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| This is a place to post photos, and to discuss, what is in your garden. This is the SECOND thread for July 2012. Since Summer has arrived, we will be focusing on blossoms, but all garden photos are welcome.
Here is the link for the
Here is the link for the
For Previous Threads from 2012: To see all of the 2011 threads, please click on the December 2011 link. The first post will have links to all previous months. |
Follow-Up Postings:
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| Bronze Fennel is blooming, a favorite of all sorts of beneficial insects. It's sited in a protected spot on the south side of the building next to a big pokeweed. I get seedlings in various areas but they usually don't survive the winter. And in that same area, a phlox escaped the woodchuck! Usually I'd wait until more buds opened before posting the pic but the woodchuck may realize its oversight and go for it. I've decided to move all of my defoliated garden phlox to this side of the house - it's the alley going to the back and I can put a fence alongside the path. I may try to tie the rambling rose canes to the fence - sort of a natural barbed wire effect. Claire |
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I'm not sure why the photo of the cosmos and petunias are not showing up in the previous photo. But we all know that GW does not let us edit. . . ![]() |
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| pixie_lou: Bronze Fennel is perennial - I originally planted two, but only one has survived. That one has been coming back for four or five years though. I've read that zone 5 is iffy, but it will sometimes be OK. In my case, while I'm zone 6b, snow cover is unreliable and winter winds are fierce so that may be a factor in their troubles here. You have Indian Pipes! I haven't seen them in years, although they used to be around here. Such beautiful, ghostly plants. None of my true lilies have bloomed yet, although there are a lot of buds ready to open. Claire |
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- Posted by spedigrees z4VT (spedigre@sover.net) on Mon, Jul 16, 12 at 10:59
| Sorry about your phlox, Claire! Such a shame, your red/pink variety is so lovely. I hope it will survive the woodchuck in its new location. I love your pink oriental lily, Pixie. I planted this same lily several times over the years, and it always died out. Now that the red beetles destroyed my beautiful tiger lilies, I've given up on true lilies. :-( Yours looks beautiful. I'm so intrigued with your tithonia! I looked them up and found that I'm really a zone too cold to grow them, unless I were to start them from seed indoors. Also the place I had envisioned planting them gets sun for only 1/2 of the day, so I guess I will have to enjoy yours vicariously, Pixie, along with the beautiful pink oriental lily! |
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| Mid-July in a heat wave is a terrible time to transplant garden phlox, but when the alternative is having them noshed by a woodchuck it seemed to make some sense this morning. I went out and dug up almost all of the defoliated phlox - I left one that has a nice tuft of leaves at the very top and has a chance of blooming if I put a little temporary fence around it and spray it. I think it's Phlox David's Lavender that was nicely established and bloomed well last year. The woodchuck only ate the lower leaves and didn't chop the top off. The rest of them are now resting in containers in the shade getting hydrated in preparation for going back into the ground. The dug phlox seemed to be doing OK but I was wilting, so the rest of the move including installing a fence is postponed until tomorrow or the next day. There are about ten phlox in the various containers - I didn't count and I really don't feel like going out again right now. I took the photos from the shady deck. Claire (in the shade herself getting hydrated with ice water) |
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| Prairiemoon----to answer your question from the July part I photo thread---yes, I have tomatoes growing with my sunflowers. I have five 3x8 raised vegetable beds and they all have sunflowers growing in them, along with nasturtiams and marigolds: We put all the raised beds right in the middle of the yard because the grass wouldn't grow there. The grass now seems to be growing just fine there now. It figures...oh well Claire---I am so sorry about your poor phlox!!! I had a woodchuck for many years, and he mostly just ate the clover in the lawn. It's the bunnies that eat up everything in my yard. Your Frans Hals daylily is gorgeous. :) Pixie lou---I love that Hot Papaya! I want one! I swear I'll have one next year! And one of Claire's Frans Hans daylilies to grow next to it! Teresa |
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- Posted by steve_mass 5b (My Page) on Tue, Jul 17, 12 at 23:25
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| Steve--that's a stunning display of yellow lilies, especially with the purple butterfly bush in the background! I like that yellowish hosta too. What else are you growing there in your white garden? I have lots of 'David' in my white garden, but it's weeks away from bloom still. Teresa |
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- Posted by steve_mass 5b (My Page) on Wed, Jul 18, 12 at 6:23
| Cat, That's a Kousa Dogwood that has finished blooming in that pic. Also Joe Pye Weed 'Chocolate' which has not yet bloomed, Hibiscus Kopper King, Lily Cassablanca, Iris Immortality, Siberian Iris Gulls Wing, a white Salvia, Centaura 'Amethyst in Snow, Viburnum Korean Spice, Miscanthus sinensis Variegeta, Hemerocallis Gentle Shepard, Hemerocallis Joan Senior, and the following Hosta Lakeside Love Affair, Night Before Christmas, Winter Snow, Minuteman, Arc de Triomphe and Mountain Snow. I still have more room and I'm looking for a few more plants. Any ideas? Thanks for the comments. Steve |
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- Posted by bill_ri_z6b (My Page) on Wed, Jul 18, 12 at 6:54
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| Ooh, all such wonderful photos! I wouldn't dare post any photos of my poor, neglected, dry and thirsty garden this year, lol! I will enjoy everyone else's instead. Steve, you are definitely not helping my hosta almost-obsession. I'm trying very hard to keep it in check but you keep tempting me! And Steve, what is that dark-leafed plant in front in the white garden? Is that the joe-pye weed Chocolate you mentioned? I've never seen a white garden with something that dark in it, and it looks wonderful - really sets off the white blooms! My monitor, however, is rather dark and I'm having trouble making out that plant. Since I have been recently sorely tempted by an Annabelle hydrangea, perhaps she would look good in your white bed? And if you like variegated foliage (and I'm guessing you do because of your beautiful hostas!) perhaps a caryopteris Snow Fairy? Mine seems to have more white on the leaves than in most pictures I've seen, and I love it. Although it does tend toward a cream at times (new leaves? old leaves?) so perhaps that wouldn't work well. And do you have any white irises, or white mums for fall color? I was never big on white blooms but I'm starting to come round.... even considering putting in a white bed of my own. Teresa, what is that lovely pink daylily? Dee |
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| Teresa - this CAN'T be you last post until August. There are still 13 days left in July! Speaking of August - I'll be posting the August thread in the next day or 2. We are leaving on vacation Saturday and won't be back until 8 August. We are all adults here, so I'm hoping I can trust all of you to not post until August. |
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| Have a great vacation, pixie_lou, and thanks for planning ahead for the August thread. We adults will try to police ourselves. Claire |
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- Posted by spedigrees z4VT (spedigre@sover.net) on Wed, Jul 18, 12 at 18:26
| Girlcat, your gardens are gorgeous! I finally have some blooms after three days of torrential rains and electrical storms. I never quite get over the fact that this bee balm arrived as a single stalk stowaway in with a clump of phlox of the same color.
One of my pink phlox, a bi-color variety, and my red phlox are starting to bloom.
I'm not sure what this pink wildflower is (maybe a member of the mint family?) but the butterflies love it.
I caught up with this monarch again by the milkweed, but the tiger swallowtail I was aiming for was too quick and got away from my camera lens.
And a couple little plantings along our walking trail, impatiens in amongst old pitchfork tines, and a pot filled with petunias and hen & chicks.
My little veggie patch is taking off. A few sunflowers are open and the summer squash has blossoms finally.
And from the back, the corn is growing.
The wild chicory is having a great year. The blue blooms are spectacular.
These gerbera daisies seem to like this rust bucket atop the sawed off stump of our old quaking aspen tree. It's their third year up there and they bloom all summer long. (I haven't tried to winter them over, but have bought new ones each year. This year I'll try saving seeds.)
My pink cosmos that I save seeds from each year is blooming, pink and deep rose.
And lastly, my orange garden has had a tough go of it this year with the drought and the Japanese beetles, but it shows signs of coming back.
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| Thank you, spedigree! I have monarda envy---yours looks so pretty. Monarda is one of the things I've always wanted in my yard but somehow haven't gotten yet. Maybe I will wintersow some. Your little garden patch is really cooking along; that squash looks fabulously healthy. I also love your orange garden---the blue bottles complement the orange so nicely. Love the rolling hills that seem to be in your yard. :) Teresa |
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| Teresa, thanks for that info on the daylily (darn!) and the white garden. But yes, I've never really seen dark foliage in anyone's white garden. Lots of variegated foliage and chartruese or lime greenish, but I guess the gardeners in the circles I run in aren't creative enough, lol, to think that deeply about the foliage - guess it's more about the white blooms. Spedigrees, thanks for identifying the wild chicory. It grows along the roads here everywhere, and someone told me they thought it was a cornflower, but they weren't sure. By the way, that unknown pink thing is kinda odd - the bloom looks for all the world like an astilbe bloom, but then you see the foliage...??? You need a little tithonia in that orange garden. :) Dee |
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- Posted by steve_mass 5b (My Page) on Thu, Jul 19, 12 at 7:03
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| Steve, my Annabelle pictured above gets between 4-5 feet high and about 3 feet wide. I cut my down to the ground this spring to keep the plant a little smaller. I have another that lives in deeper shade and it's a bit smaller. Teresa |
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- Posted by steve_mass 5b (My Page) on Thu, Jul 19, 12 at 8:13
| Thanks Teresa, BTW, my favorite white daylily is Joan Senior. Big recurved ruffled blooms. Steve |
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| Very beautiful all! I whimpered softly when I saw spedigree's phlox in bloom. My defoliated phlox are all transplanted, just in time for the torrential rains yesterday, and the woodchuck fence goes up today. Maybe I'll still get some phlox flowers this year. The rain woke up my first true lily to bloom this year and this sight greeted me this morning. Claire |
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| Very pretty, Claire! |
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| Gee, thanks Steve. Yet another hosta... ;) Claire, that lily is quite pretty. I love the hint of soft pink. Are your lilies really just starting? That bouquet I brought to work in the rain yesterday is pretty much the end of my lilies. I did think they bloomed rather early this year, and many are in crates, which may make them earlier than in-ground lilies, but even my in-ground lilies are pretty much done. Just the tigers are left, and they started blooming about two days ago. Dee |
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| Dee: I just checked my lily photos from past years, and late July and early August is the usual time for blooming here. I don't have any Asiatic lilies which would bloom earlier. I found a photo of an Asiatic lily that bloomed on June 30, 2008 in an out of the way spot but I didn't notice it this year (forgot to look). Claire |
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| Claire, that's the thing, I don't have asiatics either! Mine are orientals (possibly a few orienpets and/or LA hybrids). Some did bloom earlier (starting three to four weeks ago up through this week) but now they are pretty much done. I just checked my ordering records and some of these lilies should have bloomed late August! Wow. Perhaps those early hot temps really made more of a difference than I realized. Dee |
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| Dee: Maybe so - we had early hot temps but on the coast they're tempered by the ocean, so nowhere near as extreme as inland. I'm seeing mostly differences in timing - things that usually bloom at the same time are out of synch. My Hosta Blue Angel and Hydrangea Blue Billow usually bloom together but the hydrangea started much earlier this year. Claire |
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| This thread is like a gardener's recital. Beats those Sunday afternoon dancing school recitals! Lovely flowers everyone. Interesting to see so many styles and the various characteristics of our gardens - all so very individual. It's now 12 feet tall and I can see the top of the new blossoms from inside my house. This is Joe Pye Weed (Eupatorium purpureum) arriving just a bit earlier this year. Naturally, it has spread from the time I planted it about 7 years ago at which time I thought for sure I'd been ripped off at the nursery sale because it looked so pathetic. Jane |
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- Posted by spedigrees z4VT (spedigre@sover.net) on Fri, Jul 20, 12 at 13:36
| Ha ha ha, girlcat! I have a winter basement torture chamber for plants too! Coincidentally red geraniums are the primary residents of my torture chamber. They look truly pathetic when I first put them out in their wine barrel homes for the summer, but, like yours, they bounce back after about a month. I like both your yellow and your deep red daylilies. I bought a packet of Joe Pyeweed seeds last fall and scattered them along one of our unmowed borders. I had forgotten about them until I saw your photos, Jane. I hope some will grow, but I may end up actually having to purchase a few plants. Time will tell I guess. Yours look great! |
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| Spedigrees and Teresa - do you hang your geraniums upside down, bareroot, from the ceiling in your torture chamber? That's what I used to do, and the first time I couldn't believe it worked! Haven't done it in a few years, but maybe this fall I'll save my geraniums. Jane, saw some eupatorium in bloom along a road running by a small lake this morning, intermixed with Queen Anne's Lace. So pretty! Dee |
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| Teresa: Your red daylily looks a lot like my 'Pardon Me'. It was blooming a few days ago but I just went out to get a pic and naturally there are no blooms today (wrong day for the daylily). A very nice daylily that's been around for a while so it could easily be found it that wonderful garden you visited. Jane: My Joe Pyeweed isn't blooming yet - a volunteer from the plant next door. Claire |
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| Molie, that Delia O'Bryan Brown daylily is gorgeous, if a bit of a mouthful, lol! I will have to look out for one. I bet it was those dread Oriental beetles that got your echinacea. They devastate my coneflowers and daisies terribly. Dee |
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| I see the August thread has been posted, and I will follow instructions and not post on it. However, I really like that Today's Date site pixie_lou included. Claire (pretending to be an adult) |
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| Lovely photos everyone! You've inspired me to head out with the camera once it's too hot to work in the garden. Spedigree's unknown pink wildflower is a wild spirea, and looks to me from her photo to be Steeplebush AKA hardhack, Spiraea tomentosa. If it is S. tomentosa it has sort of brownish or golden-tan fuzz on the leaf undersides and tends to like damp old field or wet meadow conditions. Like other spireas, it's a shrub, but it tends to have fewer, upright stems. Steve, my Annabelle hydrangea stops at about 4' in height, the shortest of my hydrangeas except for Endless Summer which gets winter killed to the ground every year. Annabelle hits the same height for me whether she is growing from last year's stems or if she has been whacked to the ground (due to damage from snow falling from the roof overhang in heavy snow years.) Mine is about 10 years old and does sucker some which I keep under control by a combination of competition from surrounding shrubs and giving away suckers. She also flops some if rain has been heavy, but her neighbors (a Rhododendron roseum elegans and a medium sized spirea) support her well, or a low fence put in when she is sprouting works well to keep her off the ground and is soon covered by leaves. I've also seen her used effectively at the top of a stone wall, gracefully arching over the top. Her flowers are a light lime to creamy white, not a white like phlox david, so keep that in mind if you are putting Annabelle in a white garden. |
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- Posted by spedigrees z4VT (spedigre@sover.net) on Sat, Jul 21, 12 at 18:05
| Thank you, nhbabs. Steeplebush rings a bell, so I must have looked this up in the wildflower book at one time. I also have some similar plants with fuzzy white flowers and I imagine they are related, probably of the spirea family too. Molie, I also love your Delia O'Bryan Brown daylilies. The Canadian Border Patrol lilies would be worth growing for the name alone! So sorry that your echinacea has been a meal for the beetles this year. They're pretty despite the damage. |
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- Posted by spedigrees z4VT (spedigre@sover.net) on Sun, Jul 22, 12 at 18:45
| I just walked out to water the gardens and discovered that my cherry cheeks daylily is blooming. This is the queen of all daylilies as far as I'm concerned! I bought two plants several years ago and only one survived, but I'm hoping it will spread.
And out in my perennial beds on the hill my double daylilies are blooming.
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- Posted by spedigrees z4VT (spedigre@sover.net) on Sun, Jul 22, 12 at 19:15
| I meant to comment on your ultra austere torture chamber for plants, Dee! I've never heard of hanging geraniums upside down, bareroot! Yikes, that really sounds like torture! My version just consists of storing them in pots atop my laundry machines where they get a stingy amount of sunlight all winter and usually too much or too little water. It's really a wonder that so many of them survive to live another summer. I just overwinter them one time, then toss them out, as they get stem-y if I try to keep them longer. |
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| Corunum--your Joe Pye weed looks so pretty through your window! Dee---yes, I do hang my geraniums bareroot upside down. I leave them out in the open, not in a paper bag or anything. They don't all make it through the winter, maybe they would if I misted them. I think I'll try that this winter. Claire---I think you are right! My red daylily does seem to be 'Pardon Me'. And more pictures of your gorgeous lilies! How many varieties do you have? Molie---my HF Young is thriving for some reason this year. I never water it, and we are in a drought around here. Seems strange for it to be doing so well. Nice shot of 'Envy' you posted! I have ammi majus/lace flower(not the weedy Queen Anne's Lace!) growing with my Envy zinnias. I really like the combo and will definately plant it again next year. I wish the salvia in that bed was doing better, though. Those Delia O'Bryan Browns are stunning! And the Canadian Border Patrol against the dogwood is perfect! Spedigree---that 'Cherry Cheeks' is lovely; is it really that pink? Teresa |
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- Posted by spedigrees z4VT (spedigre@sover.net) on Sun, Jul 29, 12 at 13:57
| Claire, what do you spray with to kill the red beetles on your lilies? The sight of your beautiful tiger lilies makes me wonder if it would be possible to salvage mine next year, if they have not all been killed by the evil beetles. I do miss them. |
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| spedigrees: In the past I've used Bayer's Advanced Rose and Flower Spray or anything containing imidacloprid - sometimes the spray and sometimes the soil drench. This always worked very well. However, the last few years I've haven't seen many beetles at all, and I assumed the parasitic wasp has been established here. I don't like to spray any more than necessary because beneficial insects are also killed. This year I saw a few adults and immediately did a spot spray using what was closest - i.e., Bonide Eight permethrin spray, only spraying the beetle. I keep permethrin around as a not-too-harmful insecticide for whatever. I would have used Bayer's but all I had here was the concentrate and I wanted to move fast without stopping to dilute the Bayer's concentrate. When I noticed the tiger lily stem leaves had been infected, I dribbled the permethrin on the stems too, although this may not be as effective on larvae. UMass has a good fact sheet and they also recommend products containing spinosad. Our FAQ also discusses controls for the beetles. In your situation, I would use Bayer's products containing imidacloprid and do it NOW, don't wait for next year. The beetles are still active and you want to kill as many as possible before they dive into the soil to pupate. You also want your current lilies to be able to grow enough to replenish the bulbs for the winter. Treat again next spring, soil drench around the lilies is good, and you should be able to protect any lilies that make it through the winter. After that, treatment every month or two should be fine. Claire |
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| Glad you asked the question, Sped, very useful info, Claire. And, you two have pushed me over the edge to get white lilies and the Cherry Cheeks really is a lovely specimen. Twice this year I bought the boxed specials on sale at HD and BJ's and naturally, don't remember which lilies they contained. Just planted them this spring, so next year will be a surprise. Lovely photos of lovely flowers, all. Aren't we lucky to be able to share all this?! Jane |
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| I do love those lilies! If it weren't for the fact that my gardens are so close to a tidal river (and I worry about pesticides), I would plant more of them in my yard---- especially the Casablanca. I've always admired that one. I also appreciated all of these photos because they make up for what I don't have. I guess it was the heat spell that got to my flowers and caused many of them to "go under" at least until the cooler weather. My clematis have perked up after I cut them back. But I'm most worried about my roses ---- Just Joey, Tamora and even my old faithful Queen Elizabeth. All of them are sad looking sticks. Molie |
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| Ah, Molie, I love, love, love Just Joey and Tamora. Sadly, I've never gotten either to last more than two years for me. I'm certain they died of pure neglect! Hope yours - and her highness - make it through this season. By the way, I almost choked this morning while driving to work - goldenrod in bloom already! Did I miss a month somewhere?! Dee |
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| It's just me trying out the new picture upload feature. WOW! How easy this is!! Thank you, Gardenweb! No more Picasa middleman. Neat. BTW, it's a Livin' Easy rose bud. Jane |
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| Okay, Jane, what did I miss about this new GardenWeb picture upload feature? Guess I should check out FAQ. Btw, I'm very jealous of that Livin' Easy rose bud. Tomorrow I'm going take my cellphone out to the garden and show this pic to Just Joey and Tamora ---- as a little incentive. Dee, I wonder if my two favorite roses won't make it through a second season either. Very sad news. Queen Elizabeth has been with me for many seasons so I expect her to pull through, especially since this is the "other" queen's Diamond Jubilee year. She's a pretty tough gal, my QE --- been through a lot of winters with no special help from me. Molie |
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- Posted by spedigrees z4VT (spedigre@sover.net) on Mon, Jul 30, 12 at 20:31
| I'll have to try the new upload feature. Jane, your easy livin' rosebud is a lovely shade of orange! Thank you Claire for reposting the info about controlling the red lily beetles in answer to my question. I'd forgotten about imidacloprid and the parasitic wasps. I remember now that I had resolved to let nature take its course and hope that the parasitic wasps would make their way here. They weren't released in my state but they were in neighboring states, so hopefully they will be coming. I haven't even looked for my poor lilies this year or last and they may well be deceased. I guess I should go out and have a look. Teresa, thank you. The 'cherry cheeks' daylily is very pink/rose colored. I love the contrast of the pink with the orange on the underside of the petals. It is as if someone took an ordinary orange daylily and painted its face with blush-on. Someone posted a photo of one a couple years ago, on either this, or perhaps the perennials, forum and I searched for it everywhere locally and finally found it at a single on-line place. I bought and planted two plants; one survived and is thriving, and the other died out, so I'm hoping this one plant will spread. Anyways this discovery is one of the many reasons I'm thankful for the garden web. |
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| Oh, Sped, as an 'orange blossom' gardener, you'll have to try Livin' Easy. I have it in a large pot on the deck so the deer don't eat it, but also, because of the fragrance. Close to me means it gets more attention and I get one of the best rose fragrances I've smelled. This rose literally seems to glow from the inside because the center is a muted, gradient of yellow. Jane |
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| Oh, Jane, what a beautiful flower!! In general my roses are climbers, but I love the orange/yellow combination in general and the glow of this rose is captivating! Now I'll have to go check to see if it will be hardy enough. I did see a comment somewhere that only one photo per post could be uploaded through the new GW photo upload, but I haven't tried it. Has anyone tried to put several photos in a post with it? Spedigrees - You are probably right about the white fuzzy blooms being another Spiraea since there's a wild white-flowered one called meadowsweet, S. latifolia. Also, with regards to red lily beetle, I have found that while my Asiatics got decimated (and so I no longer plant them) the oriental-trumpet AKA orienpet lilies don't seem to be much bothered by them. I've only planted those for about 5 years, and have found the RLB grubs only once on one plant. This is only my experience, but might be worth a try for folks who don't want to use pesticides for whatever reason. |
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- Posted by spedigrees z4VT (spedigre@sover.net) on Tue, Jul 31, 12 at 17:53
| That is a lovely rose, Jane. I simply drool with envy over that and also Claire's lovely climbing roses, but I fear I am a zone too far north for roses to really do well. My neighbor has a few, but she grows them next to her house foundation (now that is a thought of a way I could grow some!) and she covers them during the winter months. I believe that most winters here (because of our altitude) reach conditions closer to zone 3, although we are supposed to be zone 4. I do have some micro-mini roses, because my Dad sends me one every year on Valentines day, and they typically last outdoors only about 2 years on average. Covering them during winter doesn't seem to increase their cold resistence or longevity. I laugh about my orange garden! All my other flower beds contain multi-colored specimens, and that garden was supposed to as well, but only orange flowers have survived there. Marigolds over-ran and choked out the red geraniums intended to share their pots, and pink and purple flowers met a similar fate. Anything orange thrived, so rather than read my orange flowers the bill of floral civil rights, I just gave up and let my bigoted orange flowers have their little gated community. I give them disapproving looks from time to time, but no longer try to integrate hapless blue, red, or purple blooms. I know what will happen. I really, really want to try growing a tithonia/Mexican sunflower, Pixielou, but I fear I am a zone too cold for them to ever flower. The plants in my orange garden would definitely embrace tithonia, but I don't think it would really fit there. I'd like a row of them along the back foundation of my house, but with sun only half the day, they'd be at an even further climactic disadvantage. Still I keep eye-ing them. Maybe I should start them early in pots. And lo and behold, as soon as I saw the photos of Indian pipe I was struck with nostalgic longing, not having seen those since I was a kid. Then what do I spy on a walk around our wooded path, but two Indian pipe fungi growing under a pine tree! I didn't have time to get the camera, but there they were! I wonder if this is a particularly favorable year for Indian pipe here in New England. |
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| Spedigrees, what about the Explorer series of roses? I have no personal experience with them, but I believe they are supposd to be quite hardy in the more northerly zones. Dee |
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Here is a link that might be useful: Heritage Garden
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- Posted by spedigrees z4VT (spedigre@sover.net) on Wed, Aug 1, 12 at 11:59
| Chardie, I love all your colorful container plantings. They are beautiful! |
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| Thanks! They've done well this year--no slugs! |
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