Showing posts with label Design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Design. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Lycoris Squamigera and Narcissus: What is the Difference?


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As I have been moving my garden I am learning a great deal about mature plants and their reaction to being disturbed. I have had a great deal of experience with moving plants and marvel at just how well plants adapt both above ground and below ground. The way I move my garden is to dig like plants. Recently my dig saw me digging up all of my Lycoris squamigera, aka Pink or Naked Ladies, or Resurrection Lilies. I dug over 150 and the job was ever so rewarding. Especially when you look to buy these expensive bulbs online and find they start at the very pricey amount of $5 per bulb! That means I dug about $800 worth of bulbs. I think these will become part of stock when I open a nursery on my land--one day. 

Coincidentally I am also digging daffodils (Narcissus species) because these bulbs emerge the same time as the Lycoris bulbs. The foliage of daffodils and Pink lady bulbs not only emerges at about the same time (Pink lady bulbs comes up a wee bit later than daffodil foliage) but the foliage of the two kinds of bulbs is very similar. If you are not attuned to the difference you might be quick to think that Pink Lady foliage is daffodil foliage. You will be sorely disappointed when that foliage produces no blooms in the spring time. Let me outline the differences of the two bulbs I observed in my garden.
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Pink Lady foliage is rounded and generally larger than daffodil foliage. You can clearly see this when looking at the tips of the foliage of the Pink Lady bulb (on the left) and the 'Ice Follies' daffodil (on the right. I purposely chose a large flowering daffodil for comparison purposes to the Pink Lady foliage. Obviously daffodil foliage is varied but generally all daffodil bulbs produce a pointed leaf whereas the Pink Lady foliage will be rounded to oblong on the end of the leaf.
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Another huge difference is the size of the bulbs. Pink Lady bulbs can get quite large when mature. I dug a wide variety of sizes of Pink Lady bulbs. They ranged in size from a diameter of six inches to a diameter of 1/2 inch. The smaller bulbs were generally offsets or bulbs that had not been in place for more than one or two years. You can kind of determine if a bulb is a daffodil or Pink Lady simply looking at the size, but if in doubt there is one very telling clue that can help you decide the difference. You can see it in the above and below pictures.
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The major difference is that the Pink Lady bulbs will simultaneously put out multiple leaf stalks whereas the daffodil bulbs will put out only one leaf stalk per bulb. The bulb on the right looks like it has multiple leaf stalks but there are actually two bulbs there that are attached. The Pink Lady bulb in the center has many leaf stalks but only one bulb. Additionally, the leaves that emerge from the Pink Lady bulbs are all fairly uniform in size, color, and texture whereas daffodil foliage may emerge at different times and be different lengths.
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Another key difference in the bulbs is the size of the roots. The Pink Lady bulbs have larger and fatter roots. These roots can extend to 4" or more. The daffodils have roots that are finer. Sometimes when daffodils grow abundantly and get crowded the bulbs can develop contractile roots. These contractile roots look similar to the Pink lady roots in that they are large, but these roots will also be joined by regular fine roots so they are not to be confused with the Pink Lady roots. The contractile roots are to pull the bulb down deeper in to the soil. I have found this phenomena quite frequently in my efforts to move my garden but simply haven't taken a picture yet. 

A little note on designing with Lycoris squamigera bulbs. In days past it seemed the likely spot for these bulbs was the lawn. Even today I see large groups growing in the lawn. I think perhaps this was because the foliage would die down by the time the lawn needed to be mowed therefore not causing problems in the lawn. Plus, since the foliage died down if you planted these bulbs in a garden you would therefore have a blank spot unless you over planted the bulb with another plant. You have to chose carefully if you decide to over plant these bulbs. I think the lawn is about the worst place for these bulbs because inevitably the person mowing the lawn will not be paying attention in early August when the flower scapes emerge. And guess what will happen? Your flowers will be mowed down and you will never get to enjoy the beautiful and fragrant flowers. Like all flowers I plant in my garden I tend to mass my flowers. These bulbs look great in natural settings in open shade or full sun-massed in groups of five or more. Be sure to space the bulbs at least 6"-8" apart. I like to plant mine where I can enjoy their summer show but where they will not interfere with the garden looks at other times of the year. I have transplanted about 100 of these beautiful bulbs to a 14' diameter round garden on my farm that surrounds a 'Calloway' crabapple. I planted a double row of them in the outer two feet of the circle. The flowers will make a spectacular edging when they bloom later this summer. I plan to plant mouse eared coreopsis over my bulbs or I can easily plant annuals over the bulbs this spring. A favorite combination of mine is to plant sprigs of 'Diamond Frost' euphorbia over these bulbs. 'Diamond Frost' is an awesome annual in our area and looks fabulous with these Pink Lady blooms during the summer. In my case I am leaning toward the mouse eared coreopsis because I am trying to reduce maintenance in the garden and planting annuals each year can be labor intensive. I have read online that you can over plant Lycoris bulbs with things like vinca or ivy. I would never ever recommend this because those two vines will form such a solid mass that the Lycoris will have a hard time popping through the foliage, not to mention both of these vines tend to take over. They are both no nos in my garden and garden designs. Other perennials I think you could successfully over plant Lycoris bulbs with include: perennial geraniums (Geranium species), coreopsis (lower growing types), and perhaps echinacea....

in the garden....
Words and Photos Property of In the Garden Blog Team, In the Garden

Friday, September 28, 2012

Nice Plant Combinations for Late Summer/Early Fall Gardens

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Let's talk late summer combinations and garden design. Here are a few I found in my garden you might like.

'Sunny' Knockout Roses and Black and Blue Salvia (Salvia guaranitica)

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Rudbeckia hirta and Salvia
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Hostas, Japanese Roof Irises (Iris tectorum), Bouncing Bets (Saponaria officinalis) and Nicotiana sylvestis
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Phlox pilosa, Lambs Ear, and Daylilies
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Sedum, Iris, and Mums
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Santolina and Sedum
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Camelia sasanqua and Japanese Holly
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Gardenia, Artemesia 'Powis Castle', and Creeping Juniper
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Amsonia, Daylily, and Catmint
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Goldenrod and River Oats
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'Guacamole' hosta and Creeping Jenny
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Hydrangeas, Coneflowers, Ornamental Grass 'Adagio', and Sedum
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Zinnia and 'Diamond Frost' Euphorbia
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Ruellia and Celosia
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Pink Double Knockout Rose and Variegated Miscanthus


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Angelonia and sedum.

What are some of your favorite late summer/early fall plant combinations?

in the garden....




Words and Photos Property of In the Garden Blog Team,

In the Garden



Friday, August 3, 2012

My Friend Geri


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Have you gone through life with few or no real friends but plenty of acquaintances? Then all of sudden that one special friend comes along and makes you very happy. You know the kind, the kind you talk with about anything, the kind that will not judge you, the kind that can sympathize, and even give you an alternative opinion when required? That one friend can change a person's perspective so totally that it is a friendship you will treasure no matter what happens. Well, for me my friend Geri was that person and now the unthinkable has happened; she has moved away.
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When I talk of many acquaintances and not so many friends that was not really the whole truth. Throughout my Army career I made a few friends along the way. Friends I even now keep in touch with and friends with whom I have many good memories. Those friends were most special but for me while traveling and working in the Army those friendships were a bit fleeting in that you kind of knew you might not be close friends forever. Being a mobile person moving on was just kind of a fact of life. My friends knew it and so did I. When I retired from the Army I kind of floated. I mean let's face it, most really good friends are made in childhood or made in the workplace or through other social circles. I never really had any of this being a mobile person. Temporary was the name of the game when working in the Army. So it was very special when I retired here to Tennessee for me to make a good friend, that friend being Geri.
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Now you all know as do I that good friends don't just drop out of the sky. They don't come knocking on your door (not usually anyhow but sometimes) and sometimes someone who seems a perfect person might not be such a good friend. Friends are like gardens, they are unique to the person. Meeting friends for me was difficult because I was a 'new' person in countryville Tennessee where everyone seems to know everyone else. And if my neighbors don't know everyone else than those 'others' were military or just passing through and not really worth the time of getting to know. Such is the life in my part of my town. It is not that I am not social or anything. I am probably the friendliest person you will meet. I'm always happy to talk to everyone and to share. But to just walk up to a group or get involved is not really my thing. There was and is a saving grace for me though-I am passionate about gardening. The logical thing to do to meet others and to get involved was to garden and to go to garden related events. When Sandy asked me to join her garden club (Beachaven Garden Club) whole circles of friends opened up to me. Oh the possibilities! Friends just kind of complete you and make you happy and help you to feel good. I was so happy to have some friends who all liked to garden too! One day while at a garden related function one of my friends from Beachaven and I were talking. I must say Faye is much more social than I and she struck up a conversation with a nice short lady about my age. That lady was also new in town and was very curious about how to landscape an above ground pool. She just happened to have had one installed and wanted to know how to make it look pretty. She was from Michigan and hated the heat in Tennessee but was willing to put down roots for a while. Her name was Geri and we hit it off.
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It wasn't until a few months later that she called me out of the blue and said she had met me at the garden function, and she wondered if I would be interested in visiting her home to help her to figure out her garden. It seems the plants that do well in Michigan don't always do well here. People who are mobile and move from one zone to another have a great deal of difficulty in adjusting to the changes and Geri was a person in a state of 'Help'! She was also a person who did not sit on her laurels. She got involved in gardening functions, even joined the Beachaven Garden club and she got her hands dirty and made over her spot of paradise into a functional garden she and her daughter could enjoy.
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After that first visit we became incredibly awesomely good friends. We were so compatible you would not believe it. Where she was quiet and soft spoken I was loud and blunt. Where I was computer savvy she hated computers with a passion (I do hope she visits this post though). Where I spent money she was thrifty. Where she was a Christian I was a bad girl and the list goes on. Through it all she and I connected and always, always felt comfortable together. When she would call me (she certainly didn't do Facebook you know) we could talk for hours about anything and everything. Talking to someone on the phone is something I generally do not like to do so you know our relationship just had to be good for us to talk the way we did. We did for one another selflessly and always, always cared about what the other was doing. Our children are the same age (her daughter is two months older than Jimmy), Geri is one of four girls (like me), Geri is a twin and I have twin daughters, and she shared all my trials and tribulations with me as I did with her. We talked family, school, jobs (we even worked together at Home Depot stocking plants of all things), and we traveled to so many garden functions together that it seems unreal now when I will go to my favorite garden events without her.
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About two months ago Geri told me she was putting her house on the market and moving back to Michigan. I was and still am heartbroken. Even now I tear up thinking about her being gone and I am not normally an emotional person but I miss her. We have grown quite close over the last six years and she was my first real friend outside of the military life. We will still talk and we will still be friends and I suspect I'll go and visit her in her new home in Michigan one day but for now I am sad she is gone. Most of the problem aside from the fact that we were such good friends is the fact I did not think my friends would move away once I retired and settled down. Sometimes we just take things for granted and the thought of any of my friends moving away just kind of never occurred to me. The fact she did move away makes a sad time in my life going back to my time in the military and throughout my life when I would move and be transient. I am happy for her and her daughter and wish them the best in Michigan and I will be okay.


I went over and helped Geri and Clare load up their POD prior to closing. This is when I took all of the above pictures of her home. The stone pathway you see by the pool is stone Geri traveled all the way to Russellville to purchase. She hand loaded those stones in the back of her Pontiac multi purpose vehicle, and hauled them back to her house where she meticulously laid each stone. It took her years but she was ever so proud of the finally completed patio and path. The arbor in the corner is set on bowling ball stones. She and I made countless trips to Hopkinsville to purchase these stones for .10 each. They too were loaded into our cars and transported home. We shared plants, we shared crafts, we shared a passion for gardening and we two are very strong do it yourselfers. She grew her wild garden from nothing by using unique things in unique ways. She reveled in all the wildlife that visited her garden but would absolutely refuse to feed the birds or hummingbirds, and don't even think about a birdbath feature. She said the animals can fend for themselves. She shared her wonderful cherries with me and the wildlife. One day I was coming home from a client's house and was in a hurry. I had said I would stop by but was running late and forgot all about stopping. She called me at the opportune time just prior to me passing her house and asked if I was still coming over. She said she had picked me a huge bowl of cherries-in the heat and mosquitoes she did this for me. She was one of a kind (just looking at her bottle tree will tell you what kind of unique person she is and was-the bottle tree was left behind for the new owner and he hasn't changed a thing) and I had so much happiness being her friend....


in the garden....


Here are more posts I have done that involve Geri. It seems when I look back she has been a part of many milestones in my life while here in Tennessee. Geri fostered dogs, helped me with my animals, but to tell you the truth she did not really like animals. There is so much more I can say but will leave it as is for now.

Garden Art from Bowling balls-a very popular post.
Tennessee Bloggers-Geri traveled to Nashville with me to meet other Tennessee bloggers a few years ago.
Nashville Lawn and Garden Show-each year since Geri and I met we always went to this show together. One year there was a tornado warning and our kids were sent home from school early. Yikes!
Perennial Plant Society-Geri and I alternated driving to Nashville each month to attend the PPSMT's great programs each month.
Irises from the Iris Society sale in Nashville-on the cheap.
Pine needles-we raked pine needles on Fort Campbell. I thought she was raking them for her garden but she gave all the ones she raked to me!
Garden tour-she helped out at my house.

There are at least 30+ posts where I have mentioned Geri. Some of the memories I had forgotten until I was preparing this post. It is so nice to have history with friends. History I can look back on as well as remember thanks to this blog. Thanks for coming along while I tearfully say goodbye to my beautiful and wonderful friend....

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in the garden....



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

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Landscape Like the Biltmore Professionals


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My recent visit to Biltmore showed me many great landscape and garden design tricks. I thought I'd share some examples of the principles of landscape and garden design with you all today in the form of pictures of the wonderful Biltmore Gardens. Let's begin shall we?


1. Use groundcover plants or low growing plants at the front of the border for interest. When looking at a garden it is best to tier the plants with the tallest in the back descending to low growers in the front. Low growers have the added benefit of being able to soften the lines of the garden and prevent weed growth if planted thickly.
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2. Mix shrubs with perennials. This is known as a mixed border. Using shrubs ensures there is something interesting to look at all year.
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3. Use different bloom and leaf forms for contrast.
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4. Use different colors for that wow factor. Do you notice how the white plant appears even more white when surrounded by dark plants? I suspect the dark plant (anemones) are probably white. When they bloom I bet they are going to be white which will work pretty well with the white grass.
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5. Use different forms of plant growth such as vertical (the iris), mounding (lamb's ears), groundcover (sedum), cascading (miscanthus), and so on. Other growth forms include: vase shaped, roundy, frilly, upright, trailing, etc.
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6. Use architectural plants such as the yuccas shown above. Architectural plants remain a major presence year round and are usually quite substantial.
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7. Layer your plants by using trees, shrubs, vines, perennials, annuals, and bulbs. Here we see the attractive bark of a crepe myrtle with a climbing hydrangea in the back on the wall, at the foot of the vine grow ferns and Solomon's seal.
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8. Have neat edgings and paths easily traversed.
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9. Design paths where the destination is a secret. The fun is in the journey.
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10. Use focal points to draw the eye. Where does eye go to immediately when looking at the above picture?
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11. Don't forget age in a garden. We can clearly see the age in the above tree and nothing makes you feel more at home than well worn and loved things such as this gnarled and giant tree trunk. It looks like a good spot to lay down for a nap huh?
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12. Be sure to include shade in your landscape. No matter how pretty sunny gardens are people always appreciate shade.
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13. Be sure to leave a place to sit and use hardscaping to complement the gardens. 


For more landscaping ideas for your backyard check out Reader's Digest backyard ideas....


in the garden....

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

Friday, April 27, 2012

Angie's Garden Part II

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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