thank goodness it’s not in our garden. Our eldest son is to be married this weekend in the garden of the Airlie Conference Center in Warrenton, a fine old formal garden considerably more appropriate for a wedding than my jungle. Since our home is only a few miles away, I’m certain that we’ll have out-of-town guests drop by,…
Ask the Garden Guru
The Garden Guru is an occasional series featuring seasonal questions selected through a rigorous, time honored journalistic tradition in which the Guru makes up the questions, then answers them. If you wish to ask your own questions, feel free to submit them and the Guru will pick the ones he knows and include them in…
September blooms
The light morning rain yesterday was a welcome relief. Two weeks with relatively low humidity and no rainfall, following a three week hot, humid, dry stretch, has sapped ground moisture and stressed the Spring blooming perennials so they look ready to jump into dormancy. All will be fine next year, but they’re a bit haggard now. Tuesday’s rain…
Good vibrations
Try as I might, I’ve had a hard time conjuring up bad vibes this late Summer. Several dry weeks in late July and early August fried the non-irrigated lawn, but I’d just as soon rip all the grass out anyway, so that’s not a bother. One after the other through July and August I’ve had trees, shrubs,…
Catching up in late August
In recent weeks this journal has devoted much space to bees and bugs, and given scant notice to all but a few plants in the garden. Despite August’s stifling heat and humidity, there is much in bloom and more to catch up on. As the calendar turns to September there are flowering trees (Franklinia, Seven…
The amazing Snowberry Clearwing
… and other garden marvels. Some evenings in late August are too intolerable to get excited about rambling through the garden, too hot, too humid, and I’m happy enough to lounge about indoors. But the past several weeks have been different. I admit to a fascination with the masses of Swallowtail butterflies and bumblebees that…
A bumblebee’s paradise
Bumblebees are everywhere! The sad, troubled story of the honeybee has been well documented. Their absence was noted in mid-March when they failed to appear with the blooms of Pieris japonica, and through the year I have spotted a few only occasionally. But there’s no shortage of bumblebees, more than ever in my garden. A stroll down…
At pond’s edge
As a visitor wanders down the stone paths in this garden they are greeted by the splash of fleeing frogs into the stream and shady ponds. In the water, perched on a lily pad or mossy stone they are less fearful. Here, they are comfortable enough to pose for photos. Of six ponds in the…
Beauty by accident – August ’09
In such a large garden as this (one acre plus) half a dozen blooming crapemyrtles are sufficient to elicit cries from passersby of “how beautiful” and admiration for the gardener’s grand design. Nonsense! The trees are splendid, the gardener fortunate this day to have placed them for all the world to see. In this garden…
Steak and potatoes
One look and there’s no doubt, I’m a steak guy. I’ve earned my two-fifty plus. And hard times or not, I haven’t been tempted to grow my own. The challenges of an ornamental garden are difficult enough for me without growing edibles. With my dogwoods, Japanese maples, hydrangeas, viburnums, mahonias, and perennials I can manage the creatures without spraying poisons…
Floating is better than weeding
When I built the swimming pond I anticipated spending lazy hours floating that could have been wasted on more productive pursuits. Today was such a day. I’m certain there were worthwhile tasks desperately needing attention, but none came to mind. (An excellent reason for avoiding written to-do lists. Then, I would have to misplace the…