Foliage Day, February 2015

Here we are on the cusp of spring–some of us closer to that cusp than others, but we in the Northern Hemisphere are all headed in the same direction and whooping it up as buds are swelling and leaves are greening.  Those in the Southern Hemisphere–happy almost autumn to you! Regardless are where the gardens are planted, thanks to Christina of Creating my own garden of the Hesperides for hosting Garden Bloggers’ Foliage Day set aside for profiling and parading foliage–for this gardener, of the late-ish winter garden.

Blackberries.  Yum.  I can’t wait to make pie and cobbler, but also to pick the berries right off this vine in May. For now though, I simply appreciate the burgundy blush that winter’s chill left on some of the prickly leaves of the Rosborough Blackberry vine (Rubus, sp.), ‘Brazos’.

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Opposite in the color and texture spectrum of the deeply colored and thorny foliage of Blackberry is this Heartleaf Skullcap, Scutellaria ovata ssp. bracteata.IMGP5204.new

This winter spreading, spring and summer blooming perennial, sports subtle gray-green leaves which are soft to the touch.

The morning sun backlit this pairing of Bamboo Muhly, Muhlenbergia dumosa  and Cast Iron Plant, Aspidistra elatior.

IMGP5210.new I love the effect.

In the same garden, just down the pathway,  I also really like this combination of Cast Iron Plant (at top), Sparkler Sedge, Carex phyllocephala ‘Sparkler’, and Iris straps (unknown variety).IMGP5304.new

All are evergreen and hardy, water wise, and lovely plants year-round.

And this fun combo includes tawny, crispy about-to-be-pruned-to-the-ground, Inland Sea Oats, Chasmanthium latifolium, graceful Giant Liriope or LilyturfLiriope muscari, snazzy Variegated Flax LilyDianella tasmanica ‘Variegata’, and lacy and lovely summer-blooming Yarrow, Achillea millefolium.  IMGP5307.new

Oh, and also fallen oak leaves which STILL need raking up.

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There’s more foliage gorgeousness to see from beautiful gardens at Creating my own garden of the Hesperides.  Check it out!

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A Refurbished Garden

I call it the Driveway Garden.

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Not a bucolic name, nor was it, for many years, a particularly interesting garden.  For most of the past twenty years, this garden was dominated by a hedge of Barbados CherryMalpighia glabra.

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I let the Barbados Cherry grow and expand, tall and wide, because it’s a low maintenance shrub, blooms pretty pink flowers, develops luscious red fruits, provides cover for wildlife, and performs well in shade–a requirement for that spot. Additionally, it served as a privacy hedge and also as a stalwart plant bolstering against balls and bicycles when my children were young and there was roughhousing activity on and around the long driveway.

Aesthetically, it wasn’t ideal, but worked and was easy.

In recent years, the tree which shaded the garden began failing, so there is now more direct sun on the garden.  I allowed myself the luxury of fantasizing about what plants I might add to the space to increase color, diversity, and wildlife interest to this otherwise utilitarian spot.

After the 2014-15 winter which was colder than any of the last twenty years, the Barbados Cherry froze to the ground and late last winter and early spring, I seized the opportunity to make changes to this narrow strip of garden. After its first year of remodeling, I’m generally pleased with the results.  For reference, the driveway garden spans most of the length of the front drive, beginning at the street levelP1040016_cropped_3338x2361..new

…and ending at the Green Tower (GT), a vertical structure which I’m experimenting with for vegetable and herb gardening.

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I dug out the bits of Barbados Cherry root, big and small, shallow and deep, which filled in so much of the GT end of the garden.  I left some of the shrubs,

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…returning from winter freezes, which align alongside my property and the neighbor’s lawn. Vowing to keep those hardy and somewhat insidious limbs and roots in check, the goal is for the Barbados Cherry to act as individual, tidy, sometimes blooming, shrubs.  I must ensure they don’t become the wall-of-plant  they were and can certainly become again, if I’m not vigilant.

I also left the Turk’s CapMalvaviscus arboreus, which planted itself at the far end of the garden, just beside and around, the Green Tower.

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Most of this garden re-do was accomplished with on-hand plants.  When you grow natives, a vast supply of seedlings is at the ready for relocation to yours, or other gardens.  I did buy a few plants though.  In the vertical and horizontal center part of the garden, I added two purchased Red Yucca, Hesperaloe parviflora,

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and along the drive, purchased and planted three small pots of Four-nerve Daisy, Tetraneuris scaposa.

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Close to the GT, I planted a Texas Smoke Tree, Cotinus obovatus, a tree I’ve long wanted to add to my garden.

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Other plants that came from various parts of my gardens include Rock Rose, Pavonia lasiopetala, Purple Coneflower, Echinacea purpurea, Mexican Feathergrass, Nassella tenuissima, Globe MallowSphaeralcea ambigua, Frostweed, Verbesina virginica, Goldeneye, Viguiera dentata, and a couple of white Tropical Sage, Salvia coccinea, which pop themselves all over my gardens with no assistance from me.  Every spring I also allow some non-native, annual sunflowers (from birdseed, I think) to grow, bloom and seed-out and a few of those tall beauties always find their way into this garden. I transplanted (again!) a Gulf Muhly, Muhlenbergia capillaris,

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…in hopes of autumn glory.

In October, a garden buddy gave me some Fall Obedient Plant, Physostegia virginiana, and it fills in a blank spot along the edge of the garden, by the neighbor’s turf.

After planting last spring, I added fresh mulch,P1040019.new

…and soaker hoses to the garden, with supervision from Asher the Garden Dog.

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The Soft-leaf Yucca that I wrote about last post, anchored the street end of this garden. It’s snout-nosed weevil rotted and gone now, but the replacement Goldeneye will work beautifully in its stead.

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I chose these particular plants because I’m a sucker for blooming things.  Also, I wanted a variety of pollinator/seed-bearing plants for wildlife, for blooms, but also, for year-round interest with seeds and berries. The height of bloom time for the garden is summer through late fall.

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The structural part of the garden resides in shrub form with the Barbados Cherry, Globe Mallow, and Rock Rose, and in a “grass” form by the Red Yucca, Mexican Feathergrass, and the foliage of the Four-nerve Daisy.  The other plants are either dormant in winter or form small winter rosettes.

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And though I don’t have many photos to verify, there was always insect and bird action around most of these plants.

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The Green Tower was a limited success as a vertical vegetable garden.  The top was lush with tomatoes, basil, cucumbers, and beans, but the sides were a bust–there wasn’t much vegetable growing success there, unfortunately.   I moved three older Bougainvillea container plants from my back patio, where less sun smiles on them than in previous years and placed them on the driveway in front of the GT, which camouflaged the unplanned for bare wall of that structure.

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The three Bougainvilleas were very happy in the new spot–they put on quite the show of blooms from midsummer until I moved them to the garage in November.  I’m trying a different set of plants in the front and sides of the GT this year and that will require some integration with the potted Bougainvilleas.

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Once the height of the growing season was past, the garden retained interest with seeds from the Frostweed, Goldeneye, and Coneflower and berries from the Barbados Cherry.

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I’ll continue tweaking this garden–I’ve moved one Frostweed to another garden, lost the Yucca, but added Goldeneye. The Four-nerve Daisy seeded out, so there will be more happy yellow, low-growing daisies to fill in along one side.   I’ve cleared out more of the Barbados Cherry, which will be an ongoing task, and I’m trying different plants (not vegetables) in the sides of the GT this year.

A year in the life of a garden.  Mistakes, re-evaluations, and revelations mark the passage of time in gardening

What garden(s) are you looking at differently?  Or changing in some fundamental way?

Yuck-ah

This is what became of my lovely Soft-leaf YuccaYucca recurvifolia.

IMGP5381.new The nascent pup shows the discoloration common with a probable fungal infection from growing in a too-wet soil.

IMGP5382.new Additionally, the large root came out of the ground without complaint and was rotted, stinky, and mushy–those last two terms aren’t technical, but they are descriptive.

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Yuck.

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I don’t have a good shot of them, but there were also fat, gross grubs in the mass of squishy, smelly root.  The grubs crawled back into their fetid lair before I took these photos and I wasn’t going to stick my hands or even a trowel into the disgusting mess to look for them.  You’ll just have to take my word that they exist.

Here’s a head of one, though, in case you’d like to look at it.

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I wrote about my concerns for this yucca in December 2014 in this post.  Once I removed the mature plant, I hoped that the root with the yucca pup would survive and thrive. At that time, the pup looked healthy and the root was firmly ensconced in the ground, so my positive outlook for the health of the yucca was reasonable.  Alas, I believe over watering by the neighboring lawn zealot truly did this yucca in during winter.  I think fungal problems were established and the damp of winter took care of the rest.

It’s a bummer, losing this yucca.  I’ll miss the evergreen form and gorgeous, twice per year bloom stalks.  Oddly, I don’t have a photo of the deceased yucca, but this is another Soft-leaf Yucca in my garden,

P1030415.new …and it, as well as the other eight specimens, seem healthy.  Soft-leaf Yucca is  striking in the garden–foliage and blooms add so much in grace and structure.

I’m not going to run out and buy anything to plant in the newly vacated spot.  If design was my priority, I would replace the yucca with something else that is evergreen with interesting structure.  Instead, I planted these two dormant Plateau Goldeneye, Viguiera dentata.

IMGP5388_cropped_3414x3207..newThey’ll flourish in the western exposure and they can handle much, or little water–whatever is dealt them. I pulled these two out from a work area at the side of my house where they receive no water from me–they established themselves because that’s what Goldeneye do.  An excellent wildlife plant, attracting pollinators and birds, Goldeneye are pretty too.

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Really, really pretty.

The two perennial Goldeneye, planted together with others in this garden, will make a bold statement along the street and edge of my property and provide sustenance for wildlife throughout the growing season.