Showing posts with label Flax Lily. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flax Lily. Show all posts

Thursday, March 15, 2012

I’m taking my vitamins again.

And I’ve just decided that I can’t let not-done (no matter how wonderful) blog posts prevent me from ever posting again. Over the last few weeks of gardening there have been many events and activities that I was excited to record in this blog only to find myself way too tired to make my brain do its thing. I simply could not. The consequence of so many missed posts is an inertia that grows to huge proportions with all those topics weighing down on me and whispering “Catch up! Go back to the first one and make a start.” Well, that just became more and more impossible. Until the time changed this past weekend there didn’t seem to be any photos, and then when there were photos they were taken in the harsh light of the setting Florida sun and were awful. I can’t seem to write about what you can’t see. So just now the thought came to me to start where I am and work in the omissions where and when I can. A simple plan, and here I am.

I got my first load of composted horse manure of the 2012 season last Saturday. Sunday evening I was two barrows short of having it all spread, covering the driveway bed, all of the right side of the circle, the garage wall bed and half of the ‘Le Vesuve’ bed. Compost duty is unquestionably the most unfeminine gardening job there is in my experience. Dirty, back-breaking work that could only be worse if done in August. I’m pretty sure I need two more truckloads to do the whole garden – maybe three. Oh, vitamins, I need you now!

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There have been roses in the garden for about a week. No, make that rose singular. ‘Clotilde Soupert’, bush forms and climber, were the first to fully leaf out and the first to bloom. She is indeed a beauty and at moments like this is my favorite rose. I’m a sucker for her dense foliage not to mention those fat, fragrant flowers.

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Today, lo and behold, ‘Le Vesuve’ has an open flower. I guess he was not going to be outdone by Miss Clotilde.

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A lot has happened since I last invited you into my garden. Another post will chronicle the disappearance of ‘Bermuda’s Anna Olivier’ from this bed. Today before I could finish dispersing the last of this batch of compost into this area I had to move ‘Full Moon Rising’, a yellow modern climber that had been relegated to a spot under a tree within easy reach of the marauding squirrels. FMR has big flowers, but since it was growing straight up against a trellis, the blooms were only at the top and not many. It would get some black spot, too. So in an effort to give it a real chance to show its stuff, it had to be moved. ‘Red Cascade’s old spot seemed the best place – actually the only place, and the homemade (female-made) picket fence offered the perfect support for horizontal growing. Hopefully, the squirrels will think it died.

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The little green sprout growing all too close to ‘Full Moon Rising’ is ‘Maggie’. She will be a big girl full of gorgeous, very fragrant deep pink/red Bourbon flowers and hopefully not full of black spot. I will be gritting my teeth through the first year, being very, very tolerant of her fungal weakness in order to one day see her in all of her healthy glory. One day this bed will be filled with magenta from ‘Maggie’ and ‘Enchantress’ and yellow from ‘Full Moon Rising’ and ‘Sherry Lane Carr’ daylily. Sounds yummy to me.

Below is my potted ‘Borderer’. Healthy, healthy and beautiful, but a tad more salmon that this photo shows.

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The Flax Lily got divided in three tonight to fill the void left by ‘Full Moon Rising’.

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The arbor at the porch entrance for ‘Clotilde Soupert, Climbing’ is in the same condition as when you last saw it. It was only urgent that weekend, something that DH doesn't quite understand. The composting moved into the urgent slot.

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This is the beautiful near-white daylily, ‘Joan Senior’. At pruning time it looked like there would be room for her next to Clotilde, the bush, but I noticed today that all her foliage has suddenly and greatly added to Clotilde’s size. She is definitely pushing on Joan even more than this photo shows and will soon be hovering over her, so it is with regret that I say I need to dig up Joan to move her. Dang! I wish I had done this a month or two ago. Denial is a bad thing.

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This is ‘Chrysler Imperial’ who used to grace the back patio with his voluptuous red Hybrid Tea flowers and intense damask scent. What’s that song that Judy Garland sang to Clark Gable's picture? Oh, yeah. “You made me love you; I didn’t wanna do it; I didn’t wanna do it.” I fell in love with ‘Chrysler Imperial’. Then he got too bedraggled-y, and he went bye-bye. This spring Lowe’s had them for $7. Not the prettiest things, all beat up, but gee, $7 is not much so I splurged on two. This one is right on the front sidewalk squeezed in between two lavender pink ‘Hermosa’ roses. Won’t that be gaudy?? But I wanted to put him where DH could easily see him, since they were originally bought for him despite the fact that he has no sense of smell left. Alas, reality smacked me in the face this evening when I noticed a bunch of leaves that were yellow and black spotted in his lower regions. Oh, well, I peacefully stripped them off. I may take to spraying these prima donnas to keep all the leaves looking like these, but I kinda doubt I have it in me to spray.

There is much, much to do in this garden of mine, and all I can do is keep plugging along. I have always been a slow gardener, but I have gotten maddeningly slower with age. Oh, yeah, there’s a plus side to age, and that is that I’m wiser. Ha!

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Yesterday

I have no photos of the garden today . This evening was grocery store day and cook dog food day . The dog food cooking is so funny . I got the idea from Connie at Hartwood Roses . As is my weird way, I modified her recipe of ground turkey, rice, kale, carrots and green beans . I added chicken livers, lamb neck bones or shank and switched from white rice to brown rice . This is the third time I've made a batch which was 22 cups today since I forgot to add dry dog food which I'm sort of glad I did . The funny thing is that Ellie knew exactly what I was doing while I was making the second and third batches which are about six weeks apart . It doesn't matter how many people meals are cooked in between . She knows when I'm cooking for her, and she's very attentive especially when I'm scooping from the food processor and filling the containers at the end . I always give her a taste . She absolutely loves this food . I add a heaping tablespoon to her half cup of dry food twice a day . It makes me happy to see her eat it all down in one breath . So thank you, Connie, for the idea .

However, yesterday I took a quick walk through the garden with camera in hand. Here follows the day-old news .

'White Maman Cochet'
I have tried to compost with variable success, so since much of my debris is rose cuttings I usually donate it to the city .
I wanted to show you 'Mme Abel Chatenay', such a lovely healthy and lush Hybrid Tea albeit from 1894 . She's just putting out new growth for her next bloom .
'Pink Gruss an Aachen' was a transplant over the winter . She's doing much better .
I have several echinaceas . This is the oldest plant and the one with the most blooms . Ones grown from seed this year are not blooming yet but are close .
'Bermuda's Anna Olivier' - when she's on, she's stunning . When she's not, she's a mess . The heat is here so I guess she'll decide to do her best .

Above and below 'Pearl Harbor' is a lovely show-off . I can't decide if I have enough yellow daylilies or if I should fill the garden with them . The decisions of a gardener!
 

This is the only Fordhook phlox seed that actually survived to maturity . Actually, I'm quite impressed . I had no clue what phlox was so this is a total win-win . It flopped from its earliest days and has been a sprawler, but I have never seen any spent flowers . It always looks like this . Can't vouch for its tolerance of our humidity since it hasn't really arrived yet .
The femme fatale of the garden, of course, 'Souv de la Malmaison' .
A 'Full Moon Rising' bud
'Secret Splendor', evergreen mid-late rebloomer
'Duquesa' Tea rose
My mounding dianthus are scattered everywhere . They take the full sun all summer and stay green all winter even at temps under 20 degrees F . They come in shades of pink, burgundy, red and variations of white with pinwheel patterns out the ying yang . These photos are each a different plant . Unfortunately, the deep reds and fuschias are often beyond the reach of my camera and simply explode out of focus much of the time . I really love them . They're only about 10" tall, and when they need deadheading, I just give them a haircut .
 


Flax Lily and 'Aaron' caladium
Clematis texensis 'Princess Diana' blooming again
'Le Vesuve' - a partial full bush shot . She tends to bloom on one side and then the other side . Don't know why .
A closer view from the other side and farther back (below) . Her non-blooming side is out of frame to the right .
 

'Leonie Lamesch' is in a pot with canes almost 5' long . She is turning out larger that I thought she was going to be. I need to find a spot in the ground for her . I wonder who's on the bubble .
Daylily progress is slow and minute, I think because the plants did not have much root system at arrival . Thankfully, they're tough and are able to grow a root system and then grow leaves .
 
Several of the daylilies aren't showing any new growth yet .

Above and below is 'Blush Noisette' which is a shrub right now, but I understand it can be a climber, too .
 

Above and the next two below is another noisette 'Princesse de Nassau' from before 1829 . I have it climbing on a pillar .
 

'Crepuscule' - a Tea-Noisette climber from 1904
 Old news is good for more than just wrapping fish, don't you agree?