Brother Tim and I renewed our family autumn arboretum walk tradition last weekend. We had a glorious, sunny day and there was a lot to see and many seeds followed us home.
I planted all the seeds that followed me home in pots this weekend to scarify them and see what comes up in the next year or two.
Many of my tonsai starts came from similar annual trips. And this rose, with which I have a love/hate relationship, came from an arboretum seed decades ago.
This is a robust and maleficent marauder, seeding around my garden and likely others, but it has beautiful, cheerful hips in the fall.
After an arid summer and early autumn, the rain came yesterday and is forecasted to stay for about ten more days, at least! The air is finally cleared of the anxiety-inducing smoke from the local wildfires and the plants are all voicing deep sighs of relief.
Today was a fun day spent in the greenhouse between bouts of computer work. There are some fun things blooming or preparing to bloom in there.
Plectranthus blooming better than ever because of the long, hot summer.Begonia blooming well–I think this is Honeysuckle.Nicotiana alata–this long-time greenhouse resident got off to a late start this year but is providing lots of scenic beauty and scent now.Thanksgiving cactus that might actually bloom at Thanksgiving!Abutilon.So many Clivia plants need to be moved into the greenhouse next month!Euchomis blooming and setting seeds.
There is a lot of general cleanup to do in there and lots of propagation, too. I took cuttings of salvia, fuchsia, and pelargoniums–lots and lots of pelargoniums! The frustration with pelargoniums is that they have excellent cutting material now, in the fall, but it isn’t really a great time to propagate them. The success rate on the cuttings can be really low. I’m hoping if I take better care of them in the next six weeks or so, they will do better than in years past.
Foliage colors have been sad this year, more brown than bright. But my tonsai trees have some brilliance despite their diminutive sizes.
One geranium leaf wanted to stand out. Success!Eryngium seedling in its third year is really spectacular. It took the Shasta daisies a couple of years to really get going. They are very showy this year.Very cute dwarf lavender in the memory garden.Sweet cherries from the tree near the driveway–we got a few pounds of cherries this year!Rose “Souvenir de St. Annes” is a favorite–growing in a pot and has a spicy, moss-rose fragrance.Austin rose, “Olivia”
With the travel to London and Lodi in May/June, I haven’t spent enough time in the garden and indeed no time writing about it. I’ll drop a bunch of photos here, though, as there is a lot going on that is lovely and new in the yard this year.
Allium blooming in the memory garden.Kniphofia blooming in the memory garden.The Shasta daisies are huge this year and full of buds.Peach-leaved bellflowers have such a perfect blue-purple color.Giant orchid cactus flower. The plant just had one flower so it was particularly large.More allium flowers.One of the David Austin roses in the orchard garden.Cameras never get the color of this rose quite right. It is electric scarlet.Wild Treasure blackberries have a lot of berries coming on!Single white peony among the hardy geraniums.There were lots of native bees in the Santa Barbara daisy flowers on this warm day.I never got to prune this rambler back in the spring and now it is covered in super-fragrant flowers. I plan to cut it back when the flowers are mostly done.Native Sidalcea in the native plant garden–grown from seed and blooming in the second year.Late tulip flowers in the memory garden.Different alliums in the memory garden.Close-up.Heuchera “Firefly” flowers among the oriental poppies.The Santa Barbara daisies (Erigeron karvinskianus) in the memory garden with columbines blooming behind.The seed-grown oriental poppies are doing well in the memory garden and had many more flowers this year.Blackberry flowers in the orchard garden.Native honeysuckle at the edge of the woods at Ingraham High School.Geranium sanguineum in the memory garden.Kniphofia/Euphorbia.Allium.Geranium patens.Eryngium.Sedum and Madrona seedling.Heuchera.Columbine.Columbine.Columbine.Geranium.Geranium.Geranium.Oldest oriental poppy started over 25 years ago and still blooms every year.One year ago, this is what the sad office houseplant looked like!Here is the Spathiphyllum in my Cardea office after one year.Tonsai rose flowering.Tonsai rose after leafing out.Cutest baby bunny found its way into our yard and hung out with me while I rearranged my Tonsais.Lovely iris flower.Naughty bunny on the lawn.Arboretum rose from seedling.
After repotting the rest of the Tonsai plants and updating the blog inventory, there are now 88 tonsai starts logged! Each one has so much potential to become a wonderful little tree.
The tulip show continues…these yellow beauties will transform two or three times in the next month before they call it quits.Close-up of the tulips.More tulip magic. These artist tulips are chaotic in color and form–so fun!Miniature cymbidium blooming for the first time since I owned it. It seems like it should be fragrant, but I can’t small anything…This pie cherry tree is the showiest plant in the entire garden–amazing!Tulip linifolia making a spectacular show.Gorgeous chestnut-backed chickadee feeding on suet near the greenhouse.
I have big plans for the garden space to the south of the greenhouse but I haven’t had the time or money to implement them yet. That area was covered with weeds and looked pretty sad.
My weekend travel plans were interrupted by a covid exposure so I hunkered down and started cleaning up the area. I got about 2/3 of it done.
Below are some flower/plant photos from the garden/greenhouse this week.
Every day something else blooms in the yard! Seattle has a potential of snow this weekend but the plants are laughing at the forecast and just doing their thing.
Here are a bunch of photos from the last few days.
Tulips and purple deadnettlesAnother viewSpecies tulips popping up in front–these are pretty late compared to prior yearsFreesia laxa in the greenhouseVeltheimia in the greenhouseErythronium in the woodland gardenEphemeral beauties–the flowers last a week and the plants last only about a monthSweet cherry tree blossoms–praying for pollinators!Sweet cherry tree in full bloomSenna by the front door from brother Tim just starting to call attention to itselfMuscari in the driveway bedEuportbia in the memory gardenKinnick Kinnick flowers in the native plant gardenErodium “Sweetheart” opening loads of cheerful flowersThe rain today only made them prettierPurple deadnettle has really spread all over the yard due to poor weeding habits. It has its own beauty, too, though, but needs to be weeded before it all goes to seed.Red-flowered currant shrub in the native plant gardenCandytuft (Iberis) in full bloomArabis in full bloomSpecies tulips waiting for some sun to openThe buds are lovely, tooFritillaria imperialis looking brilliant in the Douglas fir bed
Today Leon installed an amazing dragonfly sculpture he created on the Douglas fir trunk! It is very cool!
Today I transplanted over 200 petunias–they are a scented, climbing variety and I’m hoping they get enough growth to be valuable for patio pots and filling in around the garden. And lots will be given away.
Species tulip–T. turkestanicaFreesia laxa–a harmless weed in the greenhouse, and such a pretty weed when the flowers open.Veltheimia bracteata blooming–almost open.I was excited to see Daphniphyllum seedling about to bloom in the greenhouse. This is a seedling from some berries borrowed from the arboretum.More Pleione pictures–I can’t help it!Anemic-looking Rhipasalis blooming. I’m not sure how to get this plant to look healthier–maybe less light?
The memory garden is filling in quickly. The growth is miraculous, really. Where does it all come from? The photo on the left was from 2/26, and the one on the right is from today.
One of my favorite bulbs has reappeared for about the twelfth year in a row–my Fritillaria imperialis. The form is so interesting and the color is a bright spot in a shady spot under the Douglas fir.
I have a love/hate relationship with the Camellia in our garden. It has gotten completely out of hand in size and has adopted a poor shape. The flowers don’t make a nice show, typically, because I’ve neglected the shrub as a whole. But taken individually, I can find beauty in the flowers. It has two kinds–smaller ones that are less than double, and huge blooms that are very double. This year it must be stressed because most of the flowers are the smaller type.
Below are some Pleine flower pictures from the greenhouse this week–so fantastic and showy, somewhere between starlets and harlots.