Showing posts with label Sempervivum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sempervivum. Show all posts

Friday, September 6, 2024

Christine Weaver's open garden

Christine Weaver's East Portland garden was open in May, on the same day I visited other HPSO open gardens (here). I ran out of time that day, thankfully she opened again in late August and I was sure to be there...

I'd be tempted to grow a vine on that interesting metalwork.

Arctostaphylos at the base.

Spikes on the front porch...

You never really know what you're gonna see when you attend an open garden, but I was getting the feeling there was a kindred spirit at work here.

The garden description from the HPSO website: "Only 12 years old, this garden is maturing into a stay at home oasis. Enter over a bridge that creates the fernery. In August, hardy hibiscus and dahlias dazzle. A shed turned into a summerhouse overlooks the fruits and vegetables. Cacti sentinels guard the roses. Carnivorous plants dot the flowerbeds. The lawn gets mowed once a month to allow lawn daisies and clover to bloom, but not get too messy or need very much water. Pause to swing and take in the whole view. Of course you 'shudda' been here last week, or next week, as it is always changing!"

I really loved the way the pavers around this tree in the front garden create a planting pocket.

There were interesting vignettes everywhere you looked.

And so many opuntia!

The side yard with the bridge over the fernery...


This is always a moment filled with trepidation. What will be around the corner? 

It's a good sign though when there are interesting plants and planters at the corner, marking the entrance to the back garden. That's a great looking roscoea.

Up on the fence at eye level was this creative composition...

It took me a few minutes to see it, maybe you did right away? The rusty pliers are baby birds in a barbed wire nest. Page back up and you'll see one of the parents coming in to feed them. 

Into the back garden we go...




Nicely pruned edgeworthia (the well-pruned corokia I wrote about on Wednesday is just to it's right)...

There were several tall cholla in containers in this garden, they stay in place year-round.

Lots of sarracenia too.



I love a gardener who can't resist hanging plants from sturdy branches...

Sturdy pipe frame to support floppy plants.

The back fence and edibles in raised planters.

The shed turned summerhouse referenced in the garden description.



I forgot to ask how they keep the racoons out of their water bowls.



Wowsa!

Opuntia wrightii

I love that elevated mossy, sedumy, goodness...

I think I'd need to add more plants though.

Even the storage is decorative in this garden!

Another pipe frame, this one strung for growing vines, or sweet peas? Or?

Super narrow shade structure...

That's just perfect for a wooden swing.

I'll close out with a few wide shots. This looking to the back of the garden with the shed and raised veggie and flower planters.

That's an exuberant planting, no empty space...

Did you notice the nice metal details on the corners?

Crumpled seems like the perfect state in which to photograph these dirty grey hibiscus. I love them! 

A final shot of the dining table area. What a garden, thank you for opening Christine Weaver!

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All material © 2009-2024 by Loree L Bohl. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

Friday, July 7, 2023

The updated front garden, 2023

Outlining the front garden changes in Wednesday's post I left off just after I'd planted a couple of yuccas at the end of April, but it wasn't until the first week of June that I finally finished planting the reworked front garden areas. Why? A combination of the weather pushing me to finish other tasks first—the things I was planting here wouldn't mind a drier, hotter kick-off to their new life than other plants—and travel, that is a week away backed by jury duty. Today I'm sharing photos from the completed plantings.

First, a nod to what stayed. The Edgeworthia chrysantha 'Nanjing Gold' (the tall slightly misshapen shrub against the house) wasn't going anywhere. I love this plant and I am happy to have it more visible. It's also another reason why I started cutting back the old fatsia early this spring, I wanted the new edgeworthia leaves to emerge in the sun, rather than being shocked by it later. So far they're handing it great, I only hope that in the long run the shrub comes together in the middle, growing to overcome the way it grew around the fatsia. To the right (near the front door) is a happy and healthy Feijoa sellowiana (pineapple guava) that didn't much mind last winter...
We must also acknowledge the mound of Yucca filamentosa in the left hand corner. I thought about trying to remove them, as it's the perfect spot for an agave to thrive, but as we all know if I had, then I would be doing it for the next 30 years, and I have a bit of an emotional attachment to them anyway. They were planted when we first moved in, and they came with me from my garden in Spokane (where they'd been transplanted from my mom's and my brother's gardens). 

I thought I would be removing both of the huge overgrown Leucothoe fontanesiana 'Rainbow'  (behind the Yucca rostrata, at the base of the edgeworthia) but once I took the front one out I discovered the one in the back could remain with just a light pruning.

The photo above made me laugh for how our house and those of the next three neighbor's up the street look. It's a cookie cutter neighborhood! Which it's not really, it's just this section where they're quite similar.

Anyway, on to the new plants! That Yucca desmetiana 'Blue Boy' is new, nestled in with some (NoID) lewisia and Imperata cylindrica (blood grass)—both of which have been growing here for years. That yucca is such a tease. It looks great for a couple of years, then... dead. I fall for it periodically. We'll see how long this one lasts.

Yucca aloifolia

Look at those colors!

Mahonia fremontii, so small! But I am thrilled to have found them (there's a second one in the new plantings). Fingers crossed I found a hot and sunny enough spot to keep them alive.

The Orostachys spinosa I brought back from my early June travels ended up here. They're also a bit of an experiment.

Ozothamnus coralloides from New Zealand; "a slow growing cushion-forming evergreen shrub that can grow to 1 foot tall by 2 to 3 feet wide with thick stems of small diamond-shaped leaves" (source).

Eryngium proteiflorum, this is the one that produces flowers that are vaguely protea-like. I should have bought both of the plants I came across, what was I thinking just getting one?!
This little bugger! Indigofera amblyantha is not a new plant, but rather an old one that I loved, until I decided I didn't, and removed it with this garden change-up. I'm convinced I'll be digging bits for years. Before I put in the new plants I dug out the plant version of a 5ft wide octopus. At the center was the original plant gifted from a friend (you know who you are!) and out from that were thick long arms (roots with sprouts) going off in every direction. I've already dug a half dozen that start out rather unassuming like this one. Grrrr.....

Back when I posted about my agaves that lived thought last winter (here) I mentioned that I'd planted several new agaves, that's seven to be exact. Here's #1, a new Agave ovatifolia which I am pretty sure is 'Frosty Blue'. I hunted and hunted for a larger ovatifolia or two, but this was the biggest I could find. It's a perfect little thing that I'm hoping will grow well.

Another shot of Holman, good looking boy that he is. Most of his roots were severed in the rescue ordeal and since he (obviously) didn't grow any new ones over the winter he was a little unstable when we put him in the ground, that's why the two rebar stakes. 

That's a NoID opuntia I picked up at the Rare Plant Research open house back in May.

I'd been growing these three cloudy cabbages (Bukiniczia cabulica) in a container for too long. It was time for them to sink or swim in the ground. We shall see.

Here's new Agave #2, the adorable Agave montana 'Baccarat' from Alison. Of course that name isn't typically used any longer (I bought at least one agave labeled as such, and she must have too), I believe they're mostly considered Agave 'Baccarat' now.

There must be black mondo grass, always! There's a large expanse on the other side of this new planting, so I figured I needed at least one here to tie the two spaces together.

New Agave #3, labeled as Agave gentryi/montana cross which came from Susan/Secret Garden Growers (it takes a village to round up this many agaves!). That name is again a little outdated, but it's what was on the container so it's what I'm saying here.

The sun is getting brighter! I tried to act quickly on a partly cloudy morning to take photos, but it's been all sun all the time here. While I am not complaining does make it hard to get decent images. Anyway, there was one hellebore here which had done well (on the far left), so I transplanted the other two (Helleborus 'Rio Carnival') which were near the old fatsia. Fingers crossed they don't mind the increased sun.

A Yucca recurvifolia with fantastic coloring (see the faint purple stripe?) that I spotted last winter and quickly purchased. The coloring was stronger in cool weather, but the fact it has remained at all in the warmer temperatures and bright sunshine has me hopeful that it will return again.

New agave #4 is a NoID, and in fact this photo doesn't quite do it justice. It's a perfectly lovely spiky little thing that I bought not knowing what it is (no label). It is my one agave gamble in the new plantings. Fingers crossed it's something hardy. 

Moving down to the lower planting area now.

I am very concerned about the Yucca rostrata on the far left. 

It went in back in 2011 and has always been the better looking of these two (that's an Agave ovatifolia in the corner, planted in 2017).

I noticed late this spring that it was looking a little sickly and it hasn't gotten better. I don't know what the problem is!

It's brother (both Yucca rostrata were planted at the same time) looks great. Behind it is the relocated Yucca linearifolia.

A pulled back shot with Holman.

Up on the house sidewalk now (the last photo was taken from the public sidewalk, visible below) and looking at the area where the Cotinus coggygria 'Royal Purple' came out. The tall exclamation point is a Chamaecyparis lawsoniana 'Wissel's Saguaro' that I've had for years, but wasn't doing anything in the dumb spot I'd planted it in, so I moved it. Fingers crossed it starts to "saguaro" here soon!

New agave #5 is the large Agave 'Baccarat' I got from Dale. How fabulous is it?!

Here's my longtime 'Baccarat' up near the front door....

It's pretty much always flawless.

A shot of the relocated Yucca linearifolia.

New agave #6, a cluster of Agave 'Silver Surfer'

Nearby are these Opuntia humifusa which had become completely engulfed in the Juniperus conferta 'Blue Pacific' groundcover. I saw one of the pads sticking up through the juniper and cut it away to reveal these two looking pretty darn good, all things considered.

Looky there! It's a previously rabbit-consumed Berkheya purpurea that's come back from the dead! A leaf from a relocated volunteer verbascum is trying to protect it.

Cryptomeria japonica 'Globosa Nana', bought on a whim for a container but I decided to give it a go in the ground.

New agave #7 (and the last) another Agave ovatifolia! Because why the heck not?

I'm gonna end this post of new little plants with a bit of a pulled back shot of the blooming Callistemon 'Woodlander's Hardy Red'. This plant (and the Dasylirion wheeleri behind it) was once new and tiny—but look what it's grown up to be.

I'm convinced us gardeners always see our new plants with the potential they have and what they'll some day become. I'm loving my new plantings!

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All material © 2009-2023 by Loree L Bohl. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.