Saturday, April 22, 2017

This Year's Crop of Plants, Part II

Happy Earth Day! 

If you're a gardening blogger, when is the absolute dumbest time to go on vacation?  Spring, when everything is beginning to bud or bloom or rise from the soil.

So, I'm on vacation.  But I've saved some photos so I can give you at least one more garden update while I'm away.

We were talking about the new plants.  I'd like you to meet Taxus Helen Corbet. 

 
"Taxus" means she's in the same family as  my Upright Japanese Yew - both are Taxus Cuspidata.  "Helen Corbet" is presumably someone involved in the propagation of this cultivar, but I can't find any information about the human Helen Corbet.  The plant Helen Corbet is a lovely lemon-lime color and forms a dense but fluffy mound, which sounds nice for a plant; we have to hope that the human Helen is not lemon-lime colored, dense, or fluffy.  I figure since the other Taxus Cuspidata is thriving, I might as well try another.


 
With her are three other newbie plants.  To Helen's left, the Heucherella Redstone Falls.  A heucherella (also known as "Foamy Bells") is a hybrid cross of a heuchera and a tiarella.  Like heucheras, they come in a wide variety of foliage colors, most of which will revert to green in my shady garden.  Like tiarellas, they have more of a creeping/trailing habit, so we'll see if they trail down the side of the pot.

To Helen's right, a new Helleborus, "Cotton Candy."  And at the bottom of the photo, the Tricyrtis Formosana Samurai, which is a mouthful.  Then again, its common name is Toad Lily, which is a horrible name.  Just another attempt to get something to bloom in my foliage garden!

Finally, the Carex Everest, which is a decorative grass, and which was too busy blowing in the wind to pose for a decent photo.



Meanwhile, nearly everything's coming up gangbusters, particularly the Whee! Hosta, and I'm going to miss it all because I'm on vacation.  My super is watering the plants.  The New Guinea Impatiens died (not frost-resistant), the hens-and-chicks plant died, and the bleeding heart is nowhere to be found.  But the Fire Chief heuchera is finally springing back to life.






Wednesday, April 19, 2017

This Year's Crop of New Plants, Part I

Browsing through garden catalogues in the winter is so much fun.  If you're a serious gardener, you plan out your garden thoughtfully and carefully.  If you're me, you say, "Oooh!  That one's pretty!" and order a jumble of this and that.

This year, however, I was at least careful to choose shade-loving plants.  No more Mr. Bowling Balls and hydrangeas for me.  No, I took a good look at what thrived last season, and bought more of those.  And a few new things just to keep it interesting.

My first shipment arrived today from Bluestone Perennials, with help from a gift certificate from Mom.  Thanks, Mom!  I eagerly opened the box and started planting.

First up: another Winterberry holly to join Jim Dandy and Red Sprite.  This one is another female, called "Berry Heavy," and she is even more petite than Red Sprite was when she first arrived.  I put her with her new friends so that she's close enough for pollination.  I think her berries will be more plentiful, and more orange, than Red Sprite's berries.  (And this is what I mean about garden planning.  Any sensible person would buy several of one variety to make a harmonious grouping, not different varieties with clashing berries!)




I paired Berry Heavy with a couple of Silver Gem violas.  I'm still not entirely clear on how exactly a viola differs from a violet or a pansy - they are all members of the same family.  And I'm not 100% sure they will thrive in my shady garden and survive the winter.  But they're so pretty. 


If you've been reading this blog, you know I love hostas.  Two new ones this year: Cool as a Cucumber (left) and Lakeside Paisley Print (right).


Mom and I used to joke that paisley was our favorite color, and we have even visited the Paisley Museum in Paisley, Scotland.  Anyway, the two hostas joined my new heuchera, Delta Dawn.





I think Cool as a Cucumber is going to get bigger than the other two, so I may do some rearranging later in the spring!

There's more, but if I blog everything in one day, what would I tell you about tomorrow?




Tuesday, April 11, 2017

I'm back!

Hello, Grey to Green fans, and happy spring!  I've been mostly ignoring my blog for the last eight months or so, but now with the arrival of warm weather, things are beginning to happen in the garden again.

The Japanese Maple has timed its budding just right this year - it missed the March frosts completely. 


Apparently if I wanted it to be a tall, straight, vertical tree, I should have pruned the bottom branches last year so that it could concentrate on growing its upper branches - but I just didn't have the heart.  So I think this tree will always be a semi-horizontal bushy thing.  No matter.  It's a beautiful tree no matter what.

You may recall that this was supposed to be an Orange Dream Japanese Maple, with a hint of orange when the leaves came in and bright orange in the fall.  That was a lie.  This is a plain ol' green Japanese Maple, and in the fall the leaves turn brown.  Again, no matter.  But I will not be buying trees from random guys on Amazon.com again.

The Upright Japanese Yew continues to be one of the stars of my garden.

  

It did very nicely over the winter (it is, after all, an evergreen) and it just thrives in the light-deprived conditions of my garden.  This was a purchase from ForestFarm of Williams, Oregon, and it was the best $35 I spent last year.  

Also from ForestFarm is one of my problem children, the "Mr. Bowling Ball" Arborvitae.  Arborvitae means "tree of life" in Latin, and someone should definitely mention that to Mr. Bowling Ball.


He's an evergreen too, but he looks like he's having a bad hair day.  I suspect he needs more sunlight than I can provide him.  If anyone is interesting in rescuing him from me, please let me know.

The winterberry hollies did well over the winter.  Since I stopped blogging in July, you never got to see that Red Sprite had four berries.  But here are a couple of photos from September showing them.  Aren't they lovely?



Jim Dandy and Red Sprite are just starting to bud for this year, and I'll be adding another female winterberry holly, called "Berry Heavy," to Jim Dandy's harem this year.  He can pollinate five female plants, maybe more.


Among the other plants that are doing well are the ligularia that Alice brought me, the helleborus that Jenn brought me, and the lamium that Liz brought me.  Thanks, all!




Meanwhile, in Hosta-land, there are little sprouts everywhere.



That last photo might be upside-down...  I think I can split that one with four sprouts.  I'm not positive which one it is because the pot got turned around, but I think it might be the Touch of Class hosta.

The heucheras are coming back to life too:


As for the rest, the hens and chicks plant looks pretty much dead, and there's no sign yet of the Bleeding Heart or the New Guinea impatiens or most of the astilbes, but I'm not giving up hope yet.  

There will be much to blog about in the coming weeks as new plants arrive.  Stay tuned!