red, reach-for-the-sky hollyhock. I had given up growing hollyhock on the Lot because of weevils and rust. However, after seeing these I may give it another try next year.

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Here is another cuddly conifer, this one being a Pinus mugo ‘Mops.’

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The garden then blended back into a shade environment as we passed behind the house.

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I took a lot of “photo notes” on how the different garden beds were edged. We have still to decide how to edge the beds on the Lot. This garden had a great combination of edging techniques, exemplifying all edging materials do not need to exactly match.

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Here is a shot of a Heucheralla ‘Solar Eclipse.’ Variegation, silver, and chartreuse foliage all popped in the shade garden.

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The blue glass here are upturned and buried wine bottles. Many jokes were made about volunteering to help the gardener empty more bottles if the need should ever arise.

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I really like this idea of a stepping stone path through a garden bed instead of an edged path. This technique was used several times throughout this garden. I think I’ll utilize it for the backyard garden on the Lot.

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Here these stones are not only decorative, but offer a solid, raise edge for the mower wheel when the lawn is cut. Since it was designed this way, there is no need to go around raised edging and trim with the weed whacker.

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Here is a macro shot of the garden bed with those stepping stones from above.

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This little corner was nestled beside and in a shady nook of the house.

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And then I saw this fern. Oh my goodness it was cool. The fronds looked like they had tassels.

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Here’s a closer shot. How cool is that?! I am kicking myself now because I did not get the name of the fern from the gardener.

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Coming around the out of the shade was this small, sunny bed right in front of the house. Here there were more lilies in bloom and a little veggie patch.

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Aren’t these Alium seed heads like little pieces of sculpture? I like the little tier of stones in the backdrop as well.

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That dark foliage and these colors? *swoons*

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Like its sister bed across the drive, this sunny perennial bed was also a riot of bright colors.

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I’m loving the idea of these Open Garden visits. There are so many great, inspirational ideas and the resident gardener is on hand to ask questions. Two more to go this summer!

Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day – May 2015

Today is Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day, a meme hosted by May Dreams Gardens in which gardeners worldwide share what is blooming in their gardens. May on the Lot is when the garden beds really kick it into gear and the plants take off. Though we’ve had less rains than previous Springs, everything is looking good and growing well.

In a northern backyard bed this Sweet Woodruff (Galium odoratum) is coming back with a vengeance and just starting to bloom. It is beginning to gobble up the poor Coral Bell. The little Labrador Violets are have been blooming for awhile now.
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In one of the back alley beds Mt Airy Fothergilla is doing its Spring thing. It survived the winter with only a couple of snapped limbs.051515_mtairy

Blooming for its first time on the Lot is this dainty barrenwort (Epimedium grandiflorum ‘Lilafee’) along the Eastern side of the house. The crocus leaves illustrates the small size of the plant.051515_Epimedium-lilafee

Another barrenwort I brought home with me from the 2014 Portland Garden Bloggers’ Fling has reappeared and is right at home as well on the Eastern side. Where the previous plant’s blooms remind me of little sprites, these flowers look like small spiders or crabs.051515_Epimedium-Portland 051515_Epimedium-Portland2

The fuzzy pasque (Anemone patens) flower is in bloom, looking soggy here as I snapped photos between rain showers.051515_pasque-flower

The dwarf irises are blooming…051515_dward-iris

… as are the bluebells which snuck under the fence from the neighbor’s property. The foreground gives a glimpse of some of the Forget-me-nots (or rather “if you plant me once you’ll be rid of me nots”) blooming around the backyard.051515_bluebells

The foamflower (Tiarella) is in bloom.051515_fence-bed

The bleeding heart (Dicentra spectabilis alba) is as huge and beautiful as ever.051515_gate-bed

Both cranesbill plants are brightening up the pathway back to the compost bin.051515_cranesbill

The Sweet Tea Coral Bell is beginning to bloom. Hmm, I didn’t notice until this photo I forgot to clean up those old leaves at the base.051515_house-bed

The brunnera is blooming. I much prefer this well-behaved version of Forget-me-not.051515_brunnera

Huzzah! I did not kill the Jack-in-the-Pulpit I brought back from the 2014 Nursery Crawl. At the beginning of the season it received too much hot, afternoon sun. It seems happier here. 051515_jack-in-the-pulpit

By the way, this is Jack. He’s a pretty dapper fellow.051515_jack

This is a Geum triflorum ‘Prairie Smoke,’ the prize find of the 2014 Nursery Crawl. I picked it up when it was already done blooming, only able to enjoy the seed heads (which admittedly is why I purchased the plant). This season I am able to enjoy the blooms as well.051515_geum-prairie-smokeLoki’s bed is looking great with the lenten rose (Hellebores) and solomon’s seal (Polygonatum odoratum Variegatum) blooming.051515_lokis-bed

Here is a brand new bloom for this season. Our west-side neighbors have a beautiful strawberry patch growing against the fence. I’m wondering what these stowaways will get up to on the Lot.051515_strawberry-bloomAnother shot of the Eastern side of the house shows the rock foil (Saxifraga) and the dwarf  bugleweed (Ajuga x ‘Chocolate Chip’) in bloom.051515_rock-garden 051515_dragons-blood-bugleweedAnd for the very first season in bloom is our lilac. This shrub was given to us by Miss A after she received it from the Arbor Day Foundation. We placed it in the ground as a mere twig. It was mowed over not once but twice by the neighbors (oh the challenges of urban gardening)! It smells heavenly.051515_lilac

The last of the tulips are fading, and the Sweet William is full of buds in the South bed. The carpet flox is still full of color in the Southwest bed. That is all for the Lot this May! What is blooming in your garden?