Friday, April 15, 2011

Documenting the Progress in my Garden Planting -- Part II

More tedious words and pictures showing what's growing where.

This is the front of the triangular bed that ended the previous post.

This area at the front gets more sun, and has less drainage. There's a stone-filled drainage (hmm...can't really call it a ditch) area there on the left, where all the run-off in the grass and the beds goes. So, on the left near it I have plants that like being wet, like Lobelia cardinalis and ornamental rhubarb. Some new plants here this year are variegated shield fern, Ligularia tussilaginea aureomaculata (that's a mouthful), and Podophyllum. They are growing with Dicentra 'Gold Heart', heucheras and columbines, native ginger, and one(!) blue Meconopsis poppy. I planted three blue poppies last summer, but only one has returned this Spring. In the center of the bed in that big bare spot is a serviceberry shrub (Amelanchier alnifolia).

This next area is to the left of that, on the other side of the drainage area thingy.

There are three Alaska cedars here, still only about 8 feet tall. They should get much taller, and will eventually fill in the bare area between them. It's hard to resist the urge to fill in that space between them with another shrub or with perennials. There are native Pacific Coast irises in front and to the left of them, and under the cloches are seeds and seedlings for Echinacea, Liatris, Lupine, Prairie Smoke, Helenium and Fleabane.



Newly planted along the fence are native orange honeysuckle, a native Delphinium, and some foxgloves. Because of all the ginormous Douglas firs, nowhere in my back garden gets what is technically full sun (6 hours or more of direct sun). But I'm hoping this area will get enough for these to cope. Usually by summer the sun is high enough overhead that the trees don't block it for quite as long.

I also plan to sow seeds of various California wildflowers here in the hopes that they will establish a self-seeding colony.  I just hope it's not too late for that, I feel like I'm running out of time, but it's hard to get it done with it being so cold and wet out there. I want to plant California poppy, Tidy Tips, Nemophila (both Baby Blue Eyes and Penny Blacks), Bird's eyes, Farewell-to-spring, Poached Egg Plant, Phacelia and Chinese houses.

The next area to the left is the area I call the mostly native bed. It's a mostly shady, woodland type area, that gets a little late afternoon sun. It's the Northeast corner of the property.

There are no new plants at the front, but it looks like all the native bulbs and plants that I put in last Fall have come up. What's in here? Camassia, Calochortus (Mariposa lily), lady ferns, scarlet monkey flower, native ginger, nodding onion, Brodiaea and Dichelostemma, Tellima, inside-out flower, Sitka burnet, Sedum spathulifolium (Cape Blanco), a handful of Fritillaria meleagris (not native) and summer-blooming heather (also not native). I know there's more but I can't remember them all.



I'm in the process of putting a walkway in here, I dig up rocks every time I plant something, so I plan to use the larger rocks to line this walk like cobbles. The edges aren't complete yet, they don't line up at the back.

Further up the walk. This is where all the Trilliums and Erythronium are. Also sword ferns, native bleeding hearts, native columbine, goatsbeard,  and more native ginger. Oh, and a couple of evergreen huckleberries.


On this side of the walk that circles the tree are shooting stars and Claytonia sibirica. At this point we are directly behind the waterfall that is the start of the stream.

Here's the area on the other side of the waterfall, that I posted pictures of in my Fertilizer Friday post.

Most of these are new. Purple Euphorbia, primroses, peachy Heucheras, a reddish grass, and one Monkey flower with soft apricot flowers (at least that's what Annie's Annuals says). There are some ornamental grasses planted last year in here as well, but they haven't shown much growth yet. Pennisetum 'Karley Rose', Northern sea oats, and a reddish Panicum. My plan for this year is to also weave a row of pink Muhly grass behind them.

There are also two new shrubs/small trees here -- a Leycesteria and a witch hazel with red flowers called Fire......something.


When I bought the witch hazel, its flowers were already past, so I didn't get to see it in full flower. It's just starting to leaf out, so I'm hoping next Spring/late Winter it will be fantastic. (Oh, see the pile of stones behind it? That's what I dig up every time I plant something.) This is also the area where I moved my Camellia Yuletide to. It seems to be doing OK.

Well, that's about it. I skipped a couple of areas -- the raised beds where I grow veggies, and another bed where I didn't plant anything new, except for some cloches with poppies growing under them.

I have so much bare space. Sometimes I feel like I will never fill it up, and I like really full cottagey beds. My garden is like that huge salad you buy where the plate seems to never empty no matter how long you eat. Have you ever ordered something like that at a restaurant?

Good thing I have seedlings coming along in my mini-greenhouses.