Friday, October 1, 2010

Back from North Carolina



We're home from North Carolina which was very fun. Actually, we've been back for a few days, which is good because we completely missed the rain and have only have a little bit up here (maybe an inch today--though one more band possibly coming through according to weather.com).






I have a lot of pictures which probably appeal mostly to me but i did think it was fun to find what i'm pretty sure was a coral bell in the Great Smokys that looks almost exactly like the Dolce Mocha Mint coral bell being sold by Proven Winners.




This is the plant I found...


and this is the Mocha Mint--not identical but still kind of fun to see how the variations come about.



every other Huechera I saw was plain green. Of course, i may be wrong about what they are--there weren't any flowers, but i think they were Coral Bells...

More to come

Friday, September 10, 2010

It is hard to believe how long it has been since I've posted. it isn't as if nothing has happened, but nothing has happened as far as the garden. I did plant two Witherod Viburnums and I know I should take pictures, but I haven't. Work for the landscape architect as well as Wildwood has taken my time. Even next week I was hoping for two days to work on my patio but I'm not sure if I'll have them.

So much of life is lived with the idea of some sort of payoff tomorrow. My Dad died instantaneously in a car crash (he was driving) in Arizona. Was he thinking of today or tomorrow?

At least the Phillies were in first when he died. To put this into persective, when the Phillies won the World Series in '80, Tug McGraw's feet had not yet touched the earth again, when the phone rang and it was my Dad saying "They won!"

Which is a part of the only song I ever wrote, a part of which is

"He gave me a quiet place
Where I could always go
Not always seeing eye to eye
Still always sitting side by side,
Listening to a ballgame
on the radio."

It was the Phillies.

I work tomorrow. That is our mantra.

Sunday, August 29, 2010

here is the patio with the cinder block center for the wall in place. Now all I have to do is add the rock veneer. I added some on the back last night so I could get a feel for how it will work in an area that will actually be buried. It uses a lot of mortar! Well, today is my one day in several weeks when I can work all day so I'm going to read the paper and then get to it!

Friday, August 13, 2010

Hey, the weather is perfect today--almost fall-like--so it's great for laying cinder blocks. I'm not fast but am closing in on finishing the main wall (need to mix more mortar so took a lunch break). then I have to do the fire pit. that's just two courses of 8x8x8 cubes so should go pretty quickly. With any luck I'll finish the whole cinder block work today.

Then it's clean up that mess and start putting on the rock to create the outer face of the wall. But not that today.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Okay. The concrete for the fire pit is in--only four bags worth so pretty easy. And all the cinder blocks are up from the driveway. I'm going to take a break and then get to mortaring.
Today is going to be a slow day. So far I've removed some of the stone dust from the fire pit so I can make a small foundation for the fire pit wall (lower than the back wall) and lugged a couple of bags of mortar up from the car and I'm already tired. It's humid and I'm still tired from Monday--yesterday was a tie--I didn't make myself worse but i didn't really rest either. I'd like to get the foundation fo rhte fire pit made as well as lay down some of the cinder blocks. We'll see. i'm going to need to take breaks frequently.

Monday, August 9, 2010

Yesterday was as hard a day as I can remember. I created a concrete pad for the patio wall using 25 80-lb bags of concrete which works out to 1 ton plus water. The last five bags I was having arm cramps--my left arm was so bad my fingers were curling up and I really couldn't get them to straighten out. Drank some extra-thick gatorade (I have the mix because it costs so much less to make your own) and that seemed to help.

i have pictures but they aren't very spectacular. 25 bags isn't much--way less than recommended, but I'm building this on the old gravel and sand bed of the swimming pool so it is well-draining very compacted subgrade so frost heave shouldn't be much of a problem (the patio stone I laid last year went nowhere over the winter).

The old tee-shirt i wore went in the trash immediately afterward. it was funny--I told Lucy iwas going to throw it away and she said something like "Somewhere outside i hope!" It was so hot the sweat had to take a number and wait its turn before pouring out. I think the 24th bag I didn't add water--just stood over it and dripped ! :-P

Anyway, today was a bit easier as all I did was collect rocks to use for the wall and lay out the first course of cinder block interior wall to see just how many I need. Tomorrow I'm going to dig out the fire pit area (I filled it with stone dust to make laying the patio easier and so we could use it for fires) and then mortar in the first course of cinder blocks. I'd like to do all three layers but I'm not sure how long its going to take. I've never mortared in cinder blocks before and, of course, my first wall is a curved one so nothing lines up easily.

I love my Fit (car) but it has been a bit of a problem getting all this dead weight home. I suppose I could push it a bit further but cinder blocks and bags of mortar/concrete are heavy so I just make more trips (two today). This is the first new car I've ever owned (not leased) so want it to stay in good shape. i did rent the Home Depot truck for twenty of the bags of concrete.

There is a light at the end of the tunnel...

Oh, I did plant a Korean spice viburnum (anticipating next spring!) and four pink knockout roses (sale at Home Depot--$3.99 each, couldn't resist buying from the 'enemy') today as well.

Why did the previous owners backfill with stone?

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Feeling particularly square-peggish these days...

Ugh.

just figured out how many bags of concrete I should use to create the foundation for the wall I want to build and it comes to 40! I thought I was doing pretty good bringing home 6 and 5 bags the last two nights but I'm going to have to do better than that! I also think I'll reduce the depth of the whole foundation from 6" to 4" and, if it cracks so be it. That'll bring it down to 30 bags (some was already calculated at 4").

Regardless, it's going to be a lot of work--it's just at the edge of being worth renting a mixer, but I think I'll do it by hand. I was hoping to get most of the work done this weekend, but if I get the foundation laid, that'll be a pretty good workload. None of this goes quickly at all...

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

A slow week. trying to figure out what I need for the stone wall. I've decided to put in a foundation, smaller than recommended, but still a lot of work.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Today I got an offer to do some actual landscape architecture work--autoCAD for a small firm in eastern Connecticut. Needless to say, I'm thrilled. It may not be very much at first but any design work at any level is a BIG step in the right direction. A great thing about this is that I will still be working at the garden center, so have the best of both worlds, working directly with plants and people (though the funny thing is the most heartfelt moments often come when I mention how much sculpture adds to the individual personality of a garden!) AND working with a professional with many years experience in landscape design.

Lucky me...

Tuesday, July 27, 2010


I fianlly managed the finish the stonework for the patio today--not the wall or fire pit or even the walkway, but the patio itself. Which is huge because it was irregular stone and took a lot of cutting (breaking) and fitting, so was a long job (started sometime last summer, after weeks of sifting stone out of the base layer of sand and small gravel. This photo was taken from the second story bedroom.
The patio measures about 20 feet from left to right by 16 feet top to bottom. The rectangle in the upper left will be an herb garden as will the obscured rectangle by the two white chairs. The cut-out to the upper right will be the fire pit. It is hard to see but there are natural rocks to the upper left and in the shadows to the right which will serve as anchors to the low wall which will curve around the back (upper edge) of the patio and serve as a setting wall/fire pit. That's the next thing to get done.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

it's hard to believe it's been since Monday, but hot weather and work will do that to you. Tonight I have to name a whole bunch of photos I took of rhododendron foliage at work today (memorizing flower color in something that blooms at best three weeks a year isn't the wisest thing to do), but I'm hoping I can show some pics about digging out and dividing a Heuchera (no idea what variety--green leaves, coral flowers, and old-style plant) tomorrow. It's too humid to think, so I won't.

Monday, July 19, 2010

Today was a surprise rain storm which completely mixed up my plan to complete the patio stonework--though I started early so was able to get some more stone work done before I got rained out. So here are the Blueberry and the Bubble--the Bubble being named by Lucy's co-worker with whom she car pools and the Blueberry being too obvious for words. It's nice to have good good cars in the driveway.

My tangelfoot arrived and I've "painted" it on blue cups and when I walk around with the cup over my head the deer flies land on it and get stuck. So, it really works, but walking aroudn holding a sticky blue cup over my head isn't as exciting as it sounds! I've seen some photos where people taped the cup to their cap and that seems to work. I'll keep working on it. ideally I can figure out a trap that attracts them without me being the target. The problem is that they focus almost exclusively on motion (when we drive downt he driveway we'll have ten or more flying around the car!) so I need a trap that moves...

Friday, July 16, 2010

The things i have been thinking about for this blog are the Tradescantia and how they all are doing so well and the Grandprize Hosta, and blue cups covered with tanglefoot for deerfly control, but tonight we watched "A Secret Garden" which is based on Henry James (almost every thing is based on Henry James, even Greece and China, though they predated him so didn't know it--and, yes, I have to admit, I have laughed out loud at Henry James, which would seem impossible, unless one grew up in a house of just nine rooms, yet contained all of the British Isles, though favored the north, as well as a good smattering of the London Stage, and gave strong support to the American Revolution, Tories though we were) so now what I have to say is less about the plants themselves than the fact that, if each of us were to design our garden of Eden, then there would be 6-billion-plus gardens. And also, children's gardens have more paths that lead to and from than grownup gardens, for children, as a rule, are eager to see who will come to visit, and adults are scared to see... who will visit.

Though the world would be a better place, if each of us were allowed to build the gardens of our innocence (for I should say "innocence" rather than "youth" for so many have their youth robbed from them), with doors and dreams wide open.

Twice in the last two weeks I have been asked at the garden center when I first became interested in plants and the first time I said, "I have never known a time when I wasn't interested in plants," and the second time I simply said, "Before I learned to talk." In my garden of Eden, my grandfather would be standing by his climbing beans with my grandmother smilingly beside. And my Granddad's iris would be in bloom with my Grammy nearby, playing the piano. And my father would be amist his rhododendrons, flowering all, and my mother would kneeling by, and planting the marigolds I bought her, at the Flower Market, on Mother's Day, my birthday, with the money she had given me for cotton candy and a ride, and I, being a pudgy sort of kid, would have gotten the cotton candy, but skipped the ride, and spent my time with crystalizing pink candy sharp on my tongue, wandering all around the tables of the great big tent, where the flower market got its name, long before I was born.

In my garden no child would lose their innocence, before they learned to talk.

I have spent my adult life classifying that which is undefinable. In the end no tale is truely epic, unless it ends with magic. For the only part of who we are that gravity cannot pull back to earth is our imagination. There are no deer flies in our garden, sitting with the catalogs, by a January fire. Which is a mish-mash. Which is why the gray-haired woman purchasing the half-priced herb pot that has gone to seed, is as real, and as important to me, as the laced couple short on time, spending hundreds, even thousands, on plants they'll never see.

If we were all blessed equally, then each of us would have a secret grden, that would give us friends who'd show us paths we'd learned how not to see, and help us walk on legs we'd learned how not to trust, and bring our family home to us, or show us how to get from here to them, whoever they may be.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Mid-week

We've had well over an inch of rain in the past two days so everything is back to being well-watered, but the next few days look to be very hot so our sandy soil will dry out quickly. I did get some more work done on the patio, and remembered there is an exposed bolder at the house end of the low wall (it was covered by stone dust) so the wall will arise out of natural stone at both ends.

The Asiatic lilies have had their days and are now fading. Next year I'm going to see if I can't plant them in different places and maybe get them to bloom at different times, so we can have a longer display. The problem is they need to be in Fort Knox (our old dog kennel used to protect plants from deer) or they need to be sprayed or the deer will level them.

I tried some Soil Moist in pots in which I planted some of the tiniest divisions of the Grandprize Hosta and it weirds me out a little because it sweels so much it almost forces the dirt and plant out of the pot. Supposed to keep water in the pot and help promote even root growth so we'll see. I wonder what happens to it over time...

Off to work.

Monday, July 12, 2010

YAY! The car dilemma has been solved by the purchase of a 2010 blue Honda Fit which seems perfect for the needs of a small-time gardener. I'd thought about trucks but they really aren't that comfortable and the vast majority of my needs (potted plants, bags of compost, a couple of cinder blocks) can be accommodated by a roomy interior and the Fit has about 20 ways to make just the roomy interior I want.


So now I can spend tomorrow working on the patio.



This is where I am with it--most of the patio stone laid but the low wall and firepit still to be done. I'd love to finish the paving by the end of next week so I can get on with building the wall, but I suspect it'll take longer than that. The space is big enough to useful even now so that's a plus.


One of the great things about living where we do is all the little plants that pop up. for example down by the stream this small orchid, probably Platanthera (= Habenaria in Newcomb's Wildflower Guide) clavellata, is doing quite nicely. Not a rare plant, but still fun to have, and a reminder that land less tilled is more interesting land.
This is where it is (red circle) in relationship to the land and the stream.


Friday, July 9, 2010

Between the heat and work I sort of lost track of the days, existing mostly just to exist, but today was a little better--we actually had a bit of rain--and someone came in and bought a bunch of stuff right before the end of the day, so that was nice. Anyway, the above shot is of one of our annual benches on a nice day. It is a fun place to work.

I liked the statue but figured it would be expensive but then it turned out the boss just wanted to get rid of it so someone got it for $39, which I would have gladly paid. Oh well, there're other deals hovering around--I just need to remember to ask. I do find that adding human elements--sculptures, benches, planters, etc. is a really strong way to personalize a garden. There are far more human concepts of garden statuary than there are types of shrubs! Also, human elements create a tie between the natural and the human--a visual bridge between house and not-house.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010


This is a Kansas Kitten daylily--a nice dark lavender with purple center. I didn't do much other than water today, as we went near, if not over, 100 here today. What lawn we have is going to dry out, I'm sure. The sandy soil just can't keep grass going through a heat spell. Atleast it knocks down the mosquito populations (though not the deer flies).

Monday, July 5, 2010

Today Lucy and I had the day off together so we went to Putnam Connecticut to wander through antique shops and then to a state park for a swim. The park was small but not very crowded and though the swimming area was roped off, it was big enough that you didn't feel too constrained--the actual constraints were the motorboats!

There's no rain listed for the next five days and we're already dry so it's going to be a brown-lawn summer. I'm going to try to get some daylily pictures early tomorrow because they fade quickly in the sun. My asiatic lilies are in full swing--we've cut several for the house,though I've had to keep on top of the lily beetles--pretty but they will wipe out asiatic lilies (leave daylilies alone) .

George

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Happy 4th!

Today is going to be a quiet day at home. Do some gardening and just relax. Supposed to be hot andyou can feel it in the air already. We were able to sit by the stream last night and have a fire--very relaxing. There were some small fireworks going on a round us but nothing we could see very well.

I'll try to remember to take some pictures of the new daylilies.

Friday, July 2, 2010

Got home late so only had time to water the beans, cucumbers and beets. I did get to see the kansas kitten daylily but not to photograph it. Everything needs watering--we've been more than a week without, but I was simply too tired. Tomorrow before work I'll try to get to some of the things. I've realized I can carry a watering can out when I get the paper in the morning to help with the wildflower bed and the new summer snowflake viburnums.


Yesterday I rearranged all the hostas at work so they made sense and spent some time this morning trying to recognize every type we sell (20!). I'd like to be better at knowing which variety is which, which can be hard as many of them look almost alike. But, if you start looking hard enough, the differences start to emerge. Like today I had an unmarked plant (one of the bains of my life) and was trying to figure out if it was a "Wide Brim" or a "Patriot" hosta--both have green leaves, but the Wide Brim is edged in creamy yellows and the Patriot is edged in creamy white. However, the white on the patriot continues down the leaf stem whereas the leaf stem of the Wide Brim is completely green. The unknown hosta 9with both creamy-white and creamy yellow edges on different leaves had the white edges extending down the leaf stem, so is a Patriot hosta. A simple win, but something I didn't know before.


I was also thinking today that a garden center has hundreds of different types of plants, all either in burlap or plastic pots, none of which are native to burlap or plastic pots. No wonder it's such a struggle to keep them looking good. There are some, like Lewesia, which I wish we didn't even bring in. It's too finicky, and rots out even on the dry table. If someone wants it we could almost always order it for them, but so far we've brough in six, killed four and have two still on the table. Why bother?

Now I need to get ready for sleep.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

I said I'd try to organize some ideas regarding this blog so here goes. As far as the tenor of the blog, I want to keep it upbeat and positive. I can be negative elsewhere--here I want to just share the good stuff. Of course, that doesn't mean deer eating my Diervilla (lowbush honeysuckle genus) won't annoy me, it's just that I won't attribute it to religious, political, social, educational, or governmental causes...
(borrrrr-ing!).

Also, I intend at least at first to keep family out of it, names, thoughts, etc. They exist, but they have the right to exist without wondering what I'm saying about them now.

that's about as far as I've gotten.

The purpose of this blog is to give myself an organized platform to move forward with my garden designs for our property. Since I haven't gotten a landscape architecture job and am working at a garden center I have a perfect opportunity to advance my skills at basic garden design (to be a landscape architect you need to pass five (!) sparate tests AND work for a professional full-time for two years--there is no hope of that happening at the moment).

Therefore, I want the blog to be professional in tenor, but fun, and, I hope, interesting. It isn't a school project and it is our living space. Right now I'm in the midst of building a patio, and designing the large front yard. We live on a gravel bank by a stream, so have sand as soil (I'll take pictures soon). Much to think about and design in other words.

Oh, and I'm not big on "official" beginnings. Most things start before they're recognized as existing, and most things continue in some way after they end. Sure, there is a time and date when a marriage starts, or a child is born, but the relationship the marriage formalizes probably has had some fullness prior to the wedding and a child's birth is the result of many other events which tie together and overlap in a continum. I've been blogging, i guess, for years, mostly while driving. Nothing unique in that.

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Well, after showing the successful results of dividing the hosta and the tradescantia, I have to admit I checked on my sea holly after work today and, not only was the very small piece clearly hopeless (so I watered it and left it to see what would happen) but the second piece that I thought might have a chance is looking awful, so not all is success. Actually, even the main section (I only got three sections total and one had almost no roots, which, given the fact that successful division survival is directly proportional to the amount of roots, didn't stand much of a chance from the git-go (sometimes when you try to divide things you're left standing there with a mini-piece saying "oh....")) isn't all that great, but should survive.

So, it ain't all many baby hostas.

The main housekeeping thing I need to point out is that this blog seems to be set on Pacific time and I am set on Eastern daylight time so I am not sending out posts at 3:30 AM. I may or may not be able to reset the clock but haven't figured that out yet.

Tomorrow I hope to talk a bit about what I hope to accomplish with this blog, and maybe some of my semi-rules about how I'm going to approach it (racing into the 21st century). I woud have done so today but (1) I'm still not sure and (2) I had to watch "So you think you can Dance" and can't type while there's a dance on.

Tradescantia - final divisions


Here are the plants all potted up (recycled pots!). The two on the right have modest root systems and the three on the left have small root systems--this way I can see if I was too aggressive in separating the crowns.
They're in the shady spot with the Grandprize Hostas and we'll see how they do.

Tradescantia continued




This shows some of the divisions and the size of their roots. I may have gone a bit far in dividing , but the books agree this is a pretty tough plant, so we'll see. The key is to just keep them moist and shady and see what happens.

Tradescantia (trad-es-KANT-ee-uh) divisions

I have to go in to work earlier than normal today so am putting this on now. It got cool overnight after two days of heat so it'll be a nice day at the garden center. I need to try not to "find" anything else to get! :-)

I'm not sure where I'm going to put this plant but it has nice flowers and it looked like a good plant to get to learn and, again, the ability to divide it and make many little plants from one pot is always appealing to someone who has to be careful about how many plants they buy.
This is Tradescantia 'Marielle Andersoniana'.

Here is the plant out of the pot. The roots are sort of fleshy which is usually a good sign for dividing, especially in summer.

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Dividing a White Flower Farm Grandprize Hosta

This Grandprize hosta from White Flower Farm sucked me in with its pretty lavender flowers, despite the fact that we have lots of deer on the property (I use a spray repellent). Of course, the other thing I liked about it was that it had plenty of offshoots so I was able to divide it into eight smaller and three larger plants.
These are the divisions four days after they were split. Kept in the shade and well-watered they all look to be doing fine. I had to cut off the flower stalks, so the plants would concentrate on root growth, but I'll be able to enjoy the flowers next year.

Mallard Daylily

Last fall I decided to start growing some interesting daylilies and this one, named Mallard, put out it's first bloom today. It's a pretty strong red which is what I was looking for from this variety.