Sunday, May 29, 2011
Iris at Church Today
A winning combo in the church garden, partially under the canopy of a tree. A Deutzia shrub--probably Deutzia gracilis 'Nikko', a variegated iris--most likely Iris Pallida 'Albo Variegata' and Hosta 'Fortunei Albomarginata'. I divided this iris into 5 clumps along the cement stairs and added the hosta from a divide at home two years ago and all survived to be enjoyed as they continue to expand in this partial shade section. Annual petunias will soon add a touch of hot color at the edges of the walkway.
The white iris and a few yellow were in full bloom today--a few weeks later than last year, this one adding a needed bit of color on another dark spring day.
Saturday, May 28, 2011
The Rose Tree - Rhododendron and a few azalea cousins
Two Rhododendron specimens, in bud and bloom |
The rhododendrons are making a big splash around town this week. Their vibrant blooms contrast beautifully with the continued bright green growth on the trees and shrubs and lawns, boosted by excessive amount of recent rain. I mow my own lawn; waiting five days between cuttings was too long--even my shaded yard is lush with growth this year.
I have several of the magenta/mauve/lavender/pink variety, Rhododendron catawbiense 'Roseum Elegans' and I think the cultivar above is the same, although the tags of these established shrubs are probably long gone. The photos for today's post were taken a few days ago at friend P's house where I help out a few hours a week. He has some lovely specimens which he takes great pride in, but I tease him when he calls them rhododendrums, which is a common mistake.
This is one bright colored azalea, piercing the gloominess of yet another damp and dreary Michigan day!
Pinkish buds turn almost pure white when in full bloom, a lovely contrast with the 'Roseum Elegans':
This half-open azalea bloom is captured in a stage I have never seen before--truly exquisite:
I don't remember when I first started admiring the rhododendron, but I first planted them here in West Michigan when we moved to this house in the early 90's. They certainly were not common in the hot and dry summers and frigid winters of my youth in South Dakota. They seem to thrive here, although I have lost a few to some hot summers, probably due to insufficient watering. I hope they are in bloom near the lake in South Haven when we travel to a cottage on Lake Michigan for the Memorial Day holiday. Perhaps I can persuade my husband to stop the car a few times and capture some more colors and cultivars which seem to enjoy the sandy lakeside environment.
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More Rose Ramblings
It was good to learn from Brown's book that the catawbiense which I grow is named after the Catawba Indians of Appalachian country, where it was first found. Most propagated cultivars have been discovered in China. Rhododendron sinogrande, discovered in 1912 in the mountain borderland of China, Tibet and Burma, has a cult status, according to Brown:
"She . . . ruled her fortress heights above the valley of the Salween and westwards to the Mishmi Hills and beyond, long before her human neighbours and demigods established their forbidden cities. She was, and is, remote and imperially despotic, preferring an altitude of about 10,000 feet and dominating dark forests and impassable jungles with her gnarled and twisted branches. She lives to a great age, grows into a substantial tree; everything about the plant is hugely impressive--its leaves are the largest of all rhododendron, great deeply veined, dark green ovals sometimes two feet long, sagging under their own weight as they hang by thick stalks from an even thicker stem, surrounding great spear-headed buds. She flowers with an imperial insouciance, when she feels like it but not every year; when they come the flowers are pale yellow, translucent globes springing from the ruffs of glossy leaves, lighting the dark woods like the lamps at the feast table.
Sinogrande has an imperial cousinage, the inevitable relatives and pretenders that put something of a strain on the supply of epithets."
That is a sample of the book at its descriptive best. It is also quite humorous in places, and at worst--endlessly boring with names, dates, species and botanists--and reads in some sections as tediously as a Biblical genealogy: so and so begat so and so . . .
Friday, May 27, 2011
Thursday, May 26, 2011
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
Monday, May 23, 2011
Saturday, May 21, 2011
A Rainy Day Saturday - Hostas and their Companions
We have had excessive rain in Michigan this spring. I do love the rain and the thunderstorms and even the lightning--which makes more nitrogen available in the soil. A light sprinkle does not discourage me from taking the camera outside, either. I contend that the hostas also love the rain. Can you see the bright green of the lawn which I finished cutting today in the light rain?
Hosta companion by my pond - Heuchera 'Palace Purple' |
Hosta 'Patriot' |
A hosta in need of botox |
Whisky barrel hosta happily overflowing |
Hostas nearly taken over by the Sweet Woodruff (Galium odoratum) A rock in a heart place - two new transplants and bleeding hearts |
Hosta camouflaged by the lamium--not good placement! |
Hostas in the ivy & poppy patch may be in need of division |
Hosta with primula in garden of friend "O" |
Friend's lovely and unusual hosta with a forgotten name |
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
A May Morning in Michigan - Just Outside my Door
Yesterday, on a cool, sunny, rained-fresh morning, I stepped outside my back deck door to do a "bloom check" in my yard. Above, an azalea I cannot bring myself to trim back enough is hanging over the deck stairs.
Click for a closer look at these lovely 5-point single azalea blooms. |
The spiky globes of the Christophii Allium are opening slowly. |
This bleeding heart has grown quite large. |
Martha Stewart describes the blooms of dicentra spectabalis alba (white) pictured on her blog as "puffy heart-shaped flowers with little dripping tears," on her recent May post about her farm.
I have only one of the "old fashioned" white bleeding hearts |
One bleeding heart is surrounded by re-seeding forget-me-nots--a nice combo. |
Sunday, May 15, 2011
So what else was in bloom last week?
Flowering Almond |
I took many photos of the gorgeous blooms on this flowering almond in a sea of brunnera macrophylla. I love this closeup with the blue sky out of focus, as reflected in the window glass. One photo unfortunately featured me in the reflection, using a flash which I had forgotten to turn off.
What's wrong with this picture? |
The heat and rain of this week have put this shrub and many of the blooming trees past their prime. We had two days in the 80's and abundant rain. It was a bonus for all growing things, but not a boon for the blooms, many of which were gone in a matter of days--like the pink magnolia--all brown and on the ground. But new things emerged daily. The bloom on the street was spectacular--all colors of crabs, all fruit trees, the redbuds, and many lilacs popping out. The leaves of the Norway and other dark maples were suddenly all leafed out and contrasting with the fresh greens of other newly unfurling leaves.That kind of beauty is hard to capture in a photo. You just have to try to enjoy while driving, trying to keep one eye on the road!
Crabapple at Uncle J's apartments |
Japanese Weeping Cherry |
Delicate allium flowers with heuchera backdrop at Aunt V's waterfall pond. |
Friday, May 13, 2011
Charlie the Pointer in the Picture
Once again, Charlie is everywhere my Fuji Camera wants to be. I point and shoot and Charlie is there pointing--at something. Here are some shots from this week with Charlie trying to steal the show.
Charlie and the Dogwood Tree |
Hosta unfurling fast and masking the fading bluebells |
One more--peekaboo Charlie |
Oh oh--there's a story here a little too gruesome to describe! |
What do you see, Charlie? |
Bleeding Hearts |
A rare moment of repose |
From March--a foot on the frosted leaves |
Thursday, May 12, 2011
May is for Mulching
Swanee River Rock |
The month of May means many things to the gardener. One of the most predictable April/May activities for homeowners and landscape businesses around town is the spreading of mulch. Piles of mulch appear on driveways everywhere. I don't remember what we did before mulch was invented, but it has done much to enhance the landscape. Mulch can be cheap (free wood chips are often available) or more expensive (bagged cocoa bean mulch, delivered). It can be shades of brown, gold, red or black. Or it can be stone. I had a new experience last week. I scooped up 360 pounds of river rock into 5-gallon partially filled pails (so I could lift them). Rocks are a kind of mulch--these rock were spread around the perimeter of my aunt's waterfall pond. Their pond guy "Jack" was kind of busy this year so I decided to get the needed stone myself.
I asked my neighbor to pick up two bags of black mulch to "finish" my pond. She decided on black color-enhanced mulch this year. I also have brown shredded bark and lots of free wood chips from last year.
One of my clients likes the so-called wood fines mulch, pictured below. All mulches add a finishing touch. I like to think of the mulch as the matting, the landscape edging as the frame and the plantings as the art subject. Mulches also help to keep moisture in the soil, keep soil temperatures more moderate, keep weeds down and eventually break down to enrich the soil. Fresh chips can rob the soil of nutrients, thick mulch can form a barrier to block water from the roots, and mulch piled up around the base of trees can be unhealthy. So, a few caveats, but otherwise, a wonderful invention, indeed.
Black mulch for my little pond |
Wood "fines" |
Added 5-21 - Friend O's Pile |
Monday, May 9, 2011
Sunday, May 8, 2011
Tulips at Church--Blooming for Mother's Day
Tulip just before dusk--closed for the evening! |
Pre-dusk, closed, showing off stripe--are these Tequila Sunrise? One more closeup--gotta love these tulips! |
Another pink and delicious tulip |
The whole funky bunch--one oddball in the middle |
Next day - open to bright sunshine! |
Half-closed for the evening |
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