When you live in a family of horticulturists, plants just... happen. I
spent the last week acquiring new additions to my front garden. Here
they are!
My New Garden, in June...
I'm participating in the "
3 in 30 Challenge",
and one of my goals for June was to install a new flower bed in my
front yard. My dream was a kitchen garden, where I had a smattering of
veggies, herbs and flowers to bring in to the dining area for cut
flowers.
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Hydrangea - we're still trying to figure out
which one this is... |
This hydrangea was one of a
batch that was not in flower, and had not been labeled, so it was
impossible to identify (or sell) at the nursery. We're still trying to
figure out what variety it is -- we had thought it would turn out to be
'Endless Summer,' but the colors are wrong. You should see how it looks
today! Each flower head could actually be cut and floated singly in a
low dish as a centerpiece -- they are just enormous.
I
have several hybrid tea roses, which I share below. The yellow is not
yet identified. The red, 'Don Juan,' fairly glows at dusk -- my husband
was admiring it from the front porch one night, and said it just screams
out, "Alive!" Very poetic guy... The third rose is called 'Love,' and
I'll have a photo of it next time -- white buds, edged in red, opening
to red on the inside.
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Hybrid Tea Rose -- no label so your guess is as good
as ours! |
My son brought more roses home yesterday -- I don't know their names yet, but here is what will come home to Mama (!) today:
- another yellow, with the most amazing scent...
- a red that's nearly lavender...
- one called 'Joseph's Coat' that my son knew I'd like, just because
of the name, but it is beautiful, with yellow buds tinged in orange, and
red edges to the petals...
- a coral-colored one...
He had an orange-orange one, but, before I could point and say,
"Ooh! I want THAT one!" he said, "And you can't have the orange one,
because I want it!" Darn it. Those cut-throat gardeners...
|
Hybrid Tea Rose - 'Don Juan' |
Some people avoid hybrid teas as "too
finicky," but I find roses to be no trouble, at all. Sometimes you have
to watch for mildew, especially on the fuller ones and especially if
your weather has been sultry like ours has. But I don't consider cutting
back spent flowers and removing spotty leaves to be a big chore -- it's
kind of therapeutic at the end of a work day. Maybe that's what people
are considering "high-maintenance?" Don't know. I call it "puttering,"
and it makes me happy.
|
New roses, cleaned up and ready for planting |
I love to
rescue plants and resuscitate them. I have been known to frequent places
like Lowe's and Home Depot, looking for the carts where they stack the
unsaleable plants. If you know plants, and "big box" stores, you know
that something becomes unsaleable when it is out of bloom. I don't care
if I have to wait until the next year, when I can buy up a bunch of the
same things for a mass planting, and only pay $0.25 (or nothing!)
apiece. I acquired an entire planting of ornamental
Solidago at Lowe's one year, simply because the flower heads had gone to seed, and the employees thought they were all weeds!
My
new roses cleaned up nicely. The next batch are some interesting
(mis)shapes, so I'm thinking I'll cut them back hard after they finish
flowering.
|
Siberian wallflower - a wonderful wildflower
that is easy to start from seed |
My neighbor had a pot on her
front step. It contained the remnants of a plant long since expired, in
petrifid peat moss. She is a very nice lady, a retired nurse, and I told
her one day that I was going to plant something nice in her pot and
leave it on her step.
I had this package of
Siberian wallflower that came (I think) as a freebie in some gardening
junk mail. I never throw any of those seeds away. Usually, I save them
all up (wallflower, cosmos, viola, herbs, all those other things they
send you), buy a nice wildflower mix, mix them all together and then
broadcast it somewhere that needs color but not gardening. Most
wildflower seed shouldn't be covered, as they need sunlight to
germinate. Wallflower comes up right away, but it's a nice surprise to
come back a couple of years later and find a lupine or other biennial
flowering.
|
Bidens, or Beggarticks |
I have many different types of
Coreopsis. This is not actually one of them, although it looks like one. This close ally is one that I bought at Wal-Mart, called
Bidens, or Beggarticks. Like
Coreopsis,
it is very durable, and hasn't once withered or shown signs of stress
during our incredible heat wave. My rosemary also has enjoyed the more
Mediterranean clime we've had lately.
My middle son
teased me about the containers that have placed in spots around the
garden. Until the plants grew up, I wanted some more vertical elements.
Plus, terracotta is cute. He later admitted that he really liked it and
was just giving me a hard time.
Then he went out and
installed a slammin' garden of his own. I like to think that his mother
inspired him! Plus all those beautiful plants he and his brother work
with all day -- it would be hard for me to bring home any money. My
family would have to learn to live on beauty, alone.
|
Eggplant 'Black Beauty' |
I love interplanting veggies, herbs and ornamentals. I rarely have insect problems, because I use companion species, such as
Nasturtium (which
is so tasty it lures the bugs to it instead of the veggies AND you can
put the peppery flowers and leaves in your salad), the ubiquitous
marigold (I'm partial to the dwarf, dark single-blooming kinds) and
others. I notice that the squirrels wait until my eggplants are about
the size of eggs, then, just as I'm beginning to fantasize about a good
"parm," they steal them. So I planted my eggplants in the front bed,
where the squirrels won't venture. We'll see.
|
Planting solar patio lights in pots |
I planted some different herbs this year. I have the
regular English thyme, and an ordinary (but wonderful) basil, but I also
have licorice basil and a wild oregano, some wild monarda, and I'm not
sure what else (because I sprinkle the seeds in places everywhere). Nice
butterfly magnets, and the sun on the basil by the front walkway smells
heavenly.
I am trying something different with my
patio lights this year. Why shouldn't I get to enjoy my garden when I
sit out in the evening, too? I "planted" my patio lights to highlight
spots in the garden, and I love it! Here's something I discovered: if
you put a patio light in a hanging basket, it acts like a porch light,
without electricity! My little guy also told me the mom of one of his
friends started putting her patio lights in her hanging baskets, too.
There
is a little toad that hides under the pot at night. Did you know that
one toad can eat 10,000 pests in three months? Love your toad -- plant a
toad house.
|
The marigolds have not cared at all about heat, drought,
or any other adverse conditions! |
Speaking of toads...
Garden Toad's Companion Plant Guide
lists a bunch of plants that can be planted as companions to your
veggie plants, and the way that they are beneficial. Lots of my things
are on there, but next year I'd love to do more purposeful planting --
I'm already excited...
My Current "Companions"
basil... catnip... cucumber... marigold... mint... nasturtium... oregano... parsley... rosemary... sweet pepper...
I am making a list for next year, though!
My
nasturtiums are tumbling everywhere! I like the old-fashioned, rambly
ones because they weave their way among the vegetables and flowers,
providing spots of unifying color all over. This planting is in a pot
that contained pansies (still doing well, in spite of the heat). My
thinking is that the pansies would fade in time for the blooming of the
nasturtiums, but it looks like they might co-habit, after all!
I
found some nasturtiums growing in a place I don't remember planting
them. It's hard to believe that I spilled those humongous seed and
didn't notice. Do you sometimes plant things and forget that you planted
there?
There are worse surprises!
|
Hypericum (St John's-wort) |
I have a little creamer pitcher that I
keep on my dining room table, that is the perpetual flower arrangement.
The other day, I noticed these
Hypericum (common St. John's-wort) flowering by the edge of the driveway, and cut a few to add to the arrangement.
If
you want a field guide that is friendly to kids and people who aren't
familiar with plant classification, then the Peterson guides are great.
Plants are organized by color,
then you use botanical features to narrow the selection. This is the
wildflower guide that I used.
Before the St. John's-wort came to live on
the table, I had trimmed some new perennials after they were
transplanted, and used the trimmings to create an impromptu arrangement.
Here are some of the
Coreopsis that made their way to the dining area.
You can read more about this photo in
Weekly Photo Challenge: Create. If you enjoy taking photographs, and have a WordPress blog, consider participating in this photo challenge.
Another photo challenge I participate in is the
OHC Summer Photo Challenge,
sponsored by the Outdoor Hour Challenge. Details about this challenge,
and how to join up, can be found on the blog link, above, or at Barb's
Pinterest board,
Summer Photo Challenge, OHC.
Next to blogging, I love taking photographs of stuff to blog about best!
Stay tuned for updates on my garden. Until next time, happy gardening!
Even the tiniest flower bed or vegetable garden can be a rich source of nature studies for all ages. Even if you only have a sidewalk planter or a patch of vacant lot, you can learn great things about the plants that God gave us for food, beauty and shelter.
Check out the notebooking pages from my friend and fellow homeschooler, Debra Reed -- you won't be disappointed!