February 16, 2012

Miscellaneous Photos



Much of the traffic to my blog comes from Google searches for plant names. Personally, I do plenty of googling for plant images when I'm thinking about buying a new plant. I like to see pictures and read reviews from real gardeners instead of just seeing one image from a catalog, which may or may not reflect how the plant will actually look when it's growing in my garden. So from now on, I'm going to take more care about naming my photos with the full and correct plant name to help other gardeners to find them with search engines.

Above is Lilium 'Miss Feya' (a trumpet/oriental hybrid lily), which was new to my garden last year. This is not the best photo, but let it be known that I took this when I was 8.5 months pregnant with my 4th child, and I had to crouch down to get the right angle. Ouch! These lilies didn't get as much water as they would have liked, so the flowers looked less full than the catalog pictures.



Here is a photos of Buxus 'Green Tower' (boxwood) from mid-summer. I have two of these in my front yard. Their color is currently (in mid-February) a tired green, but they aren't bronze like so many other boxwoods in winter.



Here is Campanula 'Birch Hybrid' (bellflower), in its first year and growing in shade. It would have more flowers with more sun, of course.



This is Lilium 'Tiny Ghost' (a dwarf asiatic lily), which was an impulse buy last spring. I have several types of dwarf asiatics, and they have all multiplied very quickly. I expect to see numerous new baby stalks shooting up around the original lilies this year.



Here is a photo of Achillea 'Summerwine' (yarrow), which is very small because I cut the original 1 gallon-sized plant into 6 starts. It's amazing that they all lived! This year they should grow large enough to send up more than a couple of stalks of flowers.

I'm getting down to the dregs of my photo archives. It might be a while before I get many fresh photos (even though spring growth should start up before too long) because I'm having a slow recovery from surgery last month. I'm tempted to complain about how boring it's getting to sit on the couch all day and wait to heal, but instead I'm going to express gratitude that my mom and mother-in-law have both visited to take over the work of the household. A family of six requires a lot of cooking, dishwashing, laundry, and housecleaning, plus diaper changing for the baby, and I haven't been doing any of it for a few weeks. Rereading that last sentence just made me feel as giddy as a truant schoolgirl - I'm definitely not complaining! I'll just enjoy the break and happily forget about the garden for another month or two. But sorry in advance if my posts are few and far between for a while.

January 18, 2012

'Royal Raindrops' Crabapple Photos



These photos of my three 'Royal Raindrops' crabapple trees are from May of last year. Maturing at 20 feet high and 15 feet wide, these trees will be a great size for my suburban backyard.



More information on this tree can be found here, on J. Frank Schmidt's website.



Lately I've been looking at a number of Schmidt's tree introductions. I wish I could collect bunches of them the way I do roses or perennials, but that's harder to do with trees!



Their list includes a number of smaller trees that are perfect for urban/suburban sites like my yard. I'm considering putting a couple of their 'Wireless Zelkova' trees in my front yard, even though the power lines in our neighborhood are buried, so we don't have to worry about the trees growing into the lines. But I love the spreading shape.



These crabapples put on a ton of new growth last year, since they are planted in great soil (imported, of course). In fact there are some longitudinal cracks in their bark from the fast growth rate, and I'm hoping they'll heal over all right.



Here you can see the fall color starting to show up. The leaves lighten and turn orangey. Our falls are too short to get the full fall color, though.



These are the bright little crabapples, which still cover the trees.



This is another sight that I'm looking forward to in May, which is a great month in the garden.

Added May 27, 2014 - Since this page is still getting a lot of views, I want to update with a little more information about my 'Royal Raindrops' trees.  I still love these trees for their gorgeous spring blooms and fall color, plus the rich maroon leaves all summer.  I don't appreciate all the little seedlings that sprout from the thousands of tiny crabapples that are produced each year, but if you planted these in the lawn, used heavy mulch around them, or spread Preen each year, you could eliminate most of that problem.  I also have to prune them up regularly as the branches are almost weeping - though maybe you would like the weeping look.  Here is a photo of the fall color last year.

 
The photo below was taken this spring just as the flowers emerged.  They are vivid magenta at first and then fade to pale pink just before the petals fall.
 
Here is another shot from this spring.  The lesson here is that if you plant trees in a mound of fluffy imported soil, you're going to need to stake them for several years until they get their roots down into the firm soil below.  I didn't leave the stakes in long enough and that's why I have some leaners, but this wouldn't be a problem if you just planted them in the ground.

January 9, 2012

Red & Violet Flowers for January



January is a good month for vivid colored arrangements, even in a year with little snow (knock on wood). These red roses and violet statice make yummy eye candy.



I put this arrangement together for my grandmother. Every amateur floral arranger should have an appreciative grandmother to ooh and ahh over each creation, regardless of how well it turns out.



The roses came from Safeway and the greenery from a little floral shop in town. The shop only charged me 35 cents per stem of plumosa fern (Asparagus setaceus). What a great deal!



Even though these roses aren't as pretty as old-fashioned or English roses, I'm happy to see anything blooming in the dead of winter. Maybe I wouldn't appreciate crimson 'William Shakespeare 2000' English roses as much if they bloomed year-round?



Have you heard that David Austin is getting into the cut flower trade? Check this link out. Their flowers are gorgeous but rather expensive.




Good thing my grandma doesn't mind plain old hybrid teas for her kitchen table.