Category Archives: Uncategorized

Plant-A-Day 2020 (Day 232) Chasmanthium latifolium

I’ve always like the “sea oat” looking grass inflorences and the photos of this plant tempted me to start the seeds last year. It is called woodoats and northern sea oats, and is native to the eastern US. My seedlings, though they have flowered a bit, haven’t really put on a good show yet. The plants seem robust, however, and I have some in pots and one clump out in the memory garden. The flower stalks appear in September.

My future plans for these plants are to keep an eye on them and make sure they don’t give signs of invasiveness. I will keep watering and feeding them and hope for them to attain full size–they can get up to three feet tall.

Plant-A-Day 2020 (Day 231) Hakonechloa macra

The graceful Japanese forest grass came to us as a clump from our friend Jim Heltsley about twelve years ago. We’ve kept the plant in a pot, though we had to move it up to something bigger when it bulked up quite a bit. The leaves of this grass hang down, they are multi-colored and also change with the seasons. They change shape when they need water (shame on me for discovering that!)–the leaves roll up and point upwards in a desperate cry for water!

My future plans for this plant are to peel off a few divisions to add to the woodland garden and give away or sell. I need to use a saw to divide it–the clump is so packed and tough!

The above photos show an example of fall color in November.

The above photos show winter color, which is a clean tan/buff color.

Plant-A-Day 2020 (Day 230) Allium tuberosum

Brother Tim gave me a clump of garlic chives five or so years ago. I don’t even remember they are there until September when they burst into bloom. The flowers are striking, particularly in the shady raised bed, they populate. What I noticed today is that they are a great pollinator favorite, so they provide a great place for me to stalk bugs with my macro lens. Before I had my lens focused, two beautiful golden digger wasps traipsed through the flower heads while chasing each other.

This plant is growing for me in a raised bed that is under a giant Douglas fir tree that hogs all the water from above and below. Somehow, garlic chives don’t seem to mind. The clump is spreading a bit every year. My future plans for the plant will be to pull a few divisions off of it and add them to the memory garden to attract even more fun pollinators.

Plant-A-Day 2020 (Day 229) Verbesina alternifolia

About ten years ago I got interested in native plants and ironweeds were one of the species that caught my interest. I just ended up with one seedling. It grew a few feet the first year and didn’t bloom. I was disappointed in it and just plopped it into a corner of the garden. The next year there was a Jack-and-the-Beanstalk moment when this plant started climbing toward the sky. It reached about eight feet tall before it bloomed with bright yellow flowers.

I’ve learned to pinch the stems back in June or July to keep them shorter and stronger so I don’t have to stake them. My near-future plans for this plant are to water it because it is wilty right now during our Mediterranean summer. I don’t have room for more of these plants so I’ll just enjoy the one I have. Fortunately, it doesn’t seem to seed around at all, so it isn’t invasive like some of my seed experiment progeny.

Plant-A-Day 2020 (Day 228) Rose “Souvenir de St. Anne

I know I’ve had this shrub for a really long time, but I don’t remember where it came from. I’m surprised I remember its name! I had it in the garden for a while, but then moved it to a pot. It is probably very pot-bound after all these years and I’ve been too lazy to repot it. However, it blooms twice a year–once in the spring, then it really suffers in the hot weather and come September, it starts to bloom again.

My future plans for this forgiving plant are to pull it out of the pot in late winter and add fresh, fertile soil and prune the plant back to strong canes.

Plant-A-Day 2020 (Day 227) Fuchsia thompsonii

Here is a surprise survivor in the front of the orchard garden. I planted two of these hardy fuchsia plants over twenty years ago. Since then, the bed they lived in has been inundated with raspberry canes, a winter hazel shrub, and more. But when I went out to the get the mail a few weeks ago, one fuchsia branch had found its way out of the crowd and into the spotlight. This is a particularly graceful hardy fuchsia cultivar with delicate leaves and blooms.

Future plans for these plants are to add a calendar reminder to dig under the other shrubs next July/August and get some viable cuttings to start a few more of them to plant in some better spaces around the yard.

Plant-A-Day 2020 (Day 226) Raspberry “Fall Gold”

I’ve had these everbearing golden raspberries for at least twenty years. They are growing at the front of the orchard garden along the street (N. 137th) where any neighbors walking by can enjoy them. These are everbearing plants, so I get berries in July and again in September. They are robust plants with deep shiny green leaves and whitish canes.

My future plans for these plants are to pot some of the many runners up and give them away. I’ll clean up the old canes in the very early spring and feed the entire bed with organic berry food.

Plant-A-Day 2020 (Day 225) Nicotiana sylvestris

I started seeds of woodland tobacco early this spring and the resulting plants are just now coming into bloom (early September). I’ve grown these before and had them reach much bigger size–they can get over five feet tall with their big flowers hanging down gracefully. My largest one is maybe going to reach two feet this year. I planned to use them to fill in some blank spots in the memory garden as some perennials die back. They have been planted out in two spots, but they don’t seem too happy about the exposure/soil there. Or maybe it is the lack of water. I have only been watering when really necessary to keep things alive. I also kept one plant in a pot on the back patio that just gets an hour or two of sun a day, and that one has grown well and is blooming now, too.

My future plans with these plant are to keep the potted ones in the greenhouse over winter to see if they make it through and get a big headstart next year. If they make it, I’ll pot them into larger pots and feed them well and see if I can get them up to four or five feet tall next year.

Plant-A-Day 2020 (Day 224) Geum Macrophyllum

Commonly known as largeleaf avens, this lovely native plant was added to my native garden as a bonus plant in a pot with a different native shrub. This is another plant family I’m very fond of, from the native prairie smoke that grows near our cabin, to the border plants, like Geum borisii and “Mrs. Bradshaw.” More subtle than all of those, but with its own brightness and charm, comes this seemingly easy plant. It has bright yellow flowers, fresh green leaves with really large leaves for a Geum at the base of the plant.

My future plans for this plant are to grow more of them and plant them around the native plant garden randomly. Since the plant set seeds, I planted some in a pot in the greenhouse and also sprinkled a bunch around this original plant.

Plant-A-Day 2020 (Day 223) Tulbaghia violacea

This plant, the Society Garlic, was somewhat unusual as a garden plant in Seattle until about ten or twelve years ago when it started popping up in nurseries and garden centers everywhere. It is a fun bulbous plant from southern Africa that has fairly plain green strap-like leaves with a hint of gray and bright pink blooms that put on a real show. The first time I was really impressed by this plant was a trip to Bainbridge Island. There were two interesting plants in outside planters, one a crinum lily and the other a fine specimen of Society Garlic.

This past autumn, we were in Prescott, Arizona visiting our friends Arliss and Mike and in their high desert garden, they had one of these plants blooming. When I got home and rejoined the Pacific Bulb Society, they had a seed and bulb exchange and seeds of this plant were available so I asked for some. They germinated readily and I have about six strong seedlings in the greenhouse With any luck, I’ll have a few plants like the above in the memory garden and in pots around the patio next year.

One of my seedlings bloomed! Here is what it looks like: