Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Dry and Green


I know I'm starting with a colourful Caryopteris bloom, but I was impressed yesterday with how dry and green the gardens are at the Cottage just now.  The peony and fall aster bed below needs a lot more something that booms at this time of year.  
Other plants were very stressed.  I hauled a lot of water from the two rain barrels to keep a few alive.  This evening we have been getting a good dose of rain... just in time... again!
Lysimachia ciliata "Firecracker"
Helenium autumnale

Vaccinium corymbosum

Somehow, some perennial seedling and other things I planted just a few weeks ago have been thriving!  They are in a spot that gets some shade each day, and I have watered them whenever I was near.  
Eryngium sp, Parthenium integrifolium, Silphium perfoliatum, and others

There are a few blooms around the place still.  Some of these plants are tough.  The Impatiens are in the shadiest spot, blooming away despite the dry spell and the aphids.  And the Rudbeckia simply likes the sun.
Impatiens glandulifera
Rudbeckia lacinata
 And this little Oxalis is happy as can be, amid plants that are wilting and crisping up.  I love the novelty of this foliage; everywhere else in the gardens the usual green-leaved variety is a "weed" I pull out.  And the contrast of the yellow blooms, and then the green pods, on this purple variety seems attractive to me.  It can go to seed as much as it wants.
Oxalis hybrid
But let the reviving rains fall!

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Seedling Joys



Berberis thungergii and friends
Growing plants from the tiniest stages sounds like a great plan, and as the years go by, I get better at bringing trees, shrubs and perennials up.  I have had many failures when collecting seed and trying to grow them. Most of the failures have to do with my watering routine, or lack thereof.  
     The array of barberries above I did not grow from seed, but I did dig them up as tiny seedlings from under a maturing shrub at a friend's house.   The purple parent Japanese Barberry has yielded an array of foliage colours.  Perhaps these will become a multicoloured hedge somewhere in the years ahead.  

This Spring I forged ahead and ordered some seeds I desired from Gardens North, a fabulous source of species I long for and interesting things I'd never heard of before.  Above, you see a scene in May, when the first plants were coming up, Cup Plant seedlings, Silphium perfoliatum.
Hibiscus coccineus and Vernonia novaboracensis
Now, a number of species have been potted up and are doing fine.  I hope.  How to keep the ones that stay potted - and don't go into the ground - will be the next important challenge.  
     Here are some Osage Orange trees.  ALL their seeds seemed to sprout, and they are doing well after being re-potted.  Notice the one in the back row on the left, with nice variegated foliage.  That's a keeper!  The dozen or so others, if they live into next year, will have to find lots of happy homes somewhere!
Maclura pomifera
I am delighted to discover lots of info online about arums, especially the genus Arisaema, which I just call Jack-in-the-Pulpits.  And the seeds I ordered have grown.  AND, they have stayed happy and green, even producing a few secondary leaves this summer!  
Arisaema consanguineum & A. ciliatum liubaense

I had been disappointed that the J-in-the-P that intrigued me most had not sprouted this summer.  Until this month.  Now, this little yellow one is at last appearing, hooray!
Arisaema flavum
Some seeds in the same tray/pot sprout all at the same time.  Some each keep their own schedule.  For a good month I had only one California Allspice.  This month a second, and recently a third, have decided to arise.  This is a shrub with lovely reddish flowers I have wanted for some time.  Notice the shape of the cotyledons; they look as if they have been trimmed.  No, that is their natural form, sort of a half-leaf shape.
Calycanthus floridus
I planted a couple or three species of Globe Thistle; one came up prolifically, one gave rise to three seedlings, one I have not seen yet.  My labels faded completely, so it is a bit of a guessing game with these!
Eryngium amethystinum and/or agavifolium and/or yuccifolium
One of the great surprises to me came in the past two weeks.  After assuming my planing of Japanese Umbrella Pine failed, they are now just arising from the ground.
Sciadopitys verticillata among the moss


Not that the battle is over.  This tree is, according to some, notoriously hard to raise from seed.  The eight seeds now sprouting may yet die at these early stages.  And those that survive are very slow growing.  Here's hoping for at least one that can get planted at the Cottage one day.  Check out my photo of a mature specimen in Annapolis Royal.
   Not on the seed, but at least the propagation theme: here is an update on the Papyrus I started from a leaf cluster cutting, or whatever we call that umbrella part of the plant.  Read how to grow this here.
Cyperus alternifolius
This will become a house plant for the winter, probably at work.  

   And one last photo that stretches the theme of this post even farther... a young organism I had nothing to do with raising.  Just that my wife is now feeding this young male Cardinal, along with hundreds of other birds in our neighbourhood.
Enjoy every new thing that comes along.  Even the weeds as you pull them (if and when you do).

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Chartreuse Foliage Follow-Up

Eupatorium rugosum 'Chocolate'
I guess it's high time I enjoyed foliage follow-up to GBBD on the blogoshpere.  Thanks to Pam for hosting this.  And thanks to some rain this month, the leaves are still alive.   
Vitis 'Einset'
And the grape harvest will be happening a month from now. Hopefully the humans get as many as the wild mammals and the birds.  Below, from the base of a Ninebark, a three-year-old, voluntary Sumac is prospering.  I have been meaning to dig that out of there for two years!  
Rhus typhina & Physocarpus opulifolius
I thought today I'd highlight a big perennial that is getting to full size.  At least, I'm guessing it won't get a lot grander than this.  It is Aralia cordata "Sun King."  Bought a little one in the summer of 2010.  Today it is just about at the four foot mark, according to my measuring tape.
 
 And the blooming bits are just starting to appear, so it will keep stretching.  Below you see what it looked like here on May 19.   It has overtaken the neighbours with its steady growth.   

It is in a protected and semi-shaded bed by the house that has also made my willow cuttings happy.  
Salix matsudana 'tortuosa'?
I call them cuttings, and they were a couple years ago, but their growth has got ahead of me.  This bed is their temporary home.  For me, these are big things to move.  I find, the bigger they are, the more likely to die, when I move a tree or shrub.  
     Well, let's finish up by visiting the hothouse.  Various perennial, shrub and tree seedlings are still happy there.  In fact, some seeds planted in the spring are just arising.  

Arisaema, Vernonia, Eryngium, Aconitum, Linum, Calycanthus, Silphium, Diospyros, etc.




And my Nepenthes has had a growth spurt.  I must have kept it watered enough to develop a whole new crop of pitchers.  Perhaps it will catch some of the wasps that have built nests in the hothouse.  May your foliage bless you in your garden!

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Bloom Day August 2012 - at Home


It's a work week, so I can't quite get to the Cottage.  Here is what's bloomin around the house.  Check out the other Garden Blogger Bloom Day posts by visiting May Dreams Gardens.

The Shofly Plant (Nicandra physaloes) had closed up by the time I took this shot.
Rose "Grootendoorst"

I still love the Campsis radicans, Trumpet Vine.

Plumbago Ceratostigma plumbaginoides in a pot, not yet planted.
Asclepias incarnata 
A spectacular weed, perhaps Tansy, Tanacetum vulgare


A Rugosa Rose reblooming
Gerbera Daisy


Not blooming, but a happy banana, Musa acuminata
And an almost blooming Joe Pye Week, Eupatorium sp.


Thursday, August 9, 2012

A Bountiful Day


After a friend offered some plums from a tree in her yard, I thought I had better check the old tree in our back field.  It is completely hanging with fruit this year.  This usually happens every second year.  I have started picking, and eating, and giving away.  I have never been one to make jams and jellies, so I am trying to freeze them - cut in half - and keep them for fruit smoothies later.  Wish me luck on this first-time experiment.
D'ya like my use of plant pots?  This is just the tip of this plum tree iceberg.
Along with this bounty, when I got over the to Cottage on Monday, I found this recently planted eggplant in sorry condition.  It is swarming with potato bugs.  


How did this happen so quickly?  Well, there is a bountiful supply of these beetles from the potato field across the road from the Cottage.  The potatoes are almost all eaten up, and the beetles are flying around looking for more.  I guess eggplant is as tasty as potato.  


 At the Cottage that day I entertained some folks from our "Haliburton Garden Club."  So it was an afternoon brimming with friends.  This is just what a garden is for, eh?



The squares and cookies they brought were plentiful indeed.  Thanks, one and all, for a rich and relaxing afternoon.