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

Saturday, February 28, 2015

End of the Month View, February, 2015 -- Gravel Garden Makeover Plans

I meant to do an End of Month View post way back in January about all the plans I have for making over several different areas of the garden. I used the EoMV meme last year to show the changes in my Bottle Tree bed as I made it over in the first half of the year, and then to show how it shook out over the second half of the year. It was a very successful way to make sure I actually accomplished something in that bed, rather than just contemplating it ad infinitum and ad nauseum. This year I have four or five areas of my garden where I want to make some big changes, adding plants, moving plants, etc., etc., etc.

So I'm going to use the EoMV meme this year to push myself to make lots of changes. The first of those is in making over my gravel garden. I'm satisfied with the hardscaping features in this bed -- the gabions, stock tanks and culvert planters -- but the actual plants, not so much. Somehow, it just didn't turn out the way I first envisioned it, and I want to try and get it closer to that vision this year by pulling out some of the plants and replacing them with others. Part of the problem is that I used plants that, while drought-tolerant, have more of a cottage garden feel and look to them, such as Nepeta 'Walker's Low' which gets enormous and floppy and blowsy very quickly. Because the bees love it so much, and it never really stops flowering, I never cut it back for the entire growing season. And because the bees love it, I've been reluctant to remove it. But this is the year.

I want the entire bed to have a more austere, ascetic look, which is how I first pictured it way back when. So, here's my post about how I'm going to redo it.

Wide shot of the gravel garden from the driveway, in all its winter ugliness

From the front door

The soil in both culvert planters has settled way too much, so I need to take all the plants out and top them off with soil. There's at least 6-8 inches of settling. There are Alliums in there that I'd like to move to the front garden, where I think they'll look better surrounded by grasses like Panicum. What's in there now? An Agave parryi 'J.C. Raulston,' a Stipa (or is it Nasella?) tenuissima, a Sedum of some kind, and some clumps of Sempervivum. I'd like it better if it matched the planter on the other side of the driveway, which has a Chaemerops humilis, a Nolina 'La Siberica,' and a few Agave havardiana.


The Alliums have already sprouted! I hope they survive being dug up and moved.

The other culvert planter, which needs topping off, as well as re-planting. What should I put in it? Maybe a Yucca rostrata? It doesn't get quite as much sun as the other culvert planter.


Another problem with the gravel garden is its weediness, which is a challenge. My neighbor's bed, which borders the gravel garden, is...um...not particularly well-cared-for. It is just chock-full of weeds every year, which go to seed, throwing gazillions of little babies into the gravel bed. The roses in their bed are basically dead. I've thought about offering to weed the bed for them, and maybe even plant it up with some of my over-stock of plants. I always have seedlings and divisions going begging for a home. My neighbor has even commented a few times, sort of wistfully wishing that her garden looked like mine. How do I offer to care for that bed, without offending her, and without biting off more than I can chew?


Not a ground cover. Weeds. I need to put something vigorous here to compete with the weeds, maybe Sedum Angelina? Or some kind of Delosperma? I have a purple one in a pot that is quite a strong spreader.

Ugh, more weeds.

Here's another problem that needs addressing in the gravel garden -- plants that were put too close together. What was I thinking when I planted this Grevillea 'Marshall Olbricht' so close to the Ceanothus? The Ceanothus looks like Pepe LePew trying to kiss his paramour. Actually, I know what I was thinking -- I was pretty much expecting the Grevillea to die on me. But instead it's thriving, and keeps getting bigger. I'd like to move it about 2 or 3 feet to the right. Of course, moving it will probably guarantee that it will indeed die, as I originally expected. Behind the two shrubs is a Kniphofia caulescens that would like to be enormous, but it doesn't get enough light with these two mammoth shrubs in front of it.


Recording the pretty Grevillea flowers, so that when it dies, I can prove it was once thriving.

Nepeta 'Walker's Low' on the right. It's coming out this year and is going to find a new home elsewhere. Last year it completely engulfed that plant on its left, which I think is a Dasylirion.

I also want to either remove or move most of the grasses that are in the gravel bed. They don't fit my vision for the bed either. I planted them thinking they were great drought-tolerant perennials, but while they do fine without water, I think they do better with it. Many of the grasses haven't increased in size in the 3 years they've been planted. I'll either put them elsewhere or give them away.

I like Chasmanthium latifolium, but it gets way taller than I thought it would, and doesn't belong right in the front of the bed. It also flops terribly, and this past year I tied it up with ribbon. I have at least 3 clumps of it. I'm either going to move them all into the front bed, along the street, or further in the back of this one, right along the border between me and my neighbor.



Here's another clump sticking out like a sore thumb.

Here's a third Chasmanthium looking like it doesn't belong

Another grass growing in the gravel garden that I'm not sure about is Stipa gigantea. There's lots of floppy blades, but very few of the fabulous tall seed clusters, which are the reason I planted it. I'm not sure where it will be happier, or if the enormous floppy blades and paltry seedheads are a feature.

Stipa gigantea


I started collecting some replacement plants last fall, and they've been living in pots in a corner of the gravel garden all winter. I hope to find more at the Yard, Garden and Patio Show in Portland.

Hesperaloe

Beschorneria, Chaemerops humilis var. cerifera, and two Yuccas, Yucca torreyi and Yucca brevifolia, which according to their tags both get tall very slowly

Speaking of Yuccas, I need to figure out what to do with the three 'Bright Star' Yuccas planted in this bed. They also seem to be in the wrong spot, visually, but they're thriving (except for one, which gets those nasty spots in the winter). The problem with them visually might just be the rest of what's planted around them. You can see the one that gets the worst spots in the third picture of Chasmanthium above, planted next to the stock tank. They're supposed to get pink highlights too, but mine never get much pink beyond the tips of the leaves.

Here's a closeup of the 'Bright Star' with the spots.

Yucky Yucca surrounded by weeds

Slightly fewer spots, and with fresh healthy foliage coming up in the middle

The healthiest looking foliage of the three

Peter The Outlaw Gardener recently posted about keeping one in the greenhouse over the winter in a pot, and I might try that with the one with the worst spots (Maybe I'll name that one Spot.)

When I first put the gravel garden in, I had plans to put a stepping stone path through the center of it. Without that, I don't think visitors realize that they can walk IN the gravel garden to get a closer look at things. Right now, it's just an expanse of gravel and weeds. I'll plan to get that done this year.

This open area full of weeds was originally supposed to be a path


As I was taking pictures for this post, my neighbor's two kitties came over to say Hi. They're so sweet. They're both essentially still kittens, and quite friendly. I see them often playing in the gravel garden. They're terrified of my other neighbor's cat Lucy (short for Lucifer) who I showed in a recent post here.

I know this one's name is Frankie. He's very affectionate and curious, in fact, he runs to me enthusiastically as soon as he sees me.

He even lets me pick him up and purrs like a motor.

He poses adorably beside the orange Carex, which matches his coloring

This one, whose name I don't know, is a little more stand-offish.

Don't point that thing at me!

So, I've definitely got my work cut out for me rejuvenating the gravel garden. There's plenty more changes in the offing in other parts of the garden too, which I'll talk about in another post.

The EoMV meme is hosted by The Patient Gardener's Weblog, on the last day of the month. You can view her most recent post here.

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

More Hats

One of the common names for Epimedium is Bishop's Hat. I don't actually know what a bishop's hat looks like, but I guess it kind of looks like an Epimedium flower.

Most of my Epimediums are just starting to put up stems from the ground that will become flowers. But this one (I don't know the name) is already flowering profusely. Epimedium is one of my favorite perennials for dry shade, but normally I don't cut them back till just about now. That becomes difficult when they've already sent up flower spikes, like this one has. The foliage looks tattered and spent, but the flowers are lovely and graceful.


Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Black Cats in Hats

Salix gracilistyla 'Melanostachys' aka Black Pussy Willow, still wearing the little cap that covers them when in bud

Monday, February 23, 2015

The Darling Buds of May

This is a Ceanothus bloom. A Ceanothus. There are only a few open, but the entire shrub is smothered in swelling buds that are about to pop.


What the what?


They usually bloom in May.

It's February. Yep, just checked the calendar. It's not May yet, it's still February.

Back in the Northeast, they are having apocalyptic winter weather. Here the plants think it's May.

Friday, February 20, 2015

Flowers That I Didn't Show For Bloom Day

For Garden Bloggers Bloom Day I showed only Hellebores, of which I have many. But there are plenty of other flowers out there, and I figured it would be useful to have a record of them for winter 2015, which is shaping up to be unusually warm and dry, with an early spring.

Grecian windflower/Anemone blanda

Primrose

Crocus

Crocus

Garrya elliptica, flowering despite its short stature and manky foliage

Cyclamen coum

Erythronium already up and flowering, evidence of the above-mentioned early spring

Hepatica

Hepatica

Indian plum

Grevillea 'Marshal Olbricht'

Edgeworthia chrysantha 'Akebono'


And in the greenhouse:

Variegated Abutilon

Abutilon 'Red Tiger'

It's beginning to feel like spring is an unstoppable juggernaut. What do you think? I won't be surprised if there's another cold spell in our future, but I hope not.

Thursday, February 19, 2015

What I Bought At the Northwest Flower and Garden Show

Well, of course, I went to the show to shop! Despite the feeling that there were fewer plant vendors, I did manage to find some plants, as well as some garden art, and a handful of colorful pots.

Most of the plants that I bought, almost all of them, in fact, except for one, are not reliably hardy outside, so they'll be living in the greenhouse for a while, and summering outside.

Aloe variegata with 5 pups. Those tips are sharp.

Aloe variegata flower

Thanks to Peter for spotting this Begonia hemsleyana -- looks kind of like a Begonia luxurians, but the new foliage is speckled


Wonderful green-on-green variegation on my new Agave 'Mateo'

Sad face -- while wrestling all my plant purchases home, I managed to damage a couple of the Agave's arms

Begonia fuchsioides -- A Begonia that looks like a Fuchsia

Thanks again to Peter for spotting this one with red flowers

Rhipsalis teres, which will probably end up in a head planter


The only hardy plant -- Leucothoe 'Red Curls,' which stays small according to the tag

Two brightly colored small square pots just the right size for the 4-oz. cacti I bought recently at Home Depot

 You may have noticed the 'Old Lady' cactus has a pretty flower in her wiry white hair.

Gratuitous shot of Cactus flower

A fabulous set of Talavera pots, which together cost just slightly more than the single pot I got last month at Molbak's

Hanging octopus planter is as much art as it is container -- now I need to figure out what to plant in it

I'm planning to turn this cool gnarly stump into a Bromeliad tree -- I'll need to put it in a large pot, or maybe on a pedestal

I bought two of these fairies in leaves -- one will hang here on the Folly, the other is sitting in the rocks at the base of the Folly fountain at the moment, but might eventually find a different home

So, that's what I bought at the Northwest Flower and Garden Show, and this is the end of this year's coverage of the show. I'm planning to go to Portland in a couple of weeks for the Yard, Garden and Patio Show. Wonder what treasures I'll find there?