I spent all of last week cleaning out a bed in the garden instead of blogging, so my blog lay fallow for a week. The plant sale at the
Rhododendron Species Botanical Garden was a couple of weekends ago now, but here's what I saw. It's one of the last sales of the season (probably the very, very last is coming up at
Heronswood on May 12 and 13).
The Rhododendron Garden plant sale always has plenty of great vendors and it's spread out nicely in a large parking lot. Even though it might attract lots of gardeners, it's not wall-to-wall with so many people that you can't breathe. And fortunately, although it was a comfortably cool day, it wasn't raining.
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Cunninghamia lanceolata reminds me of Wollemia -- I'm intrigued, but a Google search shows it gets huge and I don't have the room for it |
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This Persicaria looks a bit like 'Purple Fantasy' to me -- the green a bit more limey and the purple splotch not quite so big and deep |
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I found myself drawn to all the bronzey leaves |
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I have chocolate Eupatorium already growing in the garden, but it needs to be moved |
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I've tried growing this plant many times, but it seldom returns for me |
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The sale took place just as Arisamea sikokianum was at its peak |
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Such wonderful stripes! I bought two at the Northwest Flower and Garden Show, but I've decided I need more, in fact, I'd like a whole forest full, but that could get expensive |
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Yummy Podophyllum |
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These leaves were gigantic! |
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A sweet variegated Disporum |
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An enormous 'Spotty Dotty' |
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Sinopanax formosanus at the Far Reaches table -- crikey, it was expensive |
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You could get Japanese maples at the sale too |
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And flowering Rhodies -- or is that an Azalea, I can never tell the diffference |
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I was happy to find Asplenium trichomanes/maidenhair spleenwort at the Hardy Fern Foundation for my fern table, which is finally in progress |
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Prism Gardens Nursery was selling miniature Hostas, aren't they cute? |
There were a couple of vendors of interesting garden art at the sale too.
Here's the work of Connie Rae Munford of
Window Lit Fused Glass Art Studio. Most of the art that she brought was on stakes for exhibiting in beds or pots.
I leaned toward liking the colors in the last two, but there was just a little too much pink, I might have gone for it with a bit of black or maybe purple thrown in.
Please check out
Connie Rae's website for many more examples of her garden art. The lantern with cherry blossoms is especially nice.
Another artist exhibiting at the sale was Julie Haun of
Original Stone Works. She creates garden art, coasters, and accent tiles using stone, tile, marble, ceramic, porcelain, glass, metal, and wood.
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This falcon drew my eye |
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And I liked this yin-yang made with Pacific salmon instead of the traditional carp |
You can check out her website
here.
And now I'm sure you want to know what I bought, right? Well, I went outside and took pictures. Just for you.
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This tiny Hosta is called Ki nakafu otome -- and it's supposed to stay really small, so it's slated for my fern table |
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Disporum smilacinum 'Ki-no-tsukasa' which also may end up in the fern table |
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When I picked up this Podophyllum from Far Reaches Farm, the leaf was pristine, I managed to catch it in the shade cover of my car when I pulled it back to try to protect the plants -- D'oh! |
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And because I failed to read the tag I bought another of that same Disporum from Far Reaches -- but in my defense, it looks rather different, with bigger leaves |
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Maidenhair spleenwort from the Hardy Fern Foundation -- also a candidate for the fern table |
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Microbiota decussata from the Rhododendron Species Botanical Garden |
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Schefflera fengii from the Rhododendron Species Botanical Garden |
Another post to come about my visit to the garden itself.