Garden Tour
Oh, the things that are blooming. We invited some friends over, including some very avid gardeners--one a professional landscaper, British no less. I decided to be loud and proud about my gardens, which look like they were planted by an insane monkey. What choice do I have? Tim was kind. He said it was really a classic cottage garden, informal, and quite charming. And that what matters is that it makes me happy. Thanks, Tim. But I know it still looks like it was planted by Bubbles the Chimp on speed. Hey. Anybody remember Bloop Bloop, Penny's spacechimp on Lost in Space?
Me, too. Wonder if she outlived Dr. Smith?
Hey, nice hat. Nice spacesuits too, Will and Penny. Looks like it's the Bloop's birthday. Aww. Somebody baked her a cake.Just a few things, other than ridiculous late-night surfing for images from old TV series, that I love. Red daylilies from the Marietta Farmer's Market, backed by pink garden or musk mallow (Malva alcea fastigiata) from White Flower Farm. It behaved itself until this year. Now it is EVERYWHERE and I cannot dig it out. "Naturalizes well from seed." To say the least. Tap root to China. I guess I still like it, even as I hack it back. Those durn mallows will sneak up on you and try to overtake everything. They spread babies everywhere and you don't know it until it's too late. But it does a nice job of stitching together hot and cool colors with its shell-pink blossoms.
There are some terrific daylily people selling their lilybabies at the Farmer's Market each Saturday. I cannot resist them.
They fit easily just about anywhere, being so ectomorphic. The lilies, not the people. Good for a "cram and jam" gardener like me.I like containers a lot, though I've planted fewer this year than any other year in memory. Just gone too much, I guess. But this is where I grow pelargoniums like the bright coral "Grey Sprite," a true miniature geranium. "Frank Headley" is another dwarf I adore, with its broad white edgings and salmon blossoms.
The new "Renegade" series (pale pink, in the front container) has chocolate leaves and is very floriferous. I give it two trowels up. Laurentia is the blue star-shaped flower in the rear container. WHATTA PLANT! Brand new. I adore it. It has bloomed hard since May. Yeah!Bill and I planted purple coneflower (Echinacea purpurea) seeds along our driveway about twelve years ago, never really expecting them to establish. But oh, they did, in five different spots along the quarter-mile, and they are so much more beautiful, grown en masse and in partial shade, than the sun-drenched dwarves in my garden. No wonder I find excuses to take letters out and check the mail.
There is always a great spangled fritillary or a tiger swallowtail enjoying the coneflowers when I go out to get the mail. The plants are as tall as I am. The flowers look me right in the eye.
Here's the hummingbird garden. They're all hummingbird gardens, but this one is dedicated. The cardinalflower (Lobelia cardinalis) , salvias and agastache are competing with lush plains coreopsis ( yellow with red center) for space here. Goldfinches adore plains coreopsis, and they help scatter its seeds. I haven't planted it but once, years ago. It pops up everywhere, and I adore it. Native, too!
Just a look. More flowers come in every day. It's turning out to be a pretty darn good garden year. Little rains and a lot of hand-watering are keeping things going. And it hasn't really gotten beastly hot. I'm thankful for every little mercy, and especially glad to be home to enjoy it all. Dang it all, I'm off again. See you next week. Garden on, Garth! Garden on, Wayne!Labels: Bloop Bloop the Chimp, container gardening, hummingbird garden, plains coreopsis, purple coneflower


14 Comments:
Garden on, Garth! Garden on, Wayne!
I'm not worthy!!!!! :-D
Julie, for me, your post had me hooting. I'm still tired from deep belly laughing.
Seriously, I like your garden style - shove it in there and see it grow! My style, exactly.
Beautiful flowers and photos gave me pleasure tonight.
Off again? Dang.
I will have to see if our local nurseries have laurentia. I love blue flowers in the mix of all the reds and yellows and pinks, but it is hard to find good blooming blues.
I have missed your garden tours. "Classic cottage garden?" Is that a nice way of saying "a big messy jumble?" I like that look better than sterile rows of flowers corraled and lined up like they are going to an execution. "Free-spirited" - THAT'S the way I describe your gardens.
~Kathi
Your garden is beautiful Julie! I am dying to try and scatter some wildflower seed at the back of our house along the tree line just to see what might pop up year after year. The "soil," and I use that term loosely, is nothing but hard chert so I'd have to truck in a good bit of topsoil, but oh, to have the garden like you do to look at each day!
Planted not by an insane monkey, perhaps, but definitely a chimp with attitude.
You've opened the gardening door here and I have a question about my salvia. It had a spectacular bloom, which is now all dried up. I'm never sure what I should deadhead and what I shouldn't... if I do this now will I be likely to get more flowers this summer? Will it hurt it for next year? Should I deadhead it now?
Yes, I am a complete amateur. And one who like to learn by doing and asking.
Advice from all you wise blogging women welcome!
-Sara
Loved you garden pictures, Julie. I am also a haphazard planter. Mainly because each year I add a few more perennials without being quite clear in the early Spring where I planted what the year before. The end product is that by July I have too much squished together in too tight a space but my oh my the colors are glorious. Now at least I have a name for my chaos...a cottage garden plan...hmmmm...sounds good anyway!
Insane gardening monkeys of the world, unite!
(Also, what Maureen said.)
Bloop Bloop? You kill me. Next post subject: Chaka from Land of the Lost?
(jz: please to excuse whilst i highjack your comments section for a question for maureen. kh)
Maureen:
I never heard - did the milkweed seeds take for you, or was the attempt unsuccessful?
~Kathi
oh how lovely...thanks! once again, inspirational
Hi Kathi,
Well... I'm not sure. I've never had milkweed before so I'm in uncharted waters with it. I was thrilled to get the seeds since I really want a good milkweed patch (I have a 3 year old spot of Joe Pye back there too).
I did find two marsh milkweed plants at the local perennial nursery this year, so I planted one at each end of the spot I was planting the seeds and thought that would be the start of the milkweed patch.
Here are the milkweed plants
This is what came up where I planted the seeds
I don't know if there are different types of milkweed, or if the seeds didn't make it and something else is growing there. That's not a plant I know either. I was hoping for some more of the blooms, or for the ones there to get bigger, in case someone would recognize it, but this is how it looks today.
Oh, and I'm soooo frustrated with my butterfly weeds out front. They're tall and green and lovely but I'm starting to see blue flowers! The little plastic tags with the orange flowers are still in place so maybe they didn't read the info. Or maybe Lowe's mistagged their stock :(
I'll be bummed if it's the latter since I'll dig those out. I've only so much space and that spot is saved for *orange* butterfly weed.
I feel like I'm in the gardening Twilight Zone this year.
I loved "Lost in Space"! I remembered Penny & Will, but I don't remember the chimp. Funny, I usually remember the pets and not the people.
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