Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Tree Peony Let-Down

So last Spring around this time I bought a tree peony at a local nursery, whose label simply read "Yellow", and which in person was a lush, double yellow flower with pink picotee edges. Gorgeous!:

Yellow Tree Peony May 2010

Unfortunately, this is what it is this spring--a single, pink flower:

"Yellow" Tree Peony May 2011

Now, don't get me wrong; it's still lovely, but...it's a bit of a let-down after last year. I've heard of the offspring of cultivars propogated from seed reverting to the cultivar's parent species, but the same plant blooming differently year to year? Huh.

Saturday, May 07, 2011

The Brown Iris

Brought this baby from TX (where I had ordered it from some online company), sadly, I have long lost it's name-tag, so I just call it The Brown Iris. All my irises have buds on them now, but this one is blooming gangbusters first. The others may open while I'm on my trip to Maconga, so I ran out to take lots of pics of this one (as always, clicking the pics will take you to a larger view):




Tuesday, May 03, 2011

Monticello Inspiration

Inspired by our trip to Monticello this weekend!  Picked up a few plants for sale there at there gift shop and a few more here.
Clematis Pitcheri--this is an old-fashioned, native kind that blooms in little bells; related to the Clematis Texensis I used to grow, so I snapped it up at the Monticello gift shop.  Also found a similar one at a local nursery: Clematis Roguchi (although this is a newer Japanese varietal).  Another vining plant, this time for partial shade is the Dutchman's Pipe Vine--this is an awesomely cool plant and I had one in TX but gave it away when we moved.  Another native, this will attract Pipevine Swallowtails.  "Nora Barlow" Columbine--the tiny, very ruffled pinky-green flowers on this one are adorable!  Observe the one I brought home:

Aquilegia vulgaris 'Nora Barlow'

Final purchase at Monticello's garden shop was Dwarf Crested Iris.  Back in town I found Cornflowers or Bachelor's Buttons at a local nursery and bought a pot, since they were growing abundantly in the flower beds of Monticello, as seen here:
Cornflower: Centaurea montana in Monticello flower bed


Plus, you must admit, these flowers are like some sort of alien life-form:
This is pretty early for a perennial to bloom--and not only that, be in full bloom.  The one I bought has buds about to pop, so it'll definitely be among the earliest perennials, joined only by my heuchera right now.  Hopefully, my peonies won't bloom while I'm out of town next week--a couple of them do have buds.

New Post for New House--the Roses Edition


Well, in any case, I have to start somewhere, and since I've now been in the new house and working in the new yard for one year and one month, I guess it's about time.  The intention has been and is to put up some Before and After posts, but today, I'm just going to gush about roses.

I dug up several roses from the TX garden that I thought I might have a hard time finding again, and brought all the ones I had in pots.  When we moved in and started putting in the beds, I also bought some more roses online.  The roses I transplanted from garden to garden include:  Hot Cocoa, Brown Velvet, Ebb Tide, Distant Drums (all floribunda), and Sweet Chariot, a purple mini rose.
"Hot Cocoa"

"Brown Velvet"
"Ebb Tide"
"Distant Drums"
There are a couple more mini roses in the ground that certainly came outta TX but have lost their ID.  No wine tastings for them! (Until they bloom, and hopefully I  can figure them out--I'm hoping one is "Ice Tea"--an apricot blend, and one may be lavender).  I'm also pretty sure I brought a little groundcover rose called "OsoEasy Peachy Cream" (Rosa Horcoherent) from TX in a pot, but I wouldn't swear to it.  This pic is from last year, and already this spring, it's spreading an even wider footprint:

 

More Roses, After The CLICK:

Monday, October 20, 2008

Fall Plant Buying Spree!

So the biennial pilgrimage to Ladybird Johnson Wildflower Center's native plant sale and the Natural Gardener nursery occurred on Friday. Himself took a half-day off and we sojourned down there on a really beautiful, warm but not to warm, bright and sunny day, which ended with shopping and dinner at the Whole Foods flagship store, driving home well after dark with a car stuffed with plants, wines, pumpkin ale, exotic cheeses and whatnot. Good times!

Anyhoo, here's the list:

Ladybird Johnson:

Desert Honeysuckle [Anisacanthus puberulus]--actually Himself found this and was enamored by the description or something...I have three flame acanthi around the yard and they have been magnets for bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds, so I thought, why not give this pink-flowered relative a try? Heat tolerant and xeric sold me.


Yellow Passionflower [passiflora lutea]

Lyre-leaf Sage [Salvie lyrata]--I had a couple of these in front, then I moved them before that hot dry summer spell and one died--so, replacing! These self-seed too; it can make a ground-cover and resembles ajuga.

White Avens [Geum canadense]--a shade perennial in the rose family--foliage like strawberry plants, and way-cool, delicate white flowers.

Wooly Ironweed [Vernonia lindheimeri]--cool story behind this one:
Woolly ironweed is a 10-30 in. high clump of gray-woolly stems and leaves. Flowers lack petals, but numerous lavender to purple disk flowers are arranged in showy, terminal clusters. Not a rampant colonizer like some other members of this genus. Well behaved species.

This species is named after Ferdinand Jacob Lindheimer (1801-1879) who is often called the Father of Texas Botany because of his work as the first permanent-resident plant collector in Texas. In 1834 Lindheimer immigrated to the United States as a political refugee. He spent from 1843-1852 collecting specimens in Texas. In 1844 he settled in New Braunfels, Texas, and was granted land on the banks of the Comal River, where he continued his plant collecting and attempted to establish a botanical garden. He shared his findings with many others who shared his interest in botany, including Ferdinand von Roemer and Adolph Scheele. Lindheimer is credited with the discovery of several hundred plant species. In addition his name is used to designate forty-eight species and subspecies of plants. He is buried in New Braunfels. His house, on Comal Street in New Braunfels, is now a museum.
Giant Coneflower [Rudbeckia maxima]--'Tis the season after all for "brown-eyed Susans"!
Note to self: It should be cut back to the base after blooming to keep tidy and be planted in mass for best effect in landscapes; moist; sun-part shade (so plant in front where it can be watered)

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Bloomin' in April.

It's been a while since I posted, and since I've stalled a bit on the landscaping due to rain and minor injury (strained chest muscle) I can't post before/after shots of the ones I started a couple weeks ago. But I also notice that I haven't put a post about what was blooming in the garden in April, and since it's now May, I should remedy that! So here are the high-lights.

First, to the left, we have the container I planted with some of the plants from the LBJ Wildflower sale and another nursery we went to (discussed here). This is one of the sea oats (grass), the 'Lilac Spoon' Osteospermum, and the Pelargonium sidoides (geranium, with it's little butterfly-like dark purple blooms and silvery foliage).

The cacti have continued to bloom apace. This is the Echinocereus (Lace Cactus) I picked up at the Ladybird Johnson Wildflower Center sale earlier this month with a l'il beetle-bug snorgling the stamens:



This is a really cool clematis that I bought a couple wildflower sales ago that is naturalized to Texas and really goes gangbusters (I have another one that I'll post for next month). This one is "Pagoda"--and you can see that the sweet little lavender flowers are more like little inverted cups (or pagodas) than the large open hybrids that I also have. The vine is a lot more vigorous too. I like how this looks against the weathered fence and the weathered wood butterfly house (which seems to be just for show--I don't think any caterpillars have taken up residence in it yet).


Okay, you know I love Gerbera Daisies, and this beautiful blush-colored one is actually growing in one of the flower beds out front and has survived two winters:

This is "Bronze Sonnet" Snapdragon. LOVE. It's located in a bed right under the bedroom window at the front of the house. There's a dark pink tea-rose there that hasn't bloomed yet and a whole assortment of other things in hot, bright colors and a few dark ones to balance it out--like "Blue & Black" Salvia.


Below is 'Prairie Sunrise' shrub rose, growing in my rose border out back:



The wildflower border still has poppies blooming, now in shades of pink and white as well as a few lingering reds, and evening primroses, but the coreopsis is now blooming as well. I'm beginning to wonder if the cornflowers we had last year will be back, but perhaps it is still too early.

Love this white poppy--so delicate!

Monday, April 28, 2008

Spring Landscaping Project 2: Mulched Paths

Right, so let's continue, shall we? After shuffling the trees around and pouring an expanded concrete stone edge to the big patio coming off the back of the house, the next step was to fill in a mulched path area. As you will see below, there's a bit of ground between the patio and the border I planted around the fenced-in rose/herb garden (below that chain-link fence I covered with plastic lattice is around the rose/herb garden. This bit of ground is shady most of the day and gets a lot of traffic, so grass did not grow well there. It was a no-brainer to just make that area a mulched walk-way, but then I decided to expand the mulched area between the flower border/beds and new tree/patio/seat area--less tricky to mow that way. I rototilled a lot of the area just so it would be relatively level, and transplanted some good sod to where we had moved the plum tree from (cutting sod is the WORST!). Then to keep grass and weeds (and dreaded trumpet creeper) from growing through the mulch, I lay out strips of landscape tarp:

Actually, before that I had expanded that garden bed at the back of the picture forward more, which will ease some of the crowding that was happening and to make the wall come out as far here as it would need to over to the left where the wildflowers are growing. If you look at the border bed curving toward you on the right, you will see that I had concrete edgers already delineating that so I just set one layer of narrow rocks on top of that. The more woodland-y section in the background had not had any formal edging beyond some pieces of tree-limb from a tree we had cut down last year, so here, and all along the rest of the edge of the yard, I'm doing a combination of a narrow plastic edging strip, and the rock wall in front of it. The edging is a pain in the butt, 'cause you have to hoe and/or pick-axe a narrow, even trench to sink at least half of it, and there are always roots that have to be dealt with. Then you fill in around it and help delineate curves and/or hold it upright with stakes every few feet. But that should keep the flowers in the flower garden and the grass out. It also helps provide a little back-brace for the two or three layer fieldstone wall in front of it. So with all edging in place, landscape tarp layed, ground stapled and tucked under the re-assembled rock wall, I was ready to add mulch. Lots of mulch. THIS much mulch:That is four cubic yards of hardwood mulch from a local landscaping supply place, that my brother-in-law kindly drove Himself and I to pick up using his trailer, covered in plastic to keep us from mulching the highway on the way home, and somehow crammed into our side-yard, where it will remain for the foreseeable future, until I have shoveled out enough cart-loads to empty it, or at least reduce it to a small, manageable pile. I don't think there will be any problem of having too much...for you see--it is a key ingredient for my landscaping plans, as you see below in this finished section:


That's the view from the door that goes out into our driveway from the new addition (there's a sliding glass door around the corner to the left that exits onto the patio. You can see the extra hard-scaping I added using concrete molds last month on the left, and a little strip at the bottom of the picture (that is a well-trod path going between the patio and the rose/herb garden, and around to the driveway). That area on the left expands the patio space for potted plants.

Having an embarassment of fieldstones now, I decided to fill in just between those two areas where I'm likely to be standing and watering a lot in summer with stepping stones (instead of home-made concrete ones. That kinda sucked 'cause I had already laid the landscape tarp, once side of which was now under that patio, so I ended out cutting out an area for each stone and hollowing a bit of earth out so the stone would lie secure and level when walked on. Laying a stepping stones or pavers is a huge pain in the arse, let me tell you! But in the end, there it is, all mulched in and looking neat. So you see, you can trip down the pathway to the left and go out into the middle of the yard, or you can pause on the lovely bench and contemplate the house, potted plants on the patio, and the little bed there that I re-worked and re-walled (contains Indian hawthorne shrub, a couple amarylli, spring daffs still have their foliage up, a couple hosta, "Mocha" heuchera):


or you can gambol down the longer path to your right which ends in the lawn and wildflower bed:


Both branches of the path end in yet more large fieldstones set in the ground at kinda stepping-stone height so one can step easily onto the lawn as well as drag lawn-mowers and wheelbarrows to and from the back and front-yards with minimal obstruction. But since the landscape tarp goes under them, they anchor the tarp, prevent mulch from going out into the grass, and the grass should not grow between, just tidied up in front with the weed-whacker. Sooo many things to consider in landscaping! I'm very happy with it so far, but still have a lot to do.

When these pics were taken I had dug in the plastic edging strip and replaced the initial temporary rock-wall all the way across the wildflowers (still mostly primroses and poppies but starting to also get coreopsis) and stopped at a stone path to a bird-feeder before the next major area to landscape--the sunny street-side corner. The added complication of having the rock-wall next to grass, as opposed to mulch, is that I'm putting a recycled rubber faux-mulch mat under the rocks, so grass will not grow between them and up to the plastic edger. You can get this stuff at Lowe's, HD or Wal-mart; it's brown, about 5 inches wide and a half-inch thick--they also make circular mats to go around the base of new trees out of this stuff.

So that's it for now. I started rototilling and working in soil amendments on Friday but was interrupted by, oh, a tornado and hail-storm, put in the edger and started planting and trans-planting things in the corner on Saturday and Sunday between more rain showers (muddy mess) and hope to have the planting finished tomorrow (Tuesday), then on to landscape-tarping and mulching. Maybe pics by the weekend?

Oh, if you want to see more pics of the landscaping project with more description, plus pics of the hail-storm, click on the Flickr Slideshow on the bottom right--both have their own sets in the photostream.

Friday, April 25, 2008

Spring Landscaping Project 1: Musical Trees

Big doin's this season in the backyard! We started out by cutting out and grinding a bunch of stumps around the house, and were then able to plant an ash tree in the back corner where we cut down a hackberry (which will eventually provide shade, although now, not so much), and in one of the side-yards we cut out some kind of smelly flowering tree that was right up next to the house (and whose stinky blooms were right outside the study windows) and put in a young Mexican redbud that I bought at the Ladybird Johnson Wildflower Center. Our tree cutters came back and cut down a huge hackberry in another corner of the backyard (hackberries suck--people plant them b/c they grow fast, but they are very weak trees and messy), and another "trash" tree in the backyard, a "silk tree" also called a mimosa, although it's not really. The plan was to basically replace it with a Mexican Plum (white blooms) that I bought our first year here, and after the loss of the hackberry is in too much sun. Here's the original set-up:

Had to move the other end of my clothesline, which the young plum tree couldn't handle yet, but this is much better in every way. Mimosas actually want more sun than that one was getting and it was all stretching out to one side, but now the plum tree will be a pretty understory tree that will be sheltered from the summer sun by our pecan tree. The guys who cut down the other trees helped me transplant this one, and they had also brought (the trip before) a pick-up truck bed full of fieldstones that I had already started setting out when they came back to take out a stump and transplant the plum tree:

As I think I might have stated before/elsewhere, the grand scheme of this project is to reduce the lawn area of the yard to an oblong in the middle surrounded by flower beds and plain mulched area filling in the entire edge and corners of the yard. I've been well on the way toward this by putting in discrete beds and borders in former seasons, and putting out the wildflower seed last year that has filled in a big strip along the road-side of the yard, but I wanted something cohesive--and in the outer corners, pretty but xeric (to non-gardenders that is heat and drought tolerant). PLUS, putting down landscape tarp under the mulch will, HOPEFULLY, help to stem the tide of that tenacious trumpet creeper vine, that I have been battling for almost three years and is STILL coming up from a huge network of roots in the ground along the edge of the yard.

Thus moving the plum tree out of the middle of the yard into an area that I wanted to turn into mulched paths helped build on this idea, but I also wanted a little flower bed around the tree. Transplanted trees need a lot of water, so instead of just watering a bunch of mulch, why not some plants around it, eh? And...well, NOT like I need many excuses for new flower beds! So I improved the area around the tree, put in a low rock wall around it, and set some really big flagstones in the ground to support a cool new garden bench I got (along with that bistro set for the back patio). This side view shows the size of the little flower bed:

Into this bed I transplanted a bunch of purple irises from the rose/herb garden, a couple white daylilies from a bed in the front yard (one was a big clump so I divided to spread it out), and some lamb's ears from a bed in the back yard (lamb's ears HATE to be transplanted, so I'm still coddling them). The theme is purple/lavender and white, so I added a purple-flowered creeping veronica in one of the "horns" to the side of the bench, and one of the LBJ Wildflower Ctr purchases Wooly Stemodia and Barbara's Buttons on the other side (both of those have white flowers and silvery foliage like the lamb's ears). Also from LBJWC I put in a Chocolate Daisy, which has cheery little yellow daisy-like flowers that smell kinda like a chocolate milkshake. The yellow is a bit off message, I suppose, but it goes just fine with purple in color theory and the foliage is silvery. To round it out I also put in Walmart-purchased lavender scabiosa (butterflies love) and honey-scented purple-flowered heliotrope. The latter is an annual, but I've been able to buy it every year--I love the smell and so do the bees and butterflies! We'll have to wait until next season to get the full effect of the garden bed in bloom, but here's the finished product, including some solar-powered lamps: