Showing posts with label Roses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roses. Show all posts

Saturday, June 16, 2018

Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day - June, 2018

In the rose garden

June is the month when I start to take fewer garden photos. Maybe there's so much in bloom that I'm overwhelmed, or maybe I'm finally done with the frenzy of spring flowers. I think gardeners in this climate are excited about anything and everything in the spring, then we get pickier in the summer. But of course the garden continues to grow and bloom regardless of whether I take photos.

Thanks to Carol at May Dreams Gardens for hosting the monthly roundup of blooms.

June is definitely the month for roses, and their companions:

Lavender, roses and catmint
Catmint, roses and white lavender at the bottom



Elsewhere around the yard:

Last of the aquilegia - for now, they'll probably re-bloom
Delphiniums and hot lips salvia
Petunias in the flower garden
Cosmos
First dahlias
Clematis on the shed
Fuchsia 'Genii'
New cape fuchsia
On the (mostly) native slope: seaside daisies, thrift and harebell
Penstemon
Penstemon and hot lips salvia
Poppies growing in my weed pile
Coreopsis, a shockingly yellow color for my garden



There are so many plants getting ready to bloom, but I'm excited about the daylilies:


Saturday, May 26, 2018

Rose garden, May 2018



The rose garden is my favorite in late May, the roses are all in bloom for the first time and the perennials help them show off. This was the first area of the yard that I started to work on in 2016 and looking back at the changes makes me happy, feels good to see the progression.

West fence, looking north
North fence, looking east
In the corner of the fences

Looking down the slope is the biggest change because the railroad tie retaining wall is gone and the whole shape of the slope is new. That's a major work in progress for this year.

North fence, looking east down the slope


In the main rose garden, I've only added a few more plants - a clematis in the corner, phlox to replace the fern leaf lavender that didn't survive the first winter, and three more bearded irises.


Clematis and rose in the mailbox corner

The irises have been amazing this year, now they're mostly done and time to deadhead because some are re-bloomers.

New bearded irises, earlier in May
Bearded iris, earlier in May
Bearded iris, earlier in May
Last bearded iris still blooming

All three of the peonies that I planted in the fall of 2016 finally bloomed this year, now I want more!

Peonies
Peony
Peony and catmint

We cut the roses way back in March, this year and last year, and that does seem to keep them healthier. We did take one out along the north fence, now trying to decide what to do with the gap. 

I mulched with wood chips in the fall and that keeps the weeds fairly well under control, but still have some grass and bindweed to pull out. I also put in a new drip line this week, the old one sprung a big leak last year, so the rose garden is all ready for summer! 


Rose and catmint

Wednesday, May 16, 2018

Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day - May, 2018

Bearded irises

I'm sure I've been working outside every day this month, hauling topsoil and wood chips, planting, weeding, watering. But even the harder physical labor feels like a respite from the stress of the job that pays the bills. Spring is such a lovely time to be outdoors, something new is blooming everywhere I turn!

Thanks to Carol at May Dreams Gardens for hosting the monthly roundup of blooms.


My red collection of bearded irises, planted last summer
The hardiest bearded irises ever
This bearded iris was a freebie
My oldest bearded iris, rescued from a shady bed
Non-bearded irises
Aquilegia
Camassia and California poppies
Riverbank lupine is taking over my meadow
Limnanthes douglasii
Chives
Dogwood, cornus kousa 'Rosy Teacups', still a baby
Roses are just starting
Jupiter's beard, centranthus ruber, planted from seed last year
Foxglove, planted from seed last year
Rhododendron 'Lee's Dark Purple'
Big blooms on a baby Rhododendron 'Polarnacht' 
Unknown rhododendron in the front yard


What's next? Peonies! All three that I planted in the fall of 2016 have buds this year.