All posts by jane

Garden Blogger’s Bloom Day – June 2010

Yay! Here are a few pics I snapped for the very first Garden Blogger’s Bloom Day being celebrated at this address. We were out of town for the weekend, but that didn’t stop the Lot. We were treated to some new arrivals upon our return.

blanket flower and lavender
Lavender Munstead and Blanket Flower
Lillies and Dappled Willow
Lillies and Dappled Willow
Coreopsis Early Sunrise
Coreopsis Early Sunrise

Also blooming this month and not pictured are the Lamb’s Ear, multiple roses, Camelot Lavender Foxglove, Chocolate Chip Bugleweed, Husker Red Beardtongue, Edelweiss, a shorter golden daylily, spiderwort, Arctic Glow Globe Thistle and Mystica Beardtongue. I just learned from the Bloom Day post at May Dreams Gardens that the common lily blooming along the west side of our house right now is a “ditch lilly” or Hemerocallis fulva.

For my own notes, the Moonbeam and Tequila Sunrise Coreopsis have a blossom or two. So does the White/Dark Bee Delphinium and the Purple Knockout Salvia. Just getting ready to open are both the Bridal Veil and Key West Astilbe. I just deadheaded the Jupiter’s Beard last night and the Valerian this evening, so we’ll see if they will have another round of blooms.

Room to Grow

After playing around with the idea for awhile, I finally purchased the url to my garden blog. I will be slowly switching over the past blogspot content and designing the site. In the meantime I will continue new posts here. The plants in the garden are not going to wait until I’ve picked the perfect WordPresss theme or properly prepared and launched this new site. Therefore, all of those details will have to be filled in between my hopefully more dedicated tracking of the development of our Lot.

Tomorrow is Bloom Day! I heard of this fantastic idea from other garden blogs I had subscribed to and am following. My friend and fellow gardener, Ms. N, participated last month on her blog Garden 337. Garden Blogger Bloom Day is an event occurring in the garden blog community on the 15th of every month. Links to garden blogs are posted in the comments section at May Dreams Garden to share photos of what is blooming for the gardener that month. This month will be my first Bloom Day where I will be posting photos. I am unsure if there are any strict rules or not, but I’m going to learn as I go. It’s been the main theme of this gardening adventure. Why change now?

Another site Ms. N shared with me is Blotanical. This site seems to compile a worldwide network of garden blogs. Oh my I could lose some time on this site. I will be signing up next month to participate.

Memorial Maintenence Marathon: Part 3

This (very early) morning started with a huge bang as the first set of seasonal thunderstorms rumbled through the area. After comforting one of our four-legged garden helpers, I tried to get some more sleep. No such luck as yet another storm came through. And another. We decided to spend the morning inside and complete all those house chores I like to forget about if I can be outside in the garden.

After lunch out with a friend we returned home and surveyed the lot. The high winds and torrential downpours really battered some of the plants. The peonies, lambs ear, snow peas, spiderwort, and valerium had either been waterlogged or blown completely over. After trying to shake some water off the spiderwort in hopes of making it stand upright again, I gave up. It was probably going to rain again. It did.

I’m kind of kicking myself because I learned last year the spiderwort tends to collapse outward. But it did so because it was much larger and the weight of the blossoms pulled the stalks away from the center of the plant. I guess now I know as soon as it fills out, I should wrangle it with a pantyhose girdle. Same thing goes with the lamb’s ear. Those flower stalks should have been staked by now. Argh. Next year the peonies will get cages so that should solve the waterlogged blooms bending the plant stalk over. The valerium was collateral damage as it was standing too close to the spiderwort. At least I remembered to effectively rope back the already massive jupiter’s beard.

I’m not sure what to do with the snow peas as they were climbing their fence in their 4’x4′ bed. According to the June 28, 1942 edition of the Sunday Morning Star, peas and pole beans can be given extra reinforcement by twiggy branches. This newspaper mentioning war bonds and victory gardens suggests to “give the plants known to need staking attention early in their career.” So, for next spring, when the afore mentioned plants awake from their winter naps, I’ll be waiting with bamboo stake, twine and pantyhose.