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When leaving the garden untended for two weeks in early summer, the gardener is assured of one thing. There will be plenty of weeds to pull when he returns. I can live with that, and since I depend only on rainfall to water the garden little else is necessary.

Milkweed 

Yes, a tree could fall in a storm as the bigleaf magnolia did a few weeks ago, but I could not have prevented that if I was standing next to it. Despite the weeds, I expect the garden to look better than when I left it.

Rice paper plant
Castor bean   

The cold hardy, but tropical-looking Rice Paper plant (Tetrapanax papyifera, above) has grown a few feet in recent weeks, so I expect it and the red-leafed Castor Bean (Ricinus communis, below) will grow substantially with the heat and rainfall that’s forecast.  The hardy banana (Musa basjoo) should also jump a foot or more.

  
Arundo donax should grow 1-2 feet in 2 weeks.

Most of the perennials flowering when we left should keep it going, but I expect to see many more pollinators as Joe Pye weeds and Mountain mint come into bloom. I know there will be a bit of work to get the garden back in shape when I return, but there’s no hurry, and there will be plenty to enjoy.

Coneflower 
Mountain mint  
 Agapanthus

2 Comments Add yours

  1. Hi DaveI have my first 2 milkweed this year that were ‘gifted to me by nature’   They now have big seed pods on them which are a healthy green…at what point should it remove them from the plants so as to make sure i can spread them to get more plants  ?  Enjoy your posts always!  I have saved them all in a folder in my email as inspiration and reference!Thank You!Susan Thurst

    1. Dave's avatar Dave says:

      Wait until the seedpod dries and begins to crack open. Seeds should be dried and some varieties require refrigeration before spring planting.

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