Friday, October 27, 2017

Fall color

Acer rubrum 'Franksred', planted in February

Fall is my favorite season, the world feels settled and calm. Fall is also the only time that I love yellow, orange and even red. The rest of the year, I am drawn to blue, purple and green. But the other colors shine in the fall, especially when we are lucky enough to have sunny weather. I don't have enough fall color in my yard, but I'm working on it.

Blueberries
Unknown Japanese maple
Dogwood, Cornus kousa 'Rosy Teacups', planted in the spring
Acer rubrum 'Franksred', planted in February
Witchhazel 'Diane', planted in February
Asian pear
Grapes
Grape leaves
Our roses, neighbor's maple in the background
Late blooming coneflower
I like the dead heads on the coneflowers too

Sunday, October 22, 2017

Meadow and Sunny Hillside Update

Fall color on the hillside

It's been just over a year since I planted a meadow with native seed mix and native plants around the edges. I also spent a lot of time last year on the sunny hillside just above the meadow. I'm now thinking of this whole area as my mostly native border (plus berries and spring bulbs). It's a big area, probably about a quarter of the whole yard, and furthest from the house and water outlet, so hardest to maintain.

Sunny hillside from the bottom

I did very little on the sunny hillside this year, just let everything grow. No water except the drip line on the blueberries and raspberries. I ended up moving some of the lewisia and probably will move the rest, they get buried under other plants. Now that the raspberries are really growing, the lupine are too big, I can't get up the steps between them. I dug out one of the lupine and will need to take out the other two or keep them well trimmed back.

Now that the ground is starting to soften up, I planted these on the lower part of the hillside:
  • Roemer's fescue - a bunch more, grown from seed
  • Xerophylum tenas, beargrass - 2 grown from seed
  • 3 Erigeron karvinskianus, labelled as Oregon fleabane but now I see that's erroneous
  • Echinacea p. 'Pow Wow Wild Berry'
  • Echinacea hybrida 'Cheyenne Spirit'
Meadow, looking south

Meadow, looking north

The meadow has more surviving lawn grass than I had hoped, plus some other obvious weeds, so I've done a little weeding a few times. I can see more of the native perennials growing in though so I'm hoping they will take off next year. I've also continued to dig out false bamboo from the back corner, it is close to gone. Plus a lot of watering over the summer, apparently I picked a bad year to plant so many bushes and trees! But I've continued to plant a few more native perennials in and around the meadow:
  • 2 allium cernuum, nodding onion
  • 1 solidago rugosa 'Fireworks', goldenrod
  • Asclepias speciosa, milkweed - a bunch grown from seed
  • Chamaenerion angustifolium, fireweed - a small clump transplanted from elsewhere in the yard
Goldenrod
Milkweed seedling

Also planted in the the shade under the bottom edge of the flowering currant:
  • Tellimia grandiflora, fringecup
  • Trillium ovatum
  • Oxalis oregana
  • Asarum caudatum, wild ginger
  • Decentra formosa, bleeding heart

Bleeding heart and wild ginger
Oxalis and bleeding heart

Whew, the plants add up to a lot more than I thought and I suspect I'm missing some too.

Next year, I need to tackle the other side of the hillside, get the Oregon grape and flowering currant under control and plant groundcover under them to keep out the grass and weeds.

Saturday, October 14, 2017

Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day - October 2017



Hello, fall! The trees have really changed color in the last two weeks and many summer blooms are gone. Winter seems far away still though.

Thanks to Carol at May Dreams Gardens for hosting this monthly roundup of blooms! I've missed a few months, I think I've still been taking as many garden photos but apparently not at the middle of the month.

In the rose garden, a few roses are hanging on and probably will until we get a hard freeze, but the profusion of blooms is done.

Salvia
Lavender

There are more blooms in my play garden, a little area next to the back deck. This will eventually be shaded out by the new red maple, but for now I'm enjoying the flowers.

Hollyhocks, 2nd year
Dahlia
Delphinium reblooming
Salvia 'hot lips'
Salvia 'hot lips'
Cosmos
Cosmos
Cosmos


The side shade garden has flowers too, my vision for this area is for fall and winter blooms.

Anemone
Fuchsia 'genii' has bloomed all summer
Hollyhocks, first year


Plus a few other blooms around the yard:

Pearly everlasting
Seaside daisy
Lewisia
Last sunflower that the squirrels haven't gotten to
Nasturtium

Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Side shade garden: 1 year update

New glass art

Now that summer is officially over, it's time to catch up on a few areas around the yard. Just over a year ago, this border on the north side of our house was grass and weeds when I decided it was the perfect place to put a few shade plants

View from the bottom:

September 1, 2016
Late September, 2016
October 10, 2017

View from the top - the large rose got chopped all the way back too:

September 1, 2016
Late September, 2016
October 10, 2017
I planted bushes last September and have been adding more plants through the year. It adds up to a lot more plants than I thought!
  • 1 Anemone 'Fantasy Red Riding Hood'
  • 2 Anemone x hybrida 'Lucky Charm'
  • 1 Fuchsia 'Logan Gardens'
  • 1 Fuchsia 'Exmoore Woods'
  • 3 Aster novi-belgii 'New York'
  • 1 Satureja douglasii 'Yerba Buena'
  • 1 Helleborus x hybridus 'Black Diamond'
  • 1 Helleborus x ballardiae Gold Collection 'Maestro'
  • 3 polystichum munitum - more sword ferns
  • 3 myosotis sylvatica 'Bluesylva' - forget-me-nots
Anemone 'Lucky Charm'

Plus, grown from seed:
  • Forget-me-not, Victoria indigo blue
  • Hollyhocks, single and double mix
Hollyhocks, first year blooms

I think that's it for new plants for now, until I can see how they will all grow in. But, there is always temptation....

Sword fern growing nicely

Fuchsia 'Genii'
Wintergreen