A summer garden tour

Hello! Welcome to my blog, where I find peace and happiness through gardening and flowers. Anyone else need some of that? 🙂 This week I’m going to give a view of what is happening all around the garden. We’ve had a strange summer, weather-wise: a very dry spring followed by a very wet early summer. Our summer so far has been cooler than normal with lots of rain. Thankfully, the sun has not been a complete stranger!

Helenium and daisies
Helenium ‘Moerheim Beauty’ with Shasta Daisy
Helenium and bee
Bees love Helenium, too!

I really like the contrast with this combination of Helenium and Daisies. I’ve propped up both plants this year as they get really floppy. The Shasta Daisy have spread, and spread, and spread!

View of the Ditch Wall Garden July
Our ditch wall garden with daisies, helenium, and yarrow.

You can see in the full view of the ditch wall garden that there are a lot of daisies! I have a few varieties of yarrow, too. Lots of floppiness going on as they all seek the afternoon sun from their position under the Hawthorn trees.

Clematis view
A view of the Clematis Purpurea Plena Elegans, lychnis coronaria rose campion, and perennial geranium.

This little corner is rather happy, although it might be a bit happier if it weren’t quite so windy where we live. This Clematis – Purpurea Plena Elegans – is very pretty, with a deep burgundy color. The Lychnis Coronaria Rose Campion is quite prolific! It has sprung up in a few places around the garden! Thankfully, it is quite a pretty fuchsia pink flower with a silvery stem. I actually have a few plants in this garden that just like to take off. The Japanese anemone is just now starting to come into bloom (only one light pink flower on the left of this picture). The perennial geranium is a pretty light pink, and is quite hardy and also enjoys moving about the garden! At the very back of this picture is a tall Rosemary plant. It is now quite woody, but otherwise we still use it for cooking. There is a Japanese Maple tree in the middle of all of this – but it is not thriving due to the wind. I am quite stubborn and I am always hopeful that it will grow big and strong enough to handle the wind. We’ll see!

Clematis Purpurea Plena Elegans single
A close up view of the Clematis Purpurea Plena Elegans
Clematis Purpurea Plena Elegans full view
Clematis Purpurea Plena Elegans
lychnis Coronaria rose campion
Lychnis Coronaria Rose Campion – one of my favorite flowers
Japanese Maple Garden spring
A view in April of our Japanese Maple garden

The above picture is a view of the same bed back in April. I was quite proud of my shaping of the boxwood shrubs! The green ground cover in the front left of the picture is the Japanese Anemone. It loves to spread!

Hydrangea Selma full view
Hydrangea Selma

In this same ‘Japanese Maple’ bed, I have a hydrangea ‘Selma’. This is the best it has ever looked as it has loved all of our rain! The mophead flowers are redish pink around the edges with a white center. The leaves are a very pretty burgundy color.

Hydrangea Selma single
Hydrangea Selma

Moving to another bed – sometimes I get my plantings right, sometimes not so much. The Russian sage – Perovskia atriplicifolia Little Spire – is really happy in this bed. The plant next to it on the left – Zantedeschia aethiopica Arum Lily – although not dead, doesn’t produce any flowers. I don’t think it is happy. I’ll be looking to move that eventually.

Russian Sage
The Russian Sage has really filled out. The Zantedeschia aethiopica Arum Lily would love to be in a different location, preferable near water. A mistake on my part!

The bed beyond the Russian Sage plant is the Rainbow garden. It has a lot going on in there! I just want to focus on one plant, though, the Buddleis BUZZ ‘Dark Pink’ Butterfly Bush. It is really showing off this year!

field view
A view of the fields and the Rainbow garden
Buddleis BUZZ Dark Pink Butterfly Bush July
Buddleis BUZZ Dark Pink Butterfly Bush in July
butterfly bush closeup
butterfly bush closeup

The next part of the garden to highlight is our front gate bed. I’ve been saying this a few years now, but I really need to move my hydrangea Incrediball. It gets a lot of sun where it is, and it would much prefer to be in shade! This bed is full of beauty. There are two lavender plants, which are super fragrant. The Pittosporum Tom Thumb is great for some different texture. The Lychnis Coronaria Rose Campion is a fabulous splash of color (even if it decided for itself to join this bed) and all of the way on the far right is the Leycesteria formosa – which is also knowns as Himalayan honeysuckle or pheasant berry. There are a lot of wonderful things going on in this bed! I’ll be sad to see the hydrangeas go, but I’m sure we’ll find something lovely to fill their places.

Front Gate Garden full view
Pittosporum Tom Thumb, Lavandula angustifolia Lavender, hydrangea Incrediball, hydrangea paniculata, lychnis Coronaria Rose Campion, Syringa v. Beauty of Moscow Lilac, and Leycesteria formosa, Bergenia and Iris ‘Benton Storrington’

The below picture is of planters that are at my back door. That is the first thing I see in the morning when I go to let the chickens out of their coop and feed them. Just a few planters with a bit of color and different sizes, shapes, textures. They’ve done really well this year!

Back deck flowers
Pots of plants at my back door. Lots of hosta, some dahlia, calla lilies, and soon to bloom marigolds, and gladiolas.

I hope you have enjoyed the tour! The garden seems to change on an almost daily basis. No matter what goes on in the outside world, life and growth continues in the garden.

Stay safe and healthy!

In Peace,
Dana

Hosta in sunlight
Hosta flowers in evening sunlight.

A Simple Garden Wreath

Garden Wreath collage updated

everything you need!

I love wreaths.  I love using plants from the garden.  I love making things with my hands. (that’s a whole lotta love!)  What a great start to my day to be able to make this wreath!  I dried all the flowers this season and it was so easy to put it together.

My video is not a “how to” but more of a summary.  I wasn’t sure how the wreath would come out so I didn’t video me making it.  Next time I will!

Super easy to make!

Super easy to make!

We’ve had some much needed rain, but now the sun is out and it is just glorious.

Enjoy the video, and enjoy your weekend!

 

In peace,
Dana

Wordless Wednesday: Hydrangea Selma

In the beginning...

In the beginning…

Now that is a horrible picture to start a blog post with!  And actually, that is not even (exactly) “in the beginning”.  That picture is the year after I bought my hydrangea Selma.  I had to dig it up and help the soil a bit.  The poor hydrangea was not happy.  Even with digging it up and helping the soil, it took last year for it to really settle in!  Last year the plant looked nice and healthy, but didn’t have any blooms.  Thankfully, this year is going much, much better!

Earlier in the season

Earlier in the season

A cherry color if you ask me

A cherry color if you ask me

The foliage is a lovely almost  burgundy color

The foliage is a lovely almost burgundy color

The white centers are becoming more prominent

The white centers are becoming more prominent

(the green leaves are from another plant)

(the green leaves are from my leycesteria formosa plant)

Still filling in with blooms

Still filling in with blooms

And here are two pictures of the plant when I bought it in August 2010.  I prefer what it looks like today 🙂

 

It looked lovely when I bought it!

It looked lovely when I bought it!

This is what it looked like when I bought it in August 2010

This is what it looked like when I bought it in August 2010

 

Another “Dana version” of Wordless Wednesday!  Here is a link to what we did to the soil to help the health of the hydrangea, if you’d like to read about that:  https://mominthegarden.wordpress.com/2012/10/18/hydrangea-selmas-new-life/  

I’m so glad I had the chance to share all of my hydrangea pictures!
I should really challenge myself to actually post with no words…  But what fun is that? 🙂

Dana

Hydrangea Selma’s new life.

I would love to say that I get it right the first time with all of my gardening projects. (Wouldn’t that be great?) But as life would have it, that just isn’t the case.  My husband was laughing at me just the other day, due to his having to move a plant from one location to another.  He’d prefer that I had a more clear vision, one which didn’t involve changing my mind (or the locations of plants!).  I’m still learning, and thankfully, my husband is still digging for me.

I probably have more than a few examples of our learning as we go along, but I’ll just focus on my Hydrangea Selma today.  I figured it was about time for an update.  Back in June, I posted about my Hydrangea Selma, and how it wasn’t doing well.  https://mominthegarden.wordpress.com/2012/06/17/nursing-hydrangea-selma-back-to-health/  I  bought this plant two years ago, and there were lovely pink and white blooms on burgundy leaves.  It was gorgeous.  As it turns out, the soil I planted it in was quite wet with not enough drainage or air, or peat.   My husband dug it up for me, and we added a 60/40 mix of compost/peat to the soil.  I could not believe the change in the plant!  It was immediately happier, filling out over the past few months.  It continued to improve despite the constant attack by slugs this summer.  Nothing deterred those guys.  Every night I’d be out in the garden picking them off.  I won’t mention what I did with them. I’d prefer for you to think of me as a non-violent gardener. 🙂  So here are some pictures of Selma now. I think the foliage is lovely.  I don’t have blooms yet, but I’m really hoping that next season we’ll finally get to enjoy some blooms.

So I’ve learned that all is not necessarily lost if your plant isn’t doing well. It’s worth investigating to find a solution!

Dana

P.S.  On a topic unrelated to Selma, I want to show you some pictures of my front gate garden.   The Asters given to me by my friend Susan are a pretty  “wow” factor!  I love seeing them every time I drive through our gates.  I think the pink climbing roses are a nice backdrop, as I am partial to pink!

June 2012 Hydrangea Selma in a bad way.

June 2012 Hydrangea Selma in a bad way.

October 2012 Hydrangea Selma filling out.

October 2012 Hydrangea Selma filling out.

October 2012 Hydrangea Selma.

October 2012 Hydrangea Selma.

A close up of Hydrangea Selma 2012.

A close up of Hydrangea Selma 2012.

A healthy Hydrangea Selma in 2010.

A healthy Hydrangea Selma in 2010.

A healthy Hydrangea Selma in 2010.

A healthy Hydrangea Selma in 2010.

Asters at the front gate.

Asters at the front gate.

Asters.

Asters.

My Asters earlier in the season, after some rain.

My Asters earlier in the season, after some rain.

The front gate at sunset.

The front gate at sunset.