Friday, June 16, 2017

Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day - June 2017

Geranium and sedum
After an inch of rain yesterday, my garden looks a little soggy but very lush. I'm thankful that this rain will delay the start of daily watering. I'm working toward less watering overall, but a lot of new bushes and trees means more watering this year.

Thanks to Carol at May Dreams Gardens for hosting this monthly roundup of blooms! June is the month for roses:



My blue/purple preference is showing:

Harebell
Aquilegia - this one plant has been blooming for months
Delphinium
Delphinium
Fuschias in hanging basket

But I do have a few other colors:

Mountain laurel, kalmia latifolia
Fireweed, fallen over in the rain
Salvia 'hot lips'
Verbascum 'wedding candles'
Zinnia, grown from seed
Coreopsis, if I remember right


What's next? These lovely hardy fuschias in the ground, and not hardy fuschias in hanging baskets:

Monday, June 12, 2017

Woodland garden progress



What's this, another pile of wood chips in the driveway? Yes!


I was hesitant to sign up again - at getchipdrop.com - because you get what you get which could be a rather large pile, and I wasn't sure how much I really needed. But I finally decided I needed enough so I signed up and waited about a week and a half. This is a lot, but we can still fit the car in the garage so there's not a big rush to move it and I think I'll end up with a use for all of it.

The first use was to finish covering the whole woodland garden area. Back in February, I showed how the area had progressed from rotten railroad ties to starting to fill in the hillside and planting a maple tree. Many wheelbarrows of mulch later, the hillside is as filled in as can be for now (it'll likely settle as the material decomposes).

At the beginning of the year, it looked like this:


Now a much different look:



Here's the view from the "front", from our concrete patio - the white flowers in front are an eco-lawn mix that I'm testing for use elsewhere in the yard. Behind that, bearded iris are done blooming but delphiniums and lupine continue. Those will all be moved further forward (north/east) to avoid shade as the maple tree grows.



The views from the top and bottom show more of the new plants:

  • Gaultheria shallon, salal - 2 along the fence, 4 in the middle above the maple
  • Polystichum munitum, western sword fern - 2 near the maple
  • Corylus cornuta, beaked hazelnut 
  • Vaccinium ovatum, evergreen huckleberry 
  • Rhododendron macrophyllum, native rhodie
  • Rhododendron 'Lee's Dark Purple', this is the one that's blooming now
  • Rhododendron 'Polarnacht'
  • Cornus kousa 'Rosy Teacups', cross between the native northwest and asian dogwoods





That's it for now, I don't want to add more plants that I'll need to water this summer. By fall, the grass under the mulch will be dead and I'll be ready to look at more groundcover plants. The tricky part in the short term is that the maple doesn't produce much shade now, so I can't plant anything that must have shade. Everything that I've planted so far can handle more sun, but most is happier in the shade.

Friday, June 2, 2017

In bloom this week: June 2, 2017

Peonies

Peonies are blooming! I planted three in the fall of 2015 and they didn't bloom last year, but two are finally blooming now. Roses are taking off now too, and they're a great combination, I'm really enjoying my rose garden right now.

This should be a red peony, but I would call it a dark pink
Rose
The red roses are very hard to get a good picture of
Unknown rose
Bearded iris
Aquilegia
Catmint, geranium and allium seed heads
Unknown succulent from my mom


In a shadier bed below the rose garden, the lemon balm and geraniums are battling for dominance, but foxglove don't care.

Foxglove, geranium and lemon balm
Foxglove, geranium and lemon balm


Across the driveway, just a few blooms in my new dry shade border. This area should fill in a lot by next year.

Geranium macrorrhizum 'White Ness'
Cedar sage, grown from seed

Around back, one of my new rhododendrons is blooming. This whole area will be shady when my new red maple tree grows, but for now I still have sun loving flowers here too.

Rhododendron 'Lee's Dark Purple'
Rhododendron 'Lee's Dark Purple'
Mixed delphiniums
Mixed delphiniums
Mixed delphiniums
Bearded irises are almost done
At the bottom of the yard, lots of blooms on the sunny hillside and meadow too. 

Seaside daisy, Oregon sedum and sea thrift
Salvia 'Hot Lips', smaller than last year but survived the winter

Rock rose
Mixed poppies in the back corner
Poppies

What's next? After we eat some strawberries, I'm very curious to see what this mountain laurel will look like in bloom.

Yum!
Mountain laurel, kalmia latifolia