Showing posts with label Angie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Angie. Show all posts

Friday, May 16, 2014

My Friend Angie's Garden

DSCN0924
Garden tours are hot and heavy for me this time of the year and I love to share them with you all so here is one of my favorite gardener's garden--Angie. Many of you know Angie as she is a kind spirit with a gentle, loving, and giving heart and has an awesome Facebook page. She is a very special friend who cheers me when I am down and supports me no matter what. Her kindness during rough times for me will never be forgotten. I have many friends and I am very fortunate to have them as no matter how many beautiful flowers I have, none can really be personal and cheer me the way my friends can--so thank you to Angie and all my friends who choose to be kind and share a word of encouragement or two.
DSCN0921
Angie is not, I repeat, not a plant collector. She is by far a designer with an eye toward beauty, practicality, endurance. She plants plants that do well and look good. Her garden always has something in bloom and when one perennial is done, there is another waiting in the wings to take its place. That being said it would appear that Angie is a plant collector because when she finds a plant she likes she has a lot of them. Irises are a favorite for Angie but simply because of their beauty, charm, and their ability to look good (with some maintenance) even when out of bloom.
DSCN0918
This time of the year irises shine in Angie's garden.
DSCN0917
Japanese peonies (single) are another favorite of Angie's. She likes them because they do not droop like the heavy double peonies favored by so many (including me). How smart is that? For sentimental reasons I will always gravitate to the double peonies but I do have a lot of these Japanese peonies and like them too. Check out how Angie has effectively used the hundreds she has in her garden. Massing is the name of the game in Angie's garden. You all do know to design a good garden you should mass the plants right? Onesies and twosies just don't work. Always try to plant in groups of three, fives, sevens, etc. Using one of something should be reserved for a specimen plant. These might include things like trees, shrubs, a prime perennial like baptisia, or even a peony--if there is a good structure of garden flowers around the specimen to highlight the oneness of it all.
DSCN0912
Irises in Angie's garden are used to great advantage in their own bed. Irises need excellent drainage and need space. Planting irises in a bed all of their own makes sense and allows for ease of maintenance as all plants have the same requirements.
DSCN0908
Here Angie under planted an evergreen spruce with her Japanese peonies.
DSCN0907
The backyard of Angie's house is nearly all garden. She uses paths, art, and plants to great advantage to create beauty, functionality and seasonal delights.
DSCN0903
Siberian irises are quite a focal point in Angie's garden.
DSCN0901
A concrete path through the garden.
DSCN0900
More peonies backed by bonsai evergreens. 
DSCN0899
A true red peony--'Red Charm'. Love it!
DSCN0896
Angie herself. The sweetest flower in her garden.
DSCN0893
Views of the front perennial beds. How lucky are these neighbors to have such a good gardener next door to them?
DSCN0892
Japanese peony.
DSCN0891
Phlox, 'Rolly's Favorite' silene, and a path in the garden.
DSCN0889

More phlox and Japanese peonies....

in Angie's Garden....


Words and Photos Property of In the Garden Blog Team, In the Garden

Friday, April 27, 2012

Angie's Garden Part II

DSCN2086 DSCN2085 DSCN2083 DSCN2082 DSCN2076-1 DSCN2074 DSCN2068-1 DSCN2061 DSCN2054-1 DSCN2053-1 DSCN2040-1 DSCN2030-1 DSCN2029-1 DSCN2025 DSCN2022-1 DSCN2021-1 DSCN2019-1 DSCN2018-1
You all really don't need words from me about this beautifully designed garden....

in the garden.....






Words and Photos Property of In the Garden Blog Team, In the Garden

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Angie's Garden Part I

DSC_1004
 (Phil's Picture)

Garden tour season is upon us and is in full swing starting with Ray's Pond and Gardens two weeks ago. Now we shall move on to a designer's  garden here in Clarksville. This special garden belongs to none other than Angie, a wonderful gardening friend and splendid (the best I've seen) designer of gardens. I posted about Angie's garden last year but like all gardens they change on a daily basis. Here are some pictures of her garden from this year.
2 gardens 035
 (Nancy's Picture)

Angie lives on a quiet cul-de-sac in Clarksville and for all of my local readers you are in for a treat as Angie's Garden will be on this year's Montgomery County Master Gardener's tour. My garden will also be featured but I tell you I am humbled when I visit Angie's garden. Angie is a Gardener Extraordinaire (my term for very very dedicated and smart gardeners) who is not really a plant collector like most gardeners (myself included). What Angie is instead is a designer though she is very modest about her talents. She has taught me quite a few things and I'll share at least one in this post. I show Angie's home because it is worth noting that when you pull into this cul-de-sac you will immediately know a special gardener lives in this home. This garden is a high maintenance garden and Angie does not disappoint. I think she spends a lot of hours in her garden yet she still manages to keep a beautiful home, spend time taking care of her husband and dog, and tends to other necessities of life all in a seemingly effortless manner.
DSCN1787
One thing I like about the gardens (this is but a small part and is in the front yard) is that the garden is functional and easily navigated. Concrete paths Angie's husband poured for her are splendid additions to the garden. Here we can see the bones of the garden. Look past the phlox and peony blooms and you'll note a great deal of foliage. Notably the poppy foliage is standing tall and proud. A trained eye will find the next great perennial already preparing for its big day in the limelight. You see, Angie gardens with a limited palette but plans her garden in such a way that all of the plants are massed and there is a clearly defined pattern in the gardens. Angie's garden is somewhat formal and is on a grand scale. Plants that Angie uses a great deal of are: roses, peonies, coreopsis, poppies, rudbeckia, zinnias, irises, daylilies, mums, phlox, columbine, Japanese anemones, lilies, and violas. I am sure there are many more but the blooms and foliage of these plants are what stood out to me on my recent visit to Angie's Garden.
DSCN1809
Of course I forgot to mention the amarylis and crinums in the above paragraph. The amount of groups of these two hardy bulbs in Angie's garden is mind boggling. They are all so beautiful. Be sure to look at last year's post for some more of the crinums.
DSCN1829
Irises are probably Angie's most ardent love. She has maybe two to four hundred cultivars and I am not talking the ordinary run of the mill irises either. These are mostly all mail order irises from specialty nurseries. Angie has all of her irises in a large area dedicated solely to irises. One trick she uses in her iris bed is to apply Treflan. Treflan is a pre-emergent herbicide that allows Angie to garden on the grand scale that she does in her iris bed. You simply weed the beds then apply Treflan in accordance with package directions and you can pretty much forget about weeds for several months. Angie uses Treflan only on her iris bed for several reasons but mainly because weeding out weeds amongst irises is nearly impossible. I find that if I get weeds in my irises I might as well dig up the clump and replant. There is another consideration when using a pre-emergent on irises that anyone who grows irises knows. Irises cannot stand to have their rhizomes buried under dirt or even mulch. The rhizomes need to bake in the sun and all of the weather elements and the rhizomes need room around them. This fact allows all sorts of free dirt for weeds so Treflan is a big help. I plan to try it on a few of my beds as soon as I can get to the Co-op. I'll use Treflan in beds that I do not normally garden in and in beds where mulch does not help with the weeds.
DSCN1845
More irises in the iris bed.
DSCN1799
When I visited Angie's garden last spring the Japanese peonies were done blooming but I could still tell what they were and I thought wowser! I need to come and see them in bloom. Well, here they are.
DSC_0963
(Phil's Picture)
More of the irises with the Knockout roses beginning to bloom. Boxwoods and junipers are a big part of Angie's garden. She always has something interesting going on in her splendid garden. I tell you I am excited she is on the Master Gardener Garden tour so that everyone else can see this garden in person too! Tickets will be going on sale soon so be sure to look for them. I'll have some available as well. The date is June 2nd so mark your calendars. 
DSC_0966
(Phil's Picture)

The irises are amazing. I never knew there could be so many different kinds. I must also note this important fact-Angie does not breed irises. She is unlike other iris gardeners in the local area in that she simply enjoys the irises and her garden is a private garden-never before opened up to the public. However, Angie was most generous in allowing my garden club to have a private tour last week. All who toured the garden were wowed. Garden clubs can be most fun especially if you are into gardening!
2 gardens 039
(Phil's Picture)
I think I like this picture of all of the ones of the irises because it shows the scale so well of the iris bed.
DSC_0964
Or maybe this one shows the scale of all of the irises. I suspect there are waaay more than two hundred cultivars located here. Some of these cultivars have found their way home to my own little garden. I feel very lucky to be gifted with some irises from this splendid garden and from Angie herself!
2 gardens 058
 (Phil's Picture)
Angie does not like her picture being taken but you all must know the gardener as well as the garden so I am taking liberties here by posting Angie's picture. I'll beg her forgiveness later:) This young lady is just as beautiful as her garden!


in the garden....

Come back Friday for a Part II of Angie's garden. I hope to get caught up and post some of the 70 pictures I took this past weekend when I visited her home. 

Words and Photos Property of In the Garden Blog Team, In the Garden