Monthly Archives: September 2019
Plant Inventory 2019
I started taking photos of the plants out on the shelves near the greenhouse today. Here is a gallery with some notes.
Some Potting On and Interesting Plants
Two weekends ago I was able to pot on some of the Chiltern’s perennial seedlings. I ended up with about a dozen pots of what I believe are Silene californica seedlings. These are strong, fast-growers. If they survive the winter in the greenhouse, I’ll plant them out in the spring, and hopefully they will end up looking like THIS.
I also potted on a bunch of Digitalis “Species and Hybrids Mixed”. I think I ended up with 40 seedlings planted in 8 pots. My hope is that I’ll end up with a nice mix of hybrids and species in these seedlings, but even if they all end up being the common foxglove, I’ll be happy.
I’m anxious to come up with a system for getting my Hippeastrum’s to bloom consistently. I have about half of them outside this year for the spring/summer and part of autumn, and the rest are in the greenhouse. I’ll mark them and see which ones bloom better.
Information on these plants can be found HERE.
Greenhouse Flowers and Foliage
Below are a few more photos of plants in bloom this week.
Asters
My gardens are weak on late summer and autumn flowers, but I do have a few asters around and they fill in perfectly at this time of year. Here is a gallery of the ones in the Memory Garden.
Some September Updates
I am trying hard to find more garden time this month, knowing that I have a lot to do to get ready for autumn. There are dozens of bitter cherry tree suckers around the yard that I need to clip or saw down to try to control them. A couple of the ones in front of the orchard bed are over ten feet tall, so it is definitely time to cut them out. Yesterday, I managed to cut down all the ones in the driveway bed and some big leaf maples that have started near the driveway, too. When darkness fell, I had to give up for the night and an impressive thunderstorm came through with heavy rains. It lasted over two hours.
One thing that I’m doing differently this year is not using the yard waste container as much. Instead, I just chop up as much of the vegetation and branches as I easily can and drop them back around where they grew. This seems to make sense to me, rather than pulling all that growth and energy away from the bed and then supplementing with organic fertilizer, I can leave the energy there and let it break down and add organic matter to the soil. I can still fertilize, of course, but I’m hoping the plants will grow stronger in this system.
This weekend, I cleaned out one of the raised veggie beds and planted seeds in there–peas, spinach, and lettuce. It might be too late in the season for the peas but I wanted to give it a try.
The wet weather is expected to continue for another few days. I expect that will help the seeds get growing pretty quickly. There are other seeds waiting to grow in this bed always, including borage and calendula.
There was a brilliant surprise as I wandered the yard yesterday. Our friend Meredith gave us some Amaryllis beladonna bulbs about seven or so years ago. I have had them in the garden ever since, where they leaf out ever year and then disappear in the summer. And until now, they have never bloomed. But look what happened finally!
A few other things are blooming on the patio and in the greenhouse.
Seedlings Planted in the Memory Garden
There are many chores around the garden and greenhouse that I need to tackle in the next few months. I decided to start by planting about 50 seedlings into the Memory Garden this morning.
I spaced the seedlings around the entire garden in the areas that needed filling.
Normally, I would wait for a much wetter time to plant seedlings, but I had the time today so I moved ahead. The ground was very dry, so I watered the entire bed heavily after all the seedlings went in.
Here is the list of what I remember planting:
Shasta Daisy–about 11 of them–a dwarf hybrid that I planted in groups of three to five around the garden.
Oriental Poppy–about 11 of these, too, which I planted in a drift in the center of the bed. These are the Fruit Punch hybrid poppies. I expect there to be some interesting colors in the batch since the mix includes plum, pink, coral and red.
There were four unlabeled perennials that I’m guessing are
Erodium pelargoniflorum, ‘Sweetheart’. I planted them all together just back from the edgers on the street-side of the garden. You can see the flowers of this plant on Chiltern’s site HERE.
I planted about 9 lupines in the easternmost end of the garden where the lilies and tulips are planted. They are from the Tutti Frutti series from Pinetree seen HERE.
There were two columbines that I planted on that were runts from the sowing I did over a year ago. There were three sedums that I planted along the curb, as well as 5 thyme seedlings.
I planted a tree peony seedling that is about five years old. I’m not sure how it will do in a hotter, drier spot, but I’ve seen one that was in a similar position near my workplace. It blooms beautifully every year.
I had a weak plant from a mail-order nursery of Phlox paniculata “Laura” that got planted today, as well.
Three seedlings of Chasmanthium latifolia were planted around a switchgrass that is just starting to grow and prosper.