I started a few of these plants about four years ago and like the other pyrenaicum varieties I have, they are spreading generously or dangerously around the garden. I have them in the ground in the orchard bed and the memory garden, and in pots on the driveway, as well. The plant can grow astoundingly quickly and large and produce an enormous amount of flowers. Still, it never reaches showy status. It tops out somewhere between pretty and interesting.
My 2020 plans for these plants will be to root out any extras to slow their spread and enjoy the flowers as they grow and bloom. They take absolutely no care except average water, so no need to feed them or anything special.
I got this plant as a little start many years ago and for whatever reason decided it would be perfect in front of the main living room window along the foundation. Several rhododendrons, far too large for foundation planting, were already there. I placed Miss Kim between them and we’ve pruned the rhodies ruthlessly ever since to let Miss Kim grow up. And now we prune her, too!
The main charm of Miss Kim is her diminutive size. The flowers are more delicate than the S. vulgaris hybrid we have in the yard, and the scent is subtler. But she makes a good show in front of the window every May.
My 2020 plans for this plant will be to prune it right after the flowers fade and before Leon feels compelled to dismember poor Miss Kim.
May is an overwhelming month in the garden–so many plants blooming and looking their best and some many fun surprises.
I can’t remember the Brugmansia “Charles Grimaldi” blooming this early before!
About ten years after planting the seed, this Paeonia lutea is blooming!
The Weeds of the Northwest FaceBook group helped me identify this as an alien Teucrium. I need to root it out of the Douglas fir bed. It is spreading via roots at an alarming rate.
Another spreader and considered particularly noxious by many gardeners, this is Oxalis corniculata.
Geranium phaeum.
Irresistible Abutilon vitifolium “Suntense”
I don’t remember this iris blooming before! It is white and soft blues.
One of the McKana’s Giants
Heuchera sanguinea
White-flowered Abutilon vitifolium
First Paeonia flower.
Popular tulip corner.
White borage.
Leftover artist tulip in the Douglas fir bed.
Polemonium “Apricot Delight”
Here is one leaf from one of my Sinningia speciosa seedlings at work. I love how the light came through and highlighted the veining.
Unknown tree seedling from one of the Arboretum raids, likely. Beautiful leaves and interesting bark/trunk.
Glacier cherry tree has a few cherries that appear to be set…but it has fooled me before.
Aronia shrub at the center of this photo, with white flower umbels.
Goumi berry shrub smothered in flowers.
More Abutilon blooms.
Tulip “Antoinette” leftovers from last year…still my favorite.
My new gardening partner. This crow comes down a few times a day to check things out and I get him dog food. But he seems genuinely curious about our human busy-ness.
This plant has hundreds of flowers–just spectacular today!
Another gorgeous, unknown Arboretum seedling.
Massive Coelogyne cristata blooming in the greenhouse.
I’m sure most lilacs smell wonderful, but the old-fashioned lavender ones smell the best/strongest to me. We were lucky to have two of these shrubs on the property when we moved here, one right near Burke Avenue on the property line to the north, and one at the southeast corner of the house. I’ve tackled them both at various times, pruning out old stems and trying to maximize their bloom power and minimize their size. They can be overlooked, but not during those three glorious weeks in May when they sweeten the entire yard with their scent.
I don’t have a lot of photos of these shrubs. I take them for granted after all these years! They sucker freely from the base and keep new stems coming and fresh blooms every year. If I find time in 2020, I’ll cull some of the older, woodier trunks and do some top pruning just to confine the growth and maximize the blooms.
My siblings and I grew up with iris in the garden. My Mom had bearded iris and I remember my Aunt Ruby in Yakima had amazing bearded iris in huge clumps–they really like the eastern side of Washington. The variety I remember Mom having was a simple purple one that I see all over the place. I have no idea what it is called and a Google search was no help at all. I remember what it looked like and its smell because somehow it found its way into my current garden.
This particular iris has proven a much better performer than any other hybrids I have tried. Even when I don’t coddle it, or weed around it, I will get flowers from the clumps every year.
My 2020 plans for these plants is to clean them up after they bloom and feed them to see if I can get more flowers. I only see three flower spikes this year–some years there are a dozen.
Despite its propensity to spread, I’ve always loved borage as a bee plant and a simple herb that adds a carefree spot of color for most of the year. I’ve been growing borage around this garden for over twenty years, mostly around the raised vegetable beds to attract pollinators. One year I grew the white-flowered variety just to have something different. Strangely, most of the seedlings that have come up in the last year are white.
I don’t have any plans for these plants in 2020 other than to enjoy them wherever they volunteer in the garden, and to enjoy the pollinators they attract.
My earliest memories of this plant are from a rock garden at the home my parents had in Burien in my earliest childhood. I think this used to be a much more popular perennial, but the other Heuchera plants with brilliantly colored foliage have surpassed this bright bloomer in popularity.
I’m not sure if it is nostalgia or the color and presentation of the flowers, but I still really like this plant. I grew some from seed in 2018 for the memory garden–many of them germinated and grew, but I didn’t transition them well to the garden and only ended up with three of them. I’ve seen photos of big patches of these in bloom and that makes an outstanding spectacle. I probably won’t ever have that many of them, but I’m glad I have a few.
My 2020 plans for these plants are to keep them fed and watered and enjoy their very red flowers.
I grew this carefree plant from seed over fifteen years ago. The original plant is planted along the driveway and I’ve taken cuttings and have another plant in the flower bed in front of the greenhouse. The typical Jacob’s ladder foliage is topped by apricot-cream flowers in May. The plant is quite floriferous for about three weeks, and then it sits quietly until the next year.
My 2020 plans for this plant are to get a few more cuttings from it and plant them around the garden or give them away.
Brother Tim, sister Cate, and I came across this interesting plant at the Washington Park Arboretum. Here is a photo of the “mother” plant.
Those berries have seeds that grow pretty easily. I’ve had several batches of seedlings. None of the ones that I transplanted into the garden have survived, but the couple that I still have in pots are doing well.
For 2020, I will pot these into bigger pots and move them to the patio. My goal is for them to become patio plants.
Columbines have always found a home in my garden. They are easy to start from seed and don’t ask for a lot once they get situated. I probably have thirty columbine plants in the garden right now, mostly in the memory garden, but also in the driveway bed and the Douglas fir bed.
My challenge with columbines has been that I grow mixes or choose varieties that end up not being my favorites. Breeders have focused more on flower power and unusual forms and less on gracefulness and the natural beauty of the plants.
Columbine May 2019
Columbine May 2019
Columbine May 2019
Columbine May 2019
Columbine May 2019
Columbine May 2019
Columbine May 2019
Columbine May 2019
Columbine May 2019
Columbine May 2019
Columbine May 2019
Columbine May 2019
I’ve notice what looks like a mosaic virus on the existing columbines in the memory garden. I plan to root those out after they bloom and destroy them. Over time, I hope to replace all the hybrids with native columbine, Aquilegia formosa. I’ve got a bunch of seeds planted already in pots and I’m hoping to have transplants ready to go out this autumn.