Monthly Archives: June 2015

Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day – June 2015

It’s time for another Bloom Day post, a meme hosted by May Dreams Garden, and the rain has made this one quite soggy. Spring  is passing and summer is bringing with it humidity, especially this past weekend. Warm, gentler rainfall is adored by the plants on the Lot and they are quickly growing larger in size as a result.

Blooms that are finishing include the sweet william, peonies, sweet woodruff, and false indigo. Blooms now appearing on the Lot include:

Blanket Flower (Gaillardia)
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Roses – Here is our monster climber (the Other Half’s nemesis) at the southwest bed.
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And here is the red climber we found squished between the now removed arborvitae and the yew in the south bed. This one usually blooms a week or so ahead of the above climber.
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In an east bed is a second-season resident, first-time bloomer, masterwort (Astrantia major?).061515_masterwort

The native beardtongue purchased last year is also blooming. It’s quite happy in its dry, morning light / afternoon shade bed.
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Here is a pretty beardtongue (Penstemon) I adore for it’s burgundy stems and dark green foliage. The lighter blooms provide quite the contrast. This plant popped up in the backyard bed in front of the blooming jupiter’s beard (Centranthus ruber). The mother plant lives in the fence bed.
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Speaking of Jupiter’s beard, when looking up its latin name, I discovered another of its common names is “red valerian.” It shares the same family, Caprifoliaceae (the honeysuckle family), as valerian (Valeriana officinalis)… which happens to be blooming now in the alley bed. This lacey bloom has quite a pretty scent.061515_valerian

Also in the full sun alley bed, this allium I received from Mrs. N is in bloom. I leave the seed head up all season as a living sculpture.061515_allium

Across the back drive from the alley bed is an area of yard being used as a pseudo holding pen. Eventually, I hope to edge out a bed for the plants living there. One such plant is this sunny lily just beginning to bloom.
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The variegated deadnettle (Lamium) from Mom G. is now blooming and will continue throughout the season. In this photo it is snuggling with a maidenhair fern (Adiantum). This plant grows as a ground cover and spreads quickly when it is in the right place. I often have to trim it back several times during the summer so it doesn’t overwhelm its neighbors.
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Nearby the foamy bells (Heucherella) is blooming. 061515_foamy-bell

The cheery tickseed (Coreopsis) is in bloom in the fence bed.061515_coreopsis

And finally, here is a bloom from one of the annual containers. 061515_container

Sneak Peak – Japanese Garden is Here

The Other Half and I visited the Frederick Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park last night for a members’ sneak peak of the completed Japanese Garden being unveiled this weekend. Throughout the past year or so we had been catching glimpses of the garden being constructed. Wooden walkways and buildings were constructed, hills and waterfalls were created, and large boulders and rocks were placed. Selected trees were left were they stood while more trees were added. Slowly the garden was taking shape.

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The 8 acre garden was designed by Hoichi Kurisu. Central to the layout is a large pond encircled by a pathway. I really enjoyed the layering of textures with rocks, water, and vegetation throughout the garden.

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The plant palette was really interesting because it was diverse within a species of plant but still reserved in the number of species. Some staples of the garden included hosta, iris, spirea, lilac, japanese maple (Acer palmatum), shrubby cinquefoil (Potentilla fruticosa), and numerous conifers.

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The trees throughout the garden were absolutely stunning. Included were niwaki, “garden trees pruned to look like the essence of mature trees.” Many of the trees brought into the garden and planted near the water’s edge were placed at an angle to simulate what would occur in nature. Still other trees provided berries to attract a host of song birds. The Other Half spotted a Cedar Waxwing. He then proclaimed the day a success due to his hobby of “uber-casual birding.”

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The Other Half enjoyed the small paths that lure a viewer off the main trail to explore little pocket gardens and navigate across creeks via stepping stones. I look forward to returning to the garden to sit in one of those little areas, surrounded by the vegetation and the sounds of the water and birds. According to the literature we received during our visit, “The Japanese Garden aesthetic emerged from centuries of Shinto and Buddhist beliefs that emphasized a reverence for nature and a contemplative lifestyle.”

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And of course it wouldn’t be a garden in our city without sculpture! We do love our sculpture here. Contemporary and more traditional sculpture embellished the already beautiful hardscape.

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Traditional elements of a Japanese garden included bamboo and wood accents, a zen rock garden, gazebos, and a tea house.

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Did I mention the textures?! Seriously, I just wanted to cuddle some of those conifers. Here are just a few examples.

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I look forward to seeing the garden as it changes from season to season, especially in the winter. Next spring we will be able to visit pathways lined with blooming cherry trees. I’m also interested in experiencing the garden layout as it ages. Right now it appears so young! (Yes, I do realize it was just completed.) After several years, hopefully the moss will establish, the trees will settle in, and the foliage will begin to knit together. What a truly beautiful addition to our little city’s gardenscape.