Starting over

I am not one to readily give up on a plant. The back side of a decades old blue, globose spruce (Picea pungens ‘Glauca Globosa’) has gone bare alongside a conical common boxwood (Buxus sempervirens). The boxwood has long encroached on the narrow path, and the spruce spreads several feet over the small, circular patio…

The garden in August

Yes, I’ve whined about the lack of rainfall, though today I happily report that a storm came through late in the afternoon. But, then I watched as others brushed past with no more than a few droplets of moisture, so there’s reason to complain. Still, the garden lives on, and without my pulling hoses around….

It’s a jungle

I am an optimistic gardener, expecting the best even when my neglect should bring trouble. My too often sporadic efforts at deer control occasionally yield beneficial results. A spurt of summer growth on the Batwing Japanese maple (Acer pictum ‘Usugumo’, below) was quickly nibbled prior to the semi regular repellent treatment. I don’t recall if…

Two flowers

The parcity of flowers on the congested clump of Crocosmia ‘Lucifer’ should be no surprise, but with diminishing flowers in recent years, I did nothing. Now, there are two flowers and two buds. No more, from many dozens of plants. Clearly, the time to split the clump is overdue. Of course, many chores in the…

Finally rain

I watch my online radar as summer storms brew, then split to bypass the garden by the tiniest fraction. I can hear the rumble of thunder, but if there’s any rain, it’s a few drops, enough to tease but barely enough to keep the dust down. All the worse, acquaintances remark that they’re being deluged….

Favored by pollinators

While this garden was not initially intended as a haven for wildlife and pollinators, it has developed into an ideal habitat for both. Rabbits and squirrels are seen daily, with evidence that deer are regular visitors despite my spraying a repellent to protect vulnerable plants. Scratches on the lid of the koi food pail tell…

Making more

My two weeks of summer business travel annually coincide with the peak flowering of three Bottlebrush buckeyes (Aesculus parviflora, below). Two in part sun in the rear garden flower first, but both were barely cracking bud when I left the second week of July. The third, the oldest and by far the largest, is more…

Weathering the summer

With the recent addition of two Japanese maples I’m thinking this might be the end. Several remain in pots on the patios, but without a spot to plant them I suppose they could stay in the containers for a few years. Even with the extremely dry spring and early summer, and my lack of attention,…

The bees are happy

With temperatures in the upper nineties, my labor in sunny areas of the garden will be limited. But, in the heat of the afternoon, I must get out to see the abundant bees and butterflies feasting on nectar in the sunny, lower half of the rear garden. As always, I’m planting, so recent revisions must…

It’s hot out there

I joke that my recent, annual tour of nurseries in the southeast is the coolest two weeks of the year. Seldom do my travel partners and I venture out of an air conditioned vehicle or hotel room, though after sitting and doing nothing for a week I managed a six mile hike in the one…

Making plans

I do it every year. After four decades traveling to purchase plants for the garden centers each time I return with several must-haves for the garden. Occasionally, this is only to test a plant before it hits the market, but more often, I’ve fallen and can’t live without plants that must be added to the…

Around the garden in July

The garden should be into its gentle summer decline, but recent rainfall has revived plants parched after a dry late spring. A stroll through the garden reveals one gem after the other. While flowers of hostas (above and below) are underappreciated, many are glorious and favorites of bumblebees. Early summer is the peak peak period…