Yes, I strolled the garden yesterday, and the day before. Little changed from one day to the next, but I relish even the most minor additions as the days slowly advance until spring. This afternoon, I am surprised and delighted by the first wood anemones (Anemonoides blanda, above) in flower. These have spread slowly in…
Author: Dave
What’s wrong with Arnold?
Undoubtedly, I’m a bit dense, but when the virtues of winter flowering witch hazels (Hamamelis) are extolled, ‘Arnold Promise’ (Hamamelis x intermedia ‘Arnold Promise’, below) is rarely mentioned. Yes, it’s common, at least as witch hazels go, but from the dozen or more witch hazels in the garden that flower from late October into March…
Too many?
I am wandering through the garden on this mild afternoon in early February, doing minimal labor, but savoring the blooms that are more abundant each day. While many hellebores and snowdrops flower, buds of spring flowering camellias (Camellia japonica, below) swell by the day. If days remain mild, there will be lovely red and pink…
An almost evergreen dogwood
Temperatures have warmed to eighteen degrees (Fahrenheit) on this sunny morning the first week of February. Last night’s wind gusts have subsided, so it’s safe to go outdoors without restrictive layers of clothing. I am particularly anxious since forecasts call for milder weather beginning tomorrow. The itch to get going in the garden is growing…
Happy to have ’em
I am quite fond of free plants, particularly those that require no effort on my part. The most obvious freebies in this garden are hellebores. Yes, there are plenty that I paid for, maybe half of the hundred plus in the garden, but beneath a hellebore’s canopy of leathery leaves there are dozens, even hundreds…
Also flowering
Not to be forgotten, the winter jasmine (Jasminum nudiflorum, below) growing with low, arching branches beneath a wide spreading paperbush (Edgeworthia chrysantha) along the edge of the koi pond is flowering. Some years, this happens as early as December, but this late January is more average. Access to a closeup view of the jasmine’s bright…
Too early? No.
I’ve mentally noted, so I must be reminded repeatedly when notes are not written, that the yellow, threadleafed spirea (Spirea thunbergii ‘Ogon’, below) overhanging the pond by the front walk must be chopped after flowering in late March. No matter how unruly, spring flowering shrubs must not be pruned until soon after the blooms have…
A bonus
While stomping through the garden this afternoon, a glimpse of yellow was spied through brown stems of what has grown to become a wide spreading clump of toad lilies (Tricyrtis). In winter, I typically stay to the edges of the garden as all noteworthy winter bloomers reside where they are easily seen, but I was…
Mysteries of the garden
Unsurprisingly, after three decades in the garden there remains much to learn. While my intent is to shut out the everyday, to escape from overthinking, every peaceful stroll through the garden reveals new information. Some are merely observations to be enjoyed for the moment. Others provoke thought (a dangerous proposition). A tall rhododendron outside the…
The early hellebores
Certainly, local gardeners must be thrilled by recent mild temperatures that followed December’s severe chill. I am overjoyed. For several days in December, broadleaf evergreens curled for protection in the cold, and while no damage is apparent in this garden, I repeatedly hear reports of plant losses locally. Somewhat by accident, a handful of tender…
If it looks good…
Despite my wife’s pronouncements, I am somewhat disciplined in my plant purchasing habits. With unlimited space and funds this would not be the case, but the limitations of a reasonable budget and the small spaces open in this thirty-four year old garden demand careful consideration prior to each acquisition. If not careful, at least consideration….
The winter blues, and yellows
How marvelous if complaining made the lull until spring seem shorter (or ever accomplished a thing)? To minimize whining, I must take the winter months a step at a time. First, I await the first blooms of hellebores (Helleborus), then vernal witch hazels (Hamamelis vernalis, below) and so on, with each new bloom an accomplished…