Showing posts with label other people's gardens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label other people's gardens. Show all posts

Monday, May 18, 2026

An excellent plant adventure; return visits to RPR and the BigJohn Hicks Oasis

Last Saturday was the annual Rare Plant Research open house, and naturally I was there. This is the 22nd year in a row I've attended this event, which is always held the 3rd weekend in May. How is that even possible? That I've been going for 22 years, and that I've been in the same place, on the same weekend (rain or shine), that many years in a row? Crazy. Burl (owner of RPR) mentioned he was going to be winding down operations, so who knows how many more years I've got?

I was rather taken with the flowers on this Euphorbia cap-saintemariensis, but I'm pretty sure I wouldn't love the plant in its non-flowering stage—plus it was expensive. Thus I left it behind.

I was a rather subdued shopper all around, only picking out a couple things I went knowing I wanted, like another saracennia. One of mine has failed to grow new pitchers this spring, wonder if it had anything to do with the ginormous slug family I found living in the pot?

I love eavesdropping at this sale, listening in on the other shoppers. My favorite quote this year came from a lady who was thrilled to spot the bug-eating African violets (yes, she was talking about the saracennia).

Killing time hoping that the long line to pay would dwindle, we (my friend Scott—maker of this garden—was my partner in crime for the day) walked up to tour around the grounds of the house above the nursery, home for Burl and his wife Cyndi. We were rewarded with a blooming Agave parryi...

What beefy bloom spike!

The bromeliad vertical garden at the house is looking a little tired. Time to add some more plants to the mix!

Ah, nice ferns!


Matteuccia struthiopteris perhaps? (ostrich fern)

Okay, we're back down at the nursery now, and it's time to pay for our plants! Here's Scott's fabulous haul: Yucca rostrata, colorful bromeliad, a NoID brown plant with small leaves (perhaps Haloragis erecta ‘Wellington Bronze’), a sarracenia, Agave montana, and three very very very spiky opuntia.

My small haul: sarracenia, tillandsia, and a bromeliad.  

After we were done at Rare Plant Research we swung by Mike and Megan's garden, the BigJohn Hicks Oasis. I was there a couple of times last summer (post here) and wondered what it would look like in mid-May. Amazing is the word, it looked absolutely amazing...

Oh the tree ferns!

And the Polygonatum kingianum... (well I suppose the Impatiens omeiana deserves a mention to).

Mike has been busy putting together creative plantings, including these kokedama creations. I loved the combination of Arthropodium candidum 'Maculatum' and Pyrrosia lingua.

So good! (I wish my photos were better)

Rhododendron 'Ever Red'

More Arthropodium candidum 'Maculatum' (the San Marcos Growers website calls it "a grassy bulbous deciduous perennial from New Zealand").

I've got a couple patches of this plant in my garden now (thanks to Little Prince Plants), but Mike and Megan's plants are next level gorgeous. 

As are their Parablechnum novae-zelandiae (aka Blechnum novae-zelandiae).

These podophyllum! The were HUGE! I should have gotten a hand in there for scale. Mike said they came from Ernie and Marietta O'Byrne.

Oh look! More Arthropodium candidum 'Maculatum' and Parablechnum novae-zelandiae. Great combination.

*Sigh*... maybe someday I'll take the plunge and get a Podophyllum difforme -Starfish Form, so strange (in the very best way)!

More tree fern (Dicksonia antarctica) appreciation.

Damn! Astelia ('Red Devil'?) and Paris polyphylla var. stenophylla 'Luquanensis'. This combo gets me every time I visit.

I was so focused on the individual plants during our visit that I neglected to take any landscape images. This might be the most pulled-back shot I got. Can you believe their gunnera is so massive in mid May? The mild winter has certainly helped our PNW gardens start the season right. Sadly I keep hearing we might be paying for the odd winter with water restrictions later in the season.

The plant directly under the gunnera in the above photo, Scadoxus puniceus.

I didn't get the name of this bright happy bromeliad... isn't it stunning?

Okay, a few more new plants. We stopped at Mike and Megan's so I could drop off a plant, but ended up leaving with plants too! Schefflera  'Mato', Mike remembered I wanted one of these when I was last at Little Prince and he nabbed me one. It's not hardy here in Portland, but it will spend summer vacation outdoors.

The rest of my haul..."extras" Mike had at the house and offered up to Scott and I.

Abutilon 'Fairy Coral Red'

And a few Haworthia attenuata 'Concolor'  (green) and Gasteria 'Kaleidoscope' (brown, which may be a stress color, all the photos I saw online are green).

Okay, one last plant and it's a great one, Agave ovatifolia 'Orca', a gift from Scott. The poor thing has lived a rough life out there in the ocean (or rather being shipped across the country in a box) but from now on it's going to be treated like royalty. I'm so excited to have joined the variegated Agave ovatifolia club (one I'd been priced out of). Coincidently I believe one of the variegated agaves I featured towards the end of last Friday's RBG post (4th from the bottom) is an 'Orca'.

The Bit at the End
Do you know Niwaki? It's a Japanese company with all sorts of gorgeous garden tools and other things. They've just released a new line of garden clothing and accessories in a camo pattern, it's unlike any camo you've ever seen before, kinda fun... here.

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All material © 2009-2026 by Loree L Bohl. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

Friday, May 8, 2026

Palms growing in Spokane; visiting Michael's garden

The second garden I visited during my recent trip to Spokane belongs to Michael Loundagin. Michael lives about 8 blocks from the house I owned in Spokane, we could have been gardening neighbors! It's a fun thing to say, but I was really feeling the pull to my former neighborhood, my friends, and even a pretty kick-ass (if rather demanding and kinda screwed up) job I had during that part of my life. All the emotions were washing over me, lots of memories and a few "what if'?" thoughts. So that's the background, this garden visit though, it was pretty fantastic...

Pulling up in front of Michael's home I was awe-struck by this huge patch of bamboo. Bamboo is not at all common in Spokane and I'd say Michael probably has one of the only front yard groves in town. Maybe the only one...

I originally "met" Michael on a PNW plant people page on Facebook. He'd posted a photo of his tall Trachycarpus fortunei and I was shocked. A palm growing in Spokane? 

Back in the day I thought of Spokane as Zone 5, but it's no longer getting that cold. Now it's a solid Zone 6, or even Zone 7 in some winters (like my garden is a 9 sometimes). Still, even with warming temperatures Trachycarpus fortunei are not something you see growing there, averages are just that. All it takes is one cold winter and ZAP! That's the end of your palm tree.

Michael's palm (which he guesses is over 25 years old, purchased from Flower World in Snohomish, WA) is growing in a large pot. He has perfected a strategy for winter protection: first he lays it on its side to wrap incandescent mini lights around the pot to keep the roots warm, these lights stay in place all winter. Then he wraps the same type of lights around the trunk and up into the crown.
winter protection photo provided by Michael Loundagin
 
After that he ties the leaves up, and wraps them with burlap. 
winter protection photo provided by Michael Loundagin
 
More lights go around the outside of the burlap, then aluminized bubble wrap around the trunk. Finally, a heavy plastic cover goes over the top and is secured to the trunk.
winter protection photo provided by Michael Loundagin

Then he stands the tree back up, which sounds like a job in itself (the tree grows in a protected area between his house and garage, so hopefully wind isn't an issue). This series of photos dates to February of 2025. Winter '25-'26 was mild enough he didn't have to bring out the protection materials.
winter protection photo provided by Michael Loundagin

Of course as any palm-lover knows, one is never enough. This is Michael's Trachycarpus fortunei 'Nainital', isn't it a beauty!? It gets the same winter protection when needed.

And a third, not yet planted, Trachycarpus fortunei 'Tesan'. Both 'Nainital' and 'Tesan' are said to be very cold hardy choices. 

As you'll see throughout this post Michael is not afraid to push the boundaries of what's considered cold hardy, and best of all he's got a strong voice in the local Hort community (working at Ritter's Garden & Gift) where he can share his knowledge with others who want to grow the unexpected.

This Rhododendron was purchased as 'Else Frye' (noted for its fragrance), but Michael has doubts that's what it actually is, saying the bloom should have more of a pink blush.

Initially I was aiming my camera at the table full of yet-to-be-planted treasures, but I realized if I panned up slightly I could also get the indoor plants in the shot. We'll take a look at some of those at the end of this post.

Another plant I didn't expect to see in Spokane, Schefflera delavayi...

A better visitor would have tracked the many daphne blooming throughout the garden, there were several. I admit to liking them, but not LOVING them. So this is the only one I photographed, let the record show there were more.

Camellia, and on the left, just out of frame a magnolia.

So many things I wish I would have asked about, I know that's a Mahonia x media 'Marvel' on the far left, there's a daphne, a couple aucuba, and is that a fatsia at the back? So many interesting foliage shapes...

Magnolia grandiflora 'Bracken's Brown Beauty', planted as a 5-gallon specimen some 20-ish years ago. It lives on despite cold, ice and squirrels.

As we walked and talked Michael shared a bit of wisteria advice. I thought it was going to be something about making sure your arbor could withstand the weight of the heavy vine, but no. Word to the wise, plant your wisteria on the north side of the arbor, since it wants to grow south, towards the sun. Michel built this handsome arbor himself, and yes, the wisteria is growing on the south (left) side...

Looking down to see Euphorbia amygdaloides subsp. robbiae and Adiantum venustum was a flashback to a combination from my Portland garden. Then Michael reminded me I wasn't in Portland by sharing that Adiantum venustum was once thought not to be hardy to Spokane winter temperatures. Now it's labeled as Zone 4 (brrr!).


Lathyrus vernus, a non-climbing perennial sweet pea.

Mahonia bealei

This Choisya x 'Aztec Pearl' dates back to at least 2011. Michael says; "I planted it even though I knew it had no chance of surviving, but I guess it didn't know that -9F was supposed to kill it. Some plants are illiterate, I guess."

Ginger, Asarum caudatum I believe.

I knew Citrus trifoliata was hardy in places with real winters, but seeing it growing here definitely drove that point home.

Michael says his form is fragrant as well, I wish my plant was.

Prunus laurocerasus  'Otto Luyken'

Plantings of Prunus laurocerasus in different places around the garden prove this one is variable in hardiness from plant to plant. The western most plant has been killed nearly to the ground twice over the 30 years since Michael planted it, while he says its "fraternal twin" to the east has been unfazed.

There were a couple nice aucuba in the front garden but I only managed a photo of the cool new growth on this one...

We're about to head inside the house now and check out a few of the cool plants growing there, but I need to share one last outside photo, the plant stash in the driveway. I thought it rather well presented, since I've seen a few plant stash hoards still entirely in nursery pots and with more dead plants than live ones.

Okay, inside now and we're staring into a terrarium in the kitchen. So many interesting things in there...


Begonia some somebody. Of course Michael told me the name, but I promptly forgot it. As I did many names in this post, but he kindly shared info with me all over again when I asked via email.

A name I do remember though, Emily Freebird and her online site In Search of Small Things. There were several plants in his collection that Michael purchased from Emily, this Teratophyllum rotundifolium being one of them. 

I love it when my worlds connect. Here I was in Spokane and the person whose garden I was visiting bought plants from a Portland seller who's a friend of mine (here's a post on her old growing set up, and here's one from when I visited her new garden). Thank you so much Michael for letting me visit your garden and for the plants/cuttings you gave me, I hope you'll come visit my garden the next time you're in Portland.

The Bit at the End
I wanted to remind locals that the Dirty Diggers Plant Sale is tomorrow from 11-3pm at 334 N Baldwin St, Portland, OR 97217. Lots of fabulous plants and garden things on offer, come check it out!

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To receive alerts of new danger garden posts by email, subscribe here. Please note: these are sent from a third party, their annoying ads are beyond my control. 

All material © 2009-2026 by Loree L Bohl. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.