From seed

I speak with little expertise regarding starting plants from seed. Yes, the garden features many hellebore seedlings and fern sporelings, but these occur naturally with no assist from me. I am challenged by routine tasks such as watering, so gardeners with such lackings are ill advised to undertake growing from seed. Failure is nearly guaranteed….

Tall tree tales

Leaves of the garden’s sourwood (Oxydendrum arboreum, below) are now gloriously colored, and with arching seedpods it is quite a marvelous sight. Unfortunately, I must imagine this beauty since the lowest branches are at least thirty feet off the ground. Why are there no lower branches, you ask? Simply, the sourwood is sandwiched between a…

Trials and ….

There are several ongoing trials in the garden, with tribulations certain to follow. If forecasts for another mild winter hold true, though one as “warm” as last winter cannot be expected, ‘Spider Web’ fatsias (below) might survive again without protection. Though rated as hardy to zero, I lack trust that these will tolerate temperatures below…

A glorious early autumn

Despite the passing of remnants of two hurricanes, each dropping in excess of an inch of rain but with nothing more extreme, our recent weather has been glorious. Not unusual for early autumn, and perhaps a bit cooler on average, but there is no more splendid time of the year for us. Several nights have…

A curious mutation

Berries on the variegated leaf beautyberry ‘Duet’ (below) are scarce enough to be almost an afterthought, so imagine my curiosity upon first glance at a dense covering of berries on a single branch. A closer look revealed a mutation, a branch with dense clusters of small white berries, but with atypical variegation of varying shades…

Where’s our view?

My wife bemoans the lack of a view from our kitchen window. She imagines that trees, ones that I’ve planted over three decades, obstruct her view of the Bull Run Mountains just a few hills away. Certainly there are trees in the garden, many, since my preference is clearly for woodies rather than perennials, but…

A broken promise

A year ago, I pledged to discontinue additional purchases to increase the collection of toad lilies (Tricyrtis). Recent acquisitions were not significantly different that I could tell, and with all common and reasonably priced varieties already in hand, why should I pay a premium for ones that can hardly be differentiated from ones half the…

Don’t ask me

What do I know? I just live here. Amongst semi-mysterious goings on in the garden, in early October there are two common witch hazels (Hamamelis virginiana, above and below), one that has defoliated completely and the other not at all, and both are flowering. Of course, the blooms on naked stems are much more obvious,…

More beautyberries

Not that I agree with my wife on the particulars, but there is a hazard when a garden is stuffed with too many plants. I often lose track of what’s where, or even what’s here, and after a recent display of beautyberries (Callicarpa), an inquiry pushed me to inventory, and discover disappointingly, that none were…

Harebrained?

No doubt, readers anxiously await the newest plant collection, or the latest harebrained scheme to be started in this garden. Here he goes again, you say. Admittedly, I am prone to jumping in with both feet when something catches my eye, and yes, here I go again. I see that parts along the edges of…