More than enough

In mid September, hundreds of blackberry lily (Iris domestica, formerly known as Belamcanda chinensis, below) seeds have recently been harvested from lilies grown from seed, starting with only a few plants several years ago. I’ll set these in seed trays in late winter, but unlike other years when most seedlings were planted in the garden…

Boogie woogie

I presumed these were aphids covering a branch of a native beech alongside a mountain trail, but I’ve never seen anything like it. Quick research tells that they are beech blight aphids, known commonly as the boogie woogie aphid. They are typically still while feeding, but they sway frantically when approached. I am easily entertained,…

Another (minor) disappointment

I’ve been nursing a purple leafed smoketree (Cotinus coggygria ‘Royal Purple’, below) for a few years, and finally it appears that this is the end. I suspect Verticillium wilt is the problem, and while I’ve pruned limbs as they turn brown, the tree’s demise was inevitable. Though the diagnosis was not tested and confirmed, I…

Not all good

So, you expect my garden is better than yours? It must be perfect, you think. Bigger, perhaps, but less weedy, disease free, not a chance. Here, are prime examples of everything that can go wrong in a garden, though to me none are so horrible and while a spotted dogwood or hydrangea stands out when…

A slow fade

Despite a brief period of abundant rainfall, the garden’s dryness combines with shortened daylight hours to accelerate its seasonal fade. There will be scattered flowers everyday through late autumn and winter, but the current abundance in the weeks before the first frosts must be fully enjoyed. As I continue to fiddle, adding transplants and rooted…

Berry good

A few years ago, a clump of winterberry hollies (Ilex verticillata) in the shaded, side garden had no berries. I supposed there were two issues explaining this lacking. First, the closest male holly for pollination was on the far side of the garden, and while I figure that bees are fully capable of traveling across…

Washouts

If our three week period with little rainfall in August could be called a drought, there’s no doubt it has ended. A storm several days ago, and a monster that’s just passed through have dumped a month’s rain. Today, the rain came by the bucket load, probably a few inches in an hour and anything…

Goodbye to summer

I don’t mind summer’s heat too much, but relish the start of September with the promise of cooler temperatures, though frosts and freezes are not far off. Then, of course, there’s the long wait until spring, but there’s much to treasure in the early autumn garden, so I’ll try not to think about what comes…

To fill

In case my impatience with the garden might be forgotten, I remind that new plantings in this garden must be crammed too tightly for the long term to satisfy my eye, or temporary placeholders must fill spaces. While many gardeners choose zinnias or dahlias, my choice to fill a void is often a canna with…

What will she think?

While she’s away Just as with many of the garden’s major additions, several tons of boulders and new plantings along the southern border of forest were recently undertaken while my wife was traveling, first to Canada and then to France. She says the nearly back-to-back trips were making up for missed vacations the past few…

Too old?

Begrudgingly, I admit that my enthusiasm for planting and for creating boulder edged gardens has run up against physical limitations. From here on out this could be a moot point since I’ve now run out of spaces to add granite boulders (my wife hopes this is true), but I’ve said that before. If an understanding…