Don't be fooled. Inside this thin coating of sweetness is a fiery core of total insanity.

Sunday, February 15, 2015

Garden Bloggers Bloom Day, February, 2015

Right now, out in my garden, it's all Hellebores all the time, everywhere.

I remember when Hellebores first started appearing in the mail order catalogs that I received, with common names of Christmas rose and Lenten rose. I was living in Massachusetts then, and the idea of flowers at Christmas or Easter was mighty tempting. I was a relatively novice gardener then, and actually believed that I might have flowers coming up in the snow of a Northeast winter. Hah! I didn't realize that those bloom times only applied in more temperate climes. Like where I'm living now, the Pacific Northwest.

So, with apologies to my friends and family who are getting continuously dumped on by snow at the moment, here, for Garden Bloggers Bloom Day, are my Hellebores on parade.
















Helleborus orientalis 'Charlotte'

Helleborus orientalis 'Charlotte'











The only one whose name I'm absolutely certain about is 'Charlotte.' It's hard to mistake that enormous flower for anything else. Pardon my fingers in so many of the photos. I grow a lot of the nodding kind of Hellebore, because despite the fact that you have to lift them up to get a good look (or a good picture), they are so much prettier than the ones that hold their heads up on their own. I do have a few other flowers blooming out in the garden, but nothing as spectacular as the Hellebores.

Happy Garden Bloggers Bloom Day! Carol at May Dreams Gardens is our host for Bloom Day, so check out her link here.

Saturday, February 14, 2015

A Quick and Dirty Love Letter to the Northwest Flower and Garden Show

After three long days of pounding the concrete floor at the Northwest Flower and Garden Show, I've finally run out of flower-show induced adrenaline. So I thought I'd sit and do a quick once-over of the halfway decent pictures I managed to take of things I loved at the show, and share them. My poor feet are very happy that I am sitting down.

One of the things plant-a-holics go to the show for is to shop for plants. There seemed to be fewer plant vendors this year than in the past, and I hope that is a temporary thing and not a trend.

Christianson's Nursery booth

Ravenna Gardens booth

Dig Floral and Garden booth

Begonia 'Green Streak'

Begonia 'Escargot'

Aloe humilis 'Hedgehog'

I was really thrilled to see a booth selling a large selection of Talavera pottery at great prices.

Talavera skeleton lady

Here are a few nicely done details from the Display Gardens and the Small Space Showcase.

Begonia, Bromeliad, primrose, jasmine and probably a dark-leaved Cordyline in a pot in "The Romance of Steampunk" by Whitby Landcare & Design

Fritillaria meleagris and Hellebore in RHR Horticulture's Small Space Showcase "An Urban Botanical Retreat"

Foliage contrasts provided by Carex, Hosta and Bergenia in West Seattle Nursery's "Birds Do It... Bees Do It..."

Orchids in a naturalistic woodland setting in the Northwest Orchid Society's "Lettre d'Amorchid"

A river of red tulips in "A Garden Built With Love" by Adam Gorski Landscapes

Flowering Hamamelis in "Over The Moon" by the Washington chapter of the Association of Professional Landscape Designers


I have three day's worth of pictures and memories to go over, so there will be more posts. Happy Valentine's Day to all you garden lovers!

Monday, February 9, 2015

Recent Acquisitions

They say "Nature abhors a vacuum." Well, I think it's also true that plants will continue to expand into the space allotted to them, which is what seems to be happening out in the greenhouse. I recently made more room for seed starting, but before I could actually get out there and start filling pots with soil and sowing seeds, one of the shelves that I had cleared off for seed trays started to...um...magically fill up with plants.

How did they get there?

But, surely they won't take up much space. They're just teeny-weeny, itty-bitty 4 oz. pots. Every year about this time, succulents in 4-oz. pots start appearing at the big box stores, and at only $2.98, they're hard to resist. They're really well-labeled too, and not just with the tags that say "treated with neonicotinoids." Not to mention I'm in the Home Depot Garden Club, which emails me every week with a $5 off coupon per $50 purchase.

I thought this year I'd try putting some tender succulents right in the ground in the gravel garden (which is getting a makeover -- more on that in a future post). Over the past summer, I saw Senecio mandraliscae planted in the ground, like an annual, at PowellsWood, so I thought I'd try that. I had to go to two Home Depots to buy up all the S. mandraliscae they had in those $2.98 pots. Ultimately I ended up with 12, and I'm looking forward to the cool blue statement they're going to make.


Of course, there were a few more cuties there that I had to get as well.

Echeveria 'Lola'

Aeonium 'Catlin Hybrid'

Echeveria agavoides

Sansevieria cylindrica

Three pots of Euphorbia tirucalli 'Firesticks' which also may end up in the ground

How could I resist a Mammillaria spinosissima cactus called 'Red-Headed Irishman'?

It's the same color as my ginger son's hair

And Mammillaria hahniana 'Old Lady Cactus'? I mean, come on.

She's getting ready to flower soon

This little guy is Mammillaria nejapensis 'Silver Arrows'


Euphorbia flanaganii cristata

I've been so pleased with the success of my first Aloe, Aloe glauca, which has been blooming all winter, that I decided to check out a few more.

Aloe bakeri, with one slim flower stalk poking up

Aloe zanzibarica

I think this one, which was labeled simply "Succulent," is Aloe fragilis

Here are the adorable, and very ethereal-looking, flowers, so very different from my A. glauca's thick, muscular, asparagus-like flower stalk

I better get out there and get some seeds going soon, or else I'm going to be in big trouble.

Monday, February 2, 2015

What I'm Most Looking Forward to at the Northwest Flower and Garden Show

The Northwest Flower and Garden Show opens next week at Seattle's Washington State Convention Center, and I plan to be there for 4 days of it -- on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, with a special visit on Tuesday for the Media Preview, which I've attended for the last two years.

Garden bloggers, journalists, and local media folks gather on Tuesday morning as soon as the display gardens have received their finishing touches, to tour each of the gardens and take photos without the pushy hordes of eager convention-goers getting in the way. Occasionally the garden creators are also available to answer questions. Peter The Outlaw Gardener and I will be going into Seattle together to check it out, followed by lunch in town and a couple of (probably madcap) nursery stops in the afternoon. Knowing Peter, he'll try to cram four or five nurseries into that half-day.

The NWFGS has been running since 1989, and is celebrating its 25th birthday this year. You can read the Show's history here. My first visit was in 2009. We had just moved here to the PNW the autumn before, in October, 2008. I remember asking people at the show what these plants were, that looked like they had purple and/or multi-colored Iris foliage, but obviously weren't Irises. They were Phormiums. That was the first of what my fellow PNW bloggers call the Phormium Killing Winters.

Oh, I had so much to learn.

Courtney Goetz's Display Garden, Paradise (to be) Regained, 2011
(a favorite of mine)




When I attended my first NWFGS, we were living in a rental house in northwest Seattle, and I wasn't blogging yet either. I started this blog in the fall of 2009, when we bought and began transforming our current house and garden. I skipped the 2010 show, but I've been to every one since. It didn't take me long to realize that spring in the PNW begins in February. I now think of the NWFGS as Spring's starting gate.

So, what am I most looking forward to next week? Well, of course, the Display Gardens. Every year they've been designed around a theme, which sometimes works, and sometimes....doesn't. Movies? Music? Art? Trying to fit the theme can result in forcing a design to embrace a degree of cheesiness. One of the things I look for in show gardens is ideas to take home to my own garden. When you force the designer to make a garden based on, say, a piece of art, it limits what they can offer. This year the show takes place over Valentine's Day weekend, and so the theme is Romance Blossoms.

I don't expect to see anything in the show gardens that surpasses, or even matches, Riz Reyes's showstopping 2013 garden entitled The Lost Gardener -- A Journey From the Wild to the Cultivated. It was that rare display garden that actually was way better than its cheesy description as Jurassic Park meets King Kong meets Raiders of the Lost Ark (that was the movie-themed year).

The Lost Gardener, 2013






But I have high hopes for Romance Blossoms. Gardens are already romantic, aren't they? How can that go wrong?

You can find a list here of descriptions of the 2015 gardens. As a plantaholic, I have to note how few of them actually mention plants, and how many refer to "plant material" (Ugh!) Overblown descriptions of hardscape, however, are quite prominent. Judging simply by the descriptions in the linked list, the following are the gardens I'm most interested in seeing.

Over the Moon by the Washington chapter of the Association of Professional Landscape Designers will feature white flowers with accents of yellow, apricot and orange, contrasted with shrubs and perennials with maroon foliage. Sounds yummy, but it will be interesting to see how this vision is executed.

Rekindled Rendezvous by McAuliffe's Nursery will spotlight reclaimed materials, such as 120-year-old barn timbers from an historic barn in Snohomish and a portion of the original façade from Seattle’s historic Fox Music Hall. I'm all in favor of re-purposing, so I'd like to see how this designer incorporates these interesting finds.

The Romance of Steampunk by Whitby Landscape and Design embraces steampunk elements of technology, sci-fi and fantasy by incorporating salvaged materials, including a Victorian folly with a domed roof and stained glass windows. I love steampunk design and stained glass so, yes to this.

Pining over Yew by Oliana Gardening touts a rain garden. I'm all in favor of a good, groan-inducing pun. And rain gardens are fun and trendy too.

The interesting features of Step by Step, Side by Side by Treeline Designz that I'm most eager to see are the gabion path and recycled wine bottle garden border. I've Pinned more than a few recycled bottle borders, and I have two bins full of wine bottles destined for that use.

The Washington Park Arboretum Foundation's garden, Picture Yourself on Azalea Way, will have “living dresses”-- dress forms covered in ornamental plants and fabric -- for convention-goers to stand behind and pose. Sounds like fun, I can't wait to get a picture of Peter wearing a living dress! I hope he's game.

I'm often more excited by the gardens featured in the show's Small Space Showcase, where designers make the most of a space that is 8 X 14 feet, than I am by the big gardens. That size creates an intimacy that is missing from the larger display gardens. I also love them because you can get up close and personal with them, and because they are built in the Convention Center's SkyBridge, with its huge windows to let in natural light (making photo-taking much easier). There's a list here of Small Space designers, but unfortunately, no description other than a title. The ones I'm most eager to see are from perennial favorite Ravenna Gardens, the afore-mentioned Riz of RHR Horticulture, and Sorticulture by Vanca Lumsden and Judith Jones, two fun ladies that I met recently at Barbara Sanderson's Christmas party.

Ravenna Gardens' Small Space Showcase Garden, 2013

Ravenna Gardens' Small Space Showcase Garden




On Wednesday, I plan to shop till I drop in the Marketplace. Given the dearth of plant vendors at the recent Tacoma Home and Garden Show, I'll be checking out the booths of Ravenna Gardens, Christianson's Nursery, Branches Garden Center, Dig Nursery, Elandan Gardens, Keeping It Green, Molbak's, Swanson's, Windmill, and Sundquist Nursery. There'll also be several lily, Dahlia, and bulb purveyors, such as B & D Lilies and Peony's Envy. Then of course there are the garden artists such as Barbara Sanderson of Glass Gardens Northwest, flower-themed jewelry creator Botanical Creations, recycled glass vendor Bedrock Industries, and purveyors of metal sculpture such as Blackwaters Metal, and one I'm quite curious about simply because of its name, Release the Flying Monkeys. Check out their website here. There's a full list of all the exhibitors here.

Barbara Sanderson's Glass Art

Carol Rice Dean's funky head planter (I bought tiles from her that hang in my gravel garden)

The first time I saw a spotted Podophyllum, a now much-coveted plant (I think this one is called 'Kaleidoscope')

I don't usually pay close attention to the Floral Competition, but occasionally one does catch my eye. See the list here.  A few years ago Mari Malcolm of Lusher Life created a memorable, award-winning Small Space Showcase garden, and this year she's in the floral competition, so I've got to check out her entry.  Here's a link to her company website.

The show is introducing a brand new feature this year -- Garden Wars It's a live-action event starting every day of the show at 1 p.m., inspired by reality-based competition shows on TV. Basically, two teams of two novice gardeners, mentored by a local garden pro, will design and install a garden in two hours. The show, hosted by Joe Lamp'l of the TV show Growing a Greener World, will benefit local charities. Apparently they've done a mock run-through of this. How I would have liked being a fly on the wall for that! I watch a lot of skill-based reality competition shows, such as Top Chef and Chopped, and two from England that I've recently discovered, The Big Allotment Challenge, and the Great British Bake-off.  Here's a link to more information about the NWFGS's Garden Wars.

Another big benefit of attending the NWFGS is the Seminars -- more than 100 of them over the course of 5 days. There's a huge roster of classes, talks, and panel discussions each day. I often intend to see more of these than I actually get to. Once I'm at the show wandering around, it's easy to lose track of time. On Thursday, I'd like to catch either Beyond Plants: Art in the Garden by Lucy Hardiman or It Would Be Better With Vampires: Adding Drama to the Garden by Susan Morrison. How frustrating that they're on at the same time. I'd also like to see the presentation Native Plants Are Cool by Sean Hogan, co-owner of Cistus Nursery in Portland, but it's at 5:45, kind of late. I can always catch his second presentation on Friday afternoon, Plants So Amazing, You'll Think We're Making Them Up! On Friday I also might catch Rochelle Greayer's talk called Express Yourself: Cultivating Garden Style. I can always benefit from a lesson in style, since I have none. (Unless dumpy is a style. Do you think dumpy can be a garden style too?) You can find out lots more here about the seminar schedule and presenters.

Finally, I am planning to make it to the early morning (7:30 a.m.!) Thursday Tweetup. I joined Twitter two years ago just to go to this, and have planned to attend for the last two years, but haven't made it yet. 2015 is the year! One good thing about the Tweetup is that we get to see the show gardens before the show opens for the day and without the theatrical lighting, making picture-taking easier. But the absolute best thing about the Tweetup is that I'll be meeting blogger friends there -- Peter, of course, as well as Portland bloggers Loree of Danger Garden, Ann of An Amateur Bot-ANN-ist, and Jane of MulchMaid. Oh, they give away a cool swag bag, too! 

I'm going to have a busy, but fun week. Can't wait!