Thursday, April 26, 2012

Bud Update

It's been cool and wet (we do need the rain) preventing much of any activity in the gardens other than snapping a few shots to check the progress of any budding plants, unfazed as they are by the coolness and loving this rain.
Of course, our northern weather is not done yet and the snow shovel is still set propped and ready on the front porch.

In the meantime it's fun to get 'close up and personal'.

Paeonia
This established herbaceous peony of unknown variety is a beautiful little red bloomed peony; the first peony I ever purchased over 10 years ago and now graces several different areas of the yard.
This plant is located in a raised foundation bed on the east side of the house and much further along than the 'Sarah Bernhardt' peony just inches away.
It must really love it there because it's always the first of my peony to bloom each year.




You got a peak at 'Jane' Magnolia back in the buds and blooms post and this is how far she's come since April 14th when I took the first photo.

So far the buds have eluded any deer nibbles but we're not out of the woods yet.
With any luck, we'll be coming up magnolias before you know it. 

Let the snows come; can't hurt this northern hardy beauty.
Can't wait to show you what she looks like when she opens up....gotta have patience.






Oh deer..... yes I mean deer.
One of the biggest challenges I face here in my northern garden is not the weather, not insects, blights or digging dogs....it's my four legged friend the white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus)

deer nibbled hosta
 And one of their favorite meals is a nice hosta salad.
Yumm...
The deer love hosta so much that if I didn't spray them with liquid deer fence ( a natural, stinky deer repellant ) I would never see a single hosta all season. 
I'd best get on it soon!



Sunday, April 22, 2012

Earth Day 2012

I woke up this morning to a light dusting of snow on everything.
It looked beautiful.

Chamaecyparis pisifera 'Filefera Aurea'
This goldthread cypress resides right next to the front entry to the house.

Love the yellow and green of this evergreen and the snow is a real nice touch.





Rhododendron 'PJM'
This mature rhoddy resides as a front foundation plant.
tip: best time to prune is in spring, after it flowers....and after it stops snowing..  







One of my favorite crabapples is the weeping Red Jade crabapple.  
Malus 'Red Jade'

White iris's are coming up under the crab and the hedgerow is 'Charles Albanel' rugosa rose.








I call this the wagon wheel bed which was created ~ 5 years ago off the front side of the garage.  There are 5 Russian Cypress which, at maturity, will create a low ground cover for the majority of the bed.
Microbiota decussata
This plant is a great alternative to the more commonly used blue rug juniper (and not at all 'picky' to handle) for the purpose of evergreen groundcover.
The 2 yellowing deciduous shrubs behind the cypress are Ninebark 'darts gold'.


Meanwhile, the bird feeder's been filled and besides the usual Chickadees there's White-throated Sparrows and American Goldfinch.

Whatever it is that you see or do on this day, please do so with love and respect for Mother Nature and take the time to reflect on all she has given us.
It is by no small measure the responsibility we bear for our planet.
http://www.earthday.org/

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Say Hi to Harry

We all have a tendency to connect physically and emotionally with the lush, green landscape during the times of the seasons when our experience of 'outside' includes gardening, playing ball, swimming and picnics. 
But that time of the season when the shrubs and trees are bear of the foliage that covers their framework is also a time that offers the opportunity to appreciate their shape and substance and how that enhances the general garden design from a different perspective.   Hence the term 'winter interest'.


Corylus avellana 'Contorta'
Meet Harry Lauder's Walking Stick.
The twisted, contorted branching characteristic of this specimen plant is grown more for it's 'defoliated' seasonal interest than anything else.


Also referred to as corkscrew filbert and contorted hazelnut,  there's not another single plant in my garden that looks as 'cool' in winter.





I planted this specimen about 12 years ago on the back side of the vegetable garden to 'heal' it in till I had a more prominent place in the landscape but, what can I say, it liked it there.

It grows 6' to 8' tall as wide and flowers a yellowish catkin in spring.   Once it leaf's out there is nothing special that draws your attention to it.   But in winter....... it's the eye catcher.

Safe to say that in nature there is no 'off' season.
 How 'twisted' is that!

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Buds and Blooms

It's almost difficult to keep up with the spurts of growth I'm seeing daily.  These past few days have brought sunshine and happily budding plants.
 
JANE MAGNOLIA
Magnolia liliflora

This is my only magnolia planted about 5 years ago as a decent sized balled and burlap.  'Jane' magnolia blooms a lovely pinkish bloom in spring a bit later than other magnolia varieties but hardy for my zone 4.
I'm lucky if I see 3 to 4 blossoms each year as the deer do a good job of 'pruning' her back on a regular basis.
Here a few buds have escaped the nibblers and, with any luck, will show off in a few weeks.  If you look close enough, you can make out the nibbled tip of the stem in the background.  Yummy.



One of my favorite shrubs is dwarf fothergilla.  I have 2 of them; one by the front walkway and the other in Whitney's garden out back.  This plant is a show stopper early spring when it bursts with fragrant white bottlebrush flowers that are so soft to the touch I find them irresistible.  These early buds are a promise of good things to come. 
Fothergilla gardenii
This particular photo is of the fothergilla in Whitney's garden.
The conifer on the right side of the photo is Swiss Stone Pine  'Pinus cembra'.



 Pulmonaria is the first perennial plant to bloom in the garden.  
I brought two little clumps that I dug up from the overgrown perennial display bed at the garden center where I worked probably 10 years ago and it now occupies the entire west side of the house.  
Pulmonaria 'Lungwart'
While I don't know which variety; this lovely shade loving plant shows off flowers that range in pinks and violets.  And who could resist those spots!
The plant has been used for centuries as a medicinal herb.   I just look at it and go gaga.




I took this photo of this tight yellow clump of daffodils in the front yard by the stone wall.
 I immediately imagined a race to the finish..
                        "And.... it's Daffy's Delight by a nose"

Sunday, April 15, 2012

April Showers...

Following a brief and unseasonably warm snap in March (oh how nice it was); we returned to the chill of early spring and all the plants which responded with the sunny seventies that occurred that unusual week laid dormant, until now...
And so, my account of spring begins.
I was thinking that the daffodils were  possibly not going to open but, thankfully, I was wrong.

Daffodils
This lovely clump of narcissus lives under the canopy of a thornless hawthorne cockspur located on the back side of the house.  Behind you can make out part of the little wee wooden fence that surrounds the vegetable garden.






'Toka' plum
The two plums trees that I'd planted on the pond lawn 5 years ago never did well (frankly, I was surprised they were still alive).  I finally had a eureka moment when I found a place to transplant them.  I did this during that warm snap in March and today, I can confirm, that they are budding out.










  Starting to hear the tree peepers at night and the 'croakers' in the pond.   The pond always looks best in spring when its at its fullest.








Veratrum viride