The Garden through 2008
3:46 AM | Posted by
Donald
With 2008 drawing to a close, I have looked back over the changes in the gardens this year. While there were many beautiful blooms in the garden, it is the transitions through the year that seem most significant to me. The transitions provided by nature.
January 2008 brought just a slight dusting of snow. Just enough for a pretty scene, but not enough to cause any problems. At the end of January, we cut back the ornamental grasses, the butterfly bushes and chaste tree.
By mid-April the garden was very colorful. The roses along the fence had new foliage and buds. The Japanese Maple was brilliant and the dianthus provided a spicy fragrance.
By June, it was beginning to feel like summer as we experienced several days in a row of 100°F heat. The Japanese irises were in bloom all along the rain garden path and the dry stream bed.
The corner willow tree provides the dividing corner where the cool colors of the front outer garden give way to the hot colors in the butterfly garden.
The little garden bench provides a perfect place to sit in the shade to take a welcome break from gardening and watch the hummingbirds in both gardens.
The willow tree is a favorite hangout place for all the birds who visit the garden.
Salvia uliginosa (bog sage) and perennial ageratum bloomed beautifully in August. The coneflowers had been in bloom since June and were still going.
In September, my husband and I pulled out three abelia and a weeping cherry tree in the cottage garden. The shrubs and tree were too large for the space. The cherry tree was always a target of the Japanese beetles, making it unattractive throughout the summer. Rather than fight nature, we decided to change the garden to be more suitable to the environment.
I amended the soil and planted a mix of agastache, salvia, echinacea, sedum and verbena for the full sun space. These perennials will take the heat, remain a size suitable for the space and will not attract the beetles.
I left space to sow poppies and other annuals since this garden space is by the front porch. The poppies have already emerged as seedlings, having been planted in October.
When I reflect on the garden this year, I think about what worked well and where I can make improvements. I'm making a list of things I learned this year so that I won't forget... to partner with nature.
Photos and story by Freda Cameron
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Archive
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2008
(109)
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December
(29)
- Top Ten Signs That You Are A Plant-Obsessed Gardener
- The Garden through 2008
- A Variety of Garden Paths
- In the Beginning: The Deer Resistant Garden
- Pretty Perennial Foliage (After the Flowers)
- Foliage Combinations in the Perennial Garden
- In the Kitchen: Scones for a Brunch or a Tea
- In the Kitchen: Savory Gouda Bites
- In the Kitchen: Sour Cream Pound Cake
- Garden Inspiration: French Garden in the Dordogne
- Evergreen Gold in the Garden
- Garden Inspiration: Farmland to Flowers
- Organizing Photos with Keywords
- All Creatures Great and Small
- Blogger's Block
- Garden Plants: Best Performance in 2008
- Art in the Garden: The Pottery of Betty Owen
- Winter Wonders, Weeds and Warm Weather
- Garden Inspiration: Karesansui Style
- Meet Harold, Our Neighborhood Heron
- A Sustainable Tabletop Christmas Tree
- Blogging for Happiness
- Where Have All the Frobel Flowers Gone?
- Perennial Edger: Hardy Geranium
- Seedy Friends Show Up for the Holidays
- Let the Winter Sun Shine on Me (and My Garden)
- Scabiosa Blooms in Winter
- Flummoxed by Phlox
- Gardens and Deer Traffic Patterns
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December
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