THE LATE SUMMER GARDEN

By Ms Sherry

Posted 08/31 at 01:40 PM (0) Comments

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toad lily

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diamond frost

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The summer garden is winding down and late summer flowers, like toad lilies and Japanese anemones, are in bloom. I love the delicate toad lily (tricyrtis); the tiny little flower resembles an orchid.  This shade lover is a precious addition to the garden. It is partial to rich, well drained soil ( but what plant isn’t?). Although I have read that this plant can become invasive, it never has been so in my garden. Unfortunately, it is irresistible to voles who may also be snacking on the surrounding hostas. I also have noticed that it does require water; in a spot where it did not get regular water it just disappeared. It is an easy plant to grow if you give it the conditions to make it happy.

There are still so many beautiful things growing.  This is really a good time to take stock of what did well in your garden and what did not. Jot this information down in your calendar, along with how many plants you bought and where you planted them. Somehow, whenever I get to the garden center to buy the plants for my color beds, I never remember how many to purchase and invariably I come home with too many or too few.

Among my favorites this summer is the diamond frost euphorbia. Planted in part to full sun in pots or in the ground this annual is both tough and beautiful. However, it does like to be watered. So plant it where watering will be easy. Billowing clouds of tiny white flowers make this plant easy to love.

I am also sending you a verse I saw at Brookgreen Gardens in Litchfield Beach in South Carolina.  The garden features an amazing children’s section with lots of wonderful verses mounted on large signs placed among the glorious sculptures and beautiful plants. Although this verse is in the children’s section, the words speak to the heart of all gardeners. 


Pineapple Lily

By Ms Sherry

Posted 08/14 at 05:27 AM (0) Comments

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The summer days have brought with them so many divine flowers and this is just one of them, the pineapple lily or eucomis. I think it is rather an unusual plant, but many of my gardener friends have one in their yards. As you can see, the flowers look like small pineapples. Eucomis can be started from bulbs in the fall or seeds in the spring. I am not sure I would ever have the patience to grow these beauties from seed. Like every other growing thing they like well-drained, well amended soil and I do keep them watered during the summer. Sometimes it is a challenge to figure out the best way to stake a flower. Mine grow in part sun but they will also take full sun.

This has been a wonderful growing season for us here in East Central Alabama. We have had good rain –  not too much to drown everything and not too little to let plants dry out. Most of the perennials have finished their show,  leaving the annuals to continue their job of providing color and interest. Unfortunately, some of them may be getting a little tired. Hopefully you pinched your impatiens and your begonias so they have not gotten too leggy. It is not too late to do some judicious pinching but they may not recover from a really hard pruning before the first frost. Annuals planted in pots will probably need water, either from mother nature or a hose, every day as their expanding root systems has filled up their pots. If your annuals are a bit weary, a shot of water based fertilizer may help. But if they are hopelessly leggy or chewed by any variety of local insects the big box stores seemed to continue replenishing their stock of annuals – so replace those that are really tired. We will have many months before it will be pansy time.

Along with the good of the garden there has be “the evil.” Right now my garden is under attack from what I refer to as the horde of locusts, lubber grasshoppers, who spend their lives chewing plants or reproducing themselves The other morning some of my mg friends were sharing their efforts to get rid of them One offered that she cut off their heads with a scissors because when she stepped on them they splattered on her leg. She wondered if there was a shellac like substance we could spray them with to suffocate them. I step on them or smash them with a shovel. And still they keep coming. When they were much smaller, I sprayed them with seven dust, to no avail. The Japanese beetles season came and went without too much damage. Although I have seen lots of deer, they are avoiding my yard perhaps because of the continuous spray of deer repellant made of putrefied eggs.

I love gardening, the good, the bad, and the ugly. I hate it when something dies as did a six year old Japanese maple the other day. But as a friend said, that is an opportunity to get something else.

I hope I never get too old or too senile to make the morning rounds, deadhead some flowers, pull weeds, prune a wayward branch, crank up the lawnmower, or any one of a hundred other tasks. Even doing battle with grasshoppers and the deer and other garden pests will keep me fit, (I hope) for life. 


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