Late summer
& early fall are two of my favorite times in the garden. Plants have reached their full size and are
blooming abundantly with bright, rich colors.
I, also, enjoy watching all the beneficial insects collecting the pollen
(bees, butterflies, wasps, and, one of my favorites-- hummingbird moths).
My friends
Jessica and Stephen, from AS&L, came to the farm the other evening, at dusk
to take some photos of some of my favorite plants. I’ve been wanting to show what fully
established plants will look like in your gardens—adding form, texture and
color with blossoms and foliage. Over the past few years my gardens have evolved becoming more simplified. I have a very busy schedule during the growing season, and I realized that I would be better served by low maintenance plants, and plants that require less water once they are established (like hosta, sedum, paniculata hydrangeas, etc.) I have several varieties of hosta and sedum because they look great even when they are not in bloom with foliage and texture—they also work very well together. My, all time, favorite (and AS&L hosta enthusiast, Shorty’s favorite) is Paradigm. Paradigm is sun tolerant and slug resistant and has amazing chartreuse foliage. But I must say I don’t think there is any hosta or sedum that I do not like.
I, also,
really enjoy the paniculata hydrangeas in my garden because they start off
white and change color throughout the season eventually turning a deep burgundy
in the fall. One of the advantages of
living on a large farm with open fields is the beautiful sunsets and I love to
plant tall plants in the foreground between the finished landscape and the
fields—i.e. Plume Poppy, Iron Weed, Joe Pye Weed, Cup Plant, Globe Thistle etc. Another plus of living on a large property is
having gardens like the one in the front of the house that I let go natural, I
call it the “wild” garden; it has a beautiful backdrop of forsythia, hydrangea
and spirea, in front it’s planted with black-eyed susan, daisies, lupine,
liatris, etc. I let these perennials
seed themselves and do what they want to do –it is very low maintenance and
these plants do very well along the roadside.
When
planting a garden I like to incorporate trees & shrubs for form, structure
and vertical interest. I really enjoy
watching trees as they mature and take on their adult canopy. Most trees require little maintenance and
add, so much, interest all year long. I
like to say when you plant a tree you’re planting for posterity …for your
grandchildren to enjoy! Keeping with the
simplicity theme I like to incorporate evergreens for texture and winter
interest, they are your true ‘anchors’ in the winter garden.
Containers
are a great addition to any landscape they add
color to a dead spot and interest to an area you cannot plant in the
ground. I will oftentimes move my
containers as the season progresses to give a little ‘pop’ where it’s
needed. I, also, like to use a
combination of perennials and shrubs in my containers. I, eventually, transplant containerized
perennials and shrubs into the garden, or I give them to a gardening friend if
I don’t have the room or the perfect spot.
This allows me to enjoy plants I may not be able to get to survive in my
yard. As the saying goes, folks, “take
time to smell the roses”…enjoy your gardens at different times of the season
and at different times of the day. There
is beauty there—we just need to open our eyes to it!!
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