On this last day of September, few flowers are seen along this climb up the mountainside that leads to a short stretch of the Appalachian Trail that Barbara and I are hiking today. A few asters and fewer phlox are seen, but near the peak the common witch hazels (Hamamelis virginiana, below) are beginning their…
No, not again
I must put a stop to this disturbing trend. One of the oldest (and neglected) areas in the garden was recently chopped out to make room for workers to construct a sunroom in place of our shabby deck. A treasured ‘Moonrise’ Japanese maple and several unusual plants have gone in (with room to spare for…
Safety first?
I must be more careful. Always, I am full steam ahead, and while dividing, then chopping back an overly exuberant Red Hot Poker (Kniphofia), I chopped into my hand with the pruners, opening a substantial wound that you need not see evidence of. Barbara was horrified, and insisted that a rush to the emergency room…
More?
Are more blackberry lilies (Iris domestica, once classified as Belamcanda chinensis, below) needed? Eighteen of this past spring’s seedlings reside in four inch pots at the edge of the summerhouse where they are sheltered from the afternoon sun, but they get the full benefit of any rainfall. All have made it through our extended summer…
Please weep for me
Undoubtedly, the most splendid tree in the garden is one I rarely mention or photograph. While most trees with pendulous branching are modest in size, the weeping beech (Fagus sylvatica ‘Pendula’, below) is enormous, covering a wide swath along the northern border. I was, unfortunately, short sighted in planting fringetrees (Chionanthus virginicus), a redbud (Cercis…
Oh, what a relief it is
First, I am not anxious for the weather to turn cold. I’ll gladly suffer through the high nineties rather than the chill of winter, but beyond the cold I prefer the fullness of the garden today rather than the comparative emptiness of the winter months. Funny, every year I wander the garden in February trying…
Thirty in, thirty out
The globosa spruce (Picea pungens ‘Glauca Globosa’) and boxwood (Buxus sempervirens) filled the small area beside the older, circular patio after ten years. In the next twenty, both grew to obstruct the patio and path to the rear deck. Not that it matters at this point, but this is another of many examples of plants…
It’s the time of the season, or not
Why would this pendulous branched Chinese dogwood (Cornus kousa ‘Elizabeth Lustgarten’, below) flower in the heat of late summer? In fact, early September is the start of meteorological autumn (and the gardener’s autumn, at least mine), but there’s no debating that our recent weeks have been very summer-like with temperatures in the upper nineties. Happily,…
Stand up straight
Stand up straight, and mind your manners. Of course, my mother found these admonitions unnecessary when I was a perfectly behaved kid, but still I am reminded with each tree that I consider adding to this already overcrowded garden. I need well behaved trees that also stay narrow. In a small garden, or one already…
Covering more ground
There are three potential layers to planting in the garden, the tree canopy, a shrub layer, and the ground cover. There are beneficial purposes to wildlife in planting all layers, but this also serves aesthetic and practical goals in minimizing labor to weed. My primary concern has been developing a garden that pleases me, but…
To smoosh or not
I was too slow, so two spotted lanternflies escaped while I first photographed them (below), then doubled back to possibly smash the two against the tree. I am not in the habit of squashing bugs, though I am far less tolerant with pesky flies and mosquitoes when they’re attacking me. Local authorities ask that lanternflies…
Covering ground
Rascally rabbits have done it again. Each time I walk past there are a few stems of several sedums that have been munched, not eaten but cut loose and sitting on the path. The loose pieces can be an inch or several, and I suppose I wouldn’t mind so much if parts of the sedums…