What’s blooming Friday, Aug 10 2012 

Usually August would include Oriental lilies, daylilies, and hostas but this year those went racing past in July.  The current colour scheme is heavily weighted towards ‘hot’ lots of yellow, hot pink, red, white.  There is some blue, and some of the dusky fall colours: ivory, old gold, rose, dusky blue, mauve are starting up.

Hydrangea: the big Pee-Gee, also known as grave-yard hydrangea, is just spectacular this year: a waterfall of ivory shading to rose almost fifteen feet tall and completely hiding a staircase.  The Endless Summer blue and the Twist-n-shout blue/pink are less happy this year, I think the wonky spring didn’t help, but they are usually a clear blue cloud in the orange/pink/white of the garden.

Garden Phlox: mostly the reverted wild pink, but the white ‘David’, along with ‘Bright Eyes’; it is everywhere here.

Shasta Daisies

Joe-Pye weed

Early goldenrod

Ligularia

Red and blue cardinal flower

Sunflowers

Echinacea

Globe thistles

Yarrow: generally rose/gold shades and a fair amount of wild white

Morning Glories: ‘Grandfather Ott’ purple

Black/Brown eyed susans (Rudbeckia hirta)

Wild thyme

Wild greek oregano

White wood aster (very early for this)

Bergamot: hot pinks/reds

Petunias

Verbana

Cosmos

California Poppies

Jerusalem artichokes

Queen Anne’s Lace

Chicory

 

 

The house, hiding Thursday, Aug 2 2012 

For the gardeners, left to right: Joe-Pye Weed, Spirea, Monarda, Goose-neck, Cimicifuga racemosa, Shasta Daisies, Hydrangeas, (also Daylilies, Black-eyed susans, and Turks-cap lilies) are all visible.  The tree is a Gingko, about 110 years old, the closer trunk is a young (fifty years old) Cucumber Magnolia.

Cimicifuga racemosa Monday, Jul 23 2012 

Also known as Actaea racemosa, Black Cohosh, or Bugbane is one of the Northeast native plants that deserves much wider use.  It happens to be one of my garden favourites, so perhaps I am biased.  Blooming in late July into August its towering candles of ivory add an incredibly dynamic element to the garden as they often bend and twist, earning it the local name: Black Snakeroot.  The various pollinators, from bees to beetles, adore it.  Its flowers can easily last several weeks with the seedheads remaining through the winter as architectural elements, while its heavily cut foliage works as a good backdrop for smaller plants.

It happens to flourish in the heavy, poor draining, partially shaded clay of this area.  In this it is unlike almost every other garden plant out there!  A big specimen should be treated as a herbaceous shrub, as they can easily be 2+ feet tall and as wide, with the flower stalks hitting seven feet.  It is also very long lived.  Conversely, it is also slow to reach flowering maturity, expect to wait several years when starting them from seed. It is drought and rain tolerant. About the only thing it doesn’t tolerate is a heavy winter mulch layer on its crown, treat it like a fern.  It can be very late in coming up in the spring. 

Here is a small one in amongst an Oriental lily and some monkshood, the red in the background is a double-file viburnum:

Orange Daylily Sunday, Jul 22 2012 

Stargazer Monday, Jul 16 2012 

lilies:

Daylilies II Saturday, Jul 7 2012 

To go with the post below:

Taken about two days ago, showing a section, you can see all the flower spikes.

The double orange type.

Last year, showing one of the red ones and a double orange.

Daylilies Saturday, Jul 7 2012 

Despite being under the fence struck by lightning, the daylilies are coming into their own.  The stretch is about 70 feet long and three feet wide, so it is a lot of daylilies.  The vast majority are the very tall, very bright orange, double ditch lily type.  Take the standard orange ditch lily and make it bigger, oranger, and doubled or tripled.  They most closely resemble a flock of gaudy birds hovering above the field.  It works because they are surrounded with green: 10 acres of hayfield as their backdrop, with a screen of green hedgerows/hills, and a front of green lawn; the arc of pure-white shasta daisies west of the flagpole also helps to balance the effect.

I am however, pondering moving some of the burnt-orange/red throated ones to the front of the line.  Somehow, most of them got on the west (field) edge.  Being slightly more incline to bend, shorter, and a darker colour, I think they might give a depth to it.  More digging!

On Lily Beetles Thursday, Jul 5 2012 

We have no shortage of pests in New England, the Asian Lily Beetle is one of the recent, truly nasty ones.  These voracious, almost impossible-to-kill beetles have taken lilies from being sure-fire garden staples to labour-intensive plants. 

What I have noticed, though, is preferences on their part.  While happily defoliating any member of the lily family; their preferred diet appears to be the bright yellow Asiatic lilies.  This is followed by the other Asiatics (although they don’t care for ‘Landini’, an almost black, purple Asiatic, appearing only rarely on it).  The Species lilies, especially Turks-cap ‘martagnon’ types are next, and last are the true Orientals.  However, defoliation occurs quickly on both the Species and Orientals, and the plant doesn’t seem to be able to survive it.  So, a mild dislike on the beetles’ parts doesn’t perhaps mean much.  Still it is interesting to note this.  Of course, seeing as the critter is here…not planting yellow/yellow-based Asiatics probably wouldn’t help the matter.

At least I am not squeamish about squishing the larvae anymore….ick!

Catbirds Sunday, Jul 1 2012 

can be foiled! A complete netting, bamboo frame/bird netting, and it looks like we just might get some currants for once.  We have entirely too many catbirds, while they are fascinating to  watch, they are also a bit of a pest in the garden.  I just hope we can get some peaches, since the tree is much too big to even consider netting…Actually, the titmice are the biggest threat to young peaches, they like to take out the kernel of the pit while it is still soft.

Zap! Friday, Jun 29 2012 

We have had several vigourous thunderstorms recently, with ground strikes near the house.  One strike took out the barn’s lighting, another we knew had hit close by (if the window goes white with light….sort of a dead giveaway).  But we couldn’t decide where, as there was no visible damage. 

Then I noticed that the daylilies…those gorgeous daylilies with at least one bud stalk for every fan…beneath the West Meadow fenceline looked oddly brown today.  The fence is electric wire, the gate is a metal t-post, as is the corner post, and the daylilies run between those two and have grown up above the bottom wire, which is not live*.  I think you can guess the rest.  It is the oddest thing, though.  It looks exactly as if a six inch wide band of herbicide was applied, with the bottom wire in the middle.  Anything within three inches is brown, anything that was directly touching is crispy, charred, and otherwise carbonized. 

*Usually!

« Previous PageNext Page »