Quantcast
Channel: Prairiebreak
Viewing all 805 articles
Browse latest View live

The Fritz extravaganza (not your ordinary garden...)

$
0
0

 In the prairie between Johannesburg and Heidelberg (Gauteng, South Africa--not the one in Germany or West Cape for that matter) there is a garden I was lucky enough to visit a few weeks ago. The large sign on the road gave no hint of what we were about to see*...

(*warning: there are 146 pictures in this post. Not for the faint of heart).
Road to the Fritz garden...
 The bus (and my 17 companions) wouldn't fit down the lane leading to the garden..so we walked half a kilometer or so.

A sentinel palm tree greeted us on one side of the driveway...

A bed of dahlias on the other...

Greenhouse and lathouse
 I naively assumed this was most of the garden--the driveway, the lath and a greenhouse beyond. That's all you can see at first.

Lots of interesting plants around the front yard...

Clerodendrum bungei looking very robust along one side

A fine blend of annuals, perennials and succulents along the greenhouse...
 At this point I'd thought I'd seen the garden, and was delighted--I knew Georg Fritz was a keep succulent lover and thought the bulk of his interest was under glass (or plastic in this case)--well worth visiting for sure!
Marietjie Durand Fritz and Georg Fritz
 The owners agreed to my taking a picture, photobombed by one of their delightful dogs...

One of many containers....
 I noticed a cluster of containers by the door....

Mammillaria gracilis v. fragilis
 You don't often see such a vigorous and happy Mammillaria gracilis v. fragilis growing outdoors!

I love the combination of textures here...

More interesting perennials and the first cycad...

Another intriguing border full of combinations

More friendly dogs--I don't know why great gardens seem to have so many dogs!

Inside the greenhouse
 The collections in the greenhouse were beautifully grown--and very clean.

Lots of aloes...

A Scadoxus multiflorus just going over below the benches


A LOT of Asclepiads and lithops--two of Org's (short for Georg's) favorites...


And plenty of cacti--especially Astrophytum which are favorites of mine as well...


A special aloe, whose name I forgot!

That aloe was so important I took two pictures. Help!

Aloe albiflora
 A thrill to see this unusual white aloe from Madagascar...
Khadia beswickii
Before I'd ever dreamed I'd meet him,  I'd read Georg's articles in Aloe about the local Khadia that is Red listed. And here it is in BLOOM in his greenhouse! Woo hoo...

Frithia humilis
 Another local specialty, in bloom as well. Next time I come hereabouts, I must see these in their habitat (not terribly far away).

Frithia pulchra
And of course, there had to be at least one pot of the better known baby toes! Another local specialty restricted to less than five km square in its habitat (albeit over a fairly long range of the Magliesberg)...

Lithops lesliei

We'd just seen this Lithops growing wild barely a kilometer away: one of the largest colonies had been destroyed, and Georg had salvaged a few...the one we saw is in the shadow of development.

More gems in every direction...here a Delosperma I was interested in...

And our beloved Astrophytums...(one of mine greeted me with flowers when I got home)

A few non succulents had snuck in...we're not purists!

Begonias and peperomias in the shade...

And there have to be a few Plectranthus and Streptocarpus--two magnificent South African genera!

And of course some new ones coming on from seed

Gardeners gravitate to seeds...

Another view of Scadoxus multiflorus from the other side of the greenhouse

Hollyhocks...
 When I step out, it's almost a relief to see something we grow well in Denver!

Where is everybody walking?



A moon gate implies there must be more beyond...
 
A genuine stone trough just next to that gate

A handsome cycad and a pool...
 We open up to a small courtyard with this handsome vignette...

And yes, MORE succulents on a stand by the door...

Including this handsome Chasmatophyllum musculinum...

Gardeners' naughty sense of humor always shows up somewhere...

More pots...

A touch of neoclassicism....

And another walkway leading further on...

Impatiens x walleriana
 Now that downy mildew has made these endangered garden plants in Denver, what a delight to the eyes to see them here in yet another courtyard!

Another cluster of pots

Another pathway edged with groundcovering Lamium....

And a side yard with a shady clearing of green grass...

Tree Euphorbia
 On the right hand side I look up to see an enormous arboreal euphorbia that Georg must have put in a long time ago...

Various shots of the large rock garden featuring succulents that borders Org's farm beyond the fence (the farm provides income for his garden and travels)...




A wonderful local Erythrina we saw in nature a few days later in the Lowveld.








One of Org's many favorite stapeliads--most are grown under glass, but a few monsters are perfectly hardy like this one.

The Garden was popular with my tour participants...



A delightfully simple stone sculpture...this garden operates on many levels in many media...


And yet another path leading further along!


Wonderful mix of media for the bridge...


I love this wonderful Mexican fleabane...which is marginally hardy in Denver as well.

Luscious cycads.


A border featuring Southwestern salvias! Plucked my patriotic heartstrings!


Variegated mugwort in another border (Artemisia vulgaris'Variegata') Fortunately not as weedy as its plain cousin!


More beds of annuals...


Yet another clearing...



More dramatic cycads.


A secret garden along the house...


And they're breeding rare tortoises!


A succulent border with some raised beds...


A wall with sculpture--we are probably getting onto his son's property--another extravagant garden. I am not sure I can annotate each picture. There was simply too much!





A treehouse!





Some gingers!




The dog is not an ornament! What a wonderful patio full of succulent pots and succulents in the ground!








I loved this inset "framed"Opuntia...

These gardens never end!





We are about to come to the very last precinct--a series of lath and other houses with screening to protect from hailstorms: this is Org's son's Bonsailand: dozens of dazzling bonsai, many of them South African natives I'd never seen bonsaied before...















This is a giant silver Cabbage Tree (Cussonia paniculata) growing above the Bonsai area--it had been there for some time planted by Org....This blew my mind.











A large proportion of the troops were gathered in one spot: but you'll notice relatively few in other pictures; the garden is so vast people were scattered and not in the shots I took by and large!


Don't you love the sculpture tucked everywhere?





Another pot with Chasmatophyllum musculinum in a wonderful trailing form...








Bonsaied cycads--how cool is that?



Time to go...we head back through  the gardens we came in through...they look altogether different now..





A large coral tree I hadn't noticed on the way in...


And we tread our way back to the bus. Did I mention that this visit was spontaneous? Org had hosted us that day showing us around the fantastic Suikerbosrand Nature Reserve that wraps around Heidelberg and covers an enormous stretch of veldt towards the Witwatersrand to the north and west.

I asked if we could visit his home garden, not having a clue that it was so vast and splendid: needless to say, they had no time to "primp" or prepare--not that you could tell. Here is a garden and gardeners worthy of their exquisite native land. South Africa rules!


Sani Pass to Howick: the Little Berg

$
0
0



Cyperus obtusiflorus v. flavissimus
This may be my all time favorite sedge: quite common all over the foothills of the Drakensberg (the "Little Berg" it was one of the highlights of a thwarted attempt to get up Sani Pass (sigh). We did nevertheless see some good stuff before heading down to Howick (the last part of this Blog)...Be warned: Sani Pass is closed this season, and the road requires four wheel drive. Compare this sedge with the much bronzier one I photographed at Drakensberg Gardens and posted a few weeks ago: wait till you see the monster we found at Platberg (to be posted in a week or so)...

Erica cerinthoides
I've seen this before (there were miles of it at Drakensberg Gardens) but here it was still blooming. This heather is widespread in South Africa: it can be a brilliant scarlet and make a shrub several feet tall. This higher altitude form, however, could be cold hardy in much of the USA..




Hypoxis sp. (close to hemerocallidea)
Hard to believe we share this genus--albeit the South African ones are wildly variable!

Rhus sp.
Sumac grow everywhere it seems: this species is uncannily similar to our North American R. aromatica or R. trilobata..although our's have more orangy-red berries. These have a similar lemonade taste.

A locust
The South African locusts are amazing.

Erica caffrorum
Compare with trhe husky plant at Drakensberg Gardens, I posted a few weeks ago...


Bracken
I have not looked up to see if the South African bracken is a different species from our's: sure looks the same! I know it's regarded as a horrible weed in many climates, but I have a warm spot in my heart for this rangy fern: it grows thickly on Rabbit Ear's Pass in Routt county (near where I was born) and there are thick colonies on Flagstaff mountain near where I grew up. And it's found near both my parents' villages in Greece--I guess you could say it grows everywhere so it's not accident it's near so many places I love, not least of which is South Africa!

Themeda triandra

A meadow full of Themeda: we'll be seeing some lovely specimens up close soon of this outstanding grasss.
Protea roupelliae in the foreground

I know this protea is found far beyond the Drakensberg, but it is so emblematic of the "Little Berg" I always associate it with these foothills. It was heartbreakingly lovely up against the green green hills dotted with giant tree ferns. These mountains are hard to beat!

Al Gerace
It was signal honor to have Al Gerace and his wonderful wife Enza on this trip. Al is not just a kingpin--he's the very heart of our regional green industry: the two of them were a daily delight to be around: love seeing him shake hands with the Protea here!

Protea roupelliae (again!)

Protea roupelliae (and yet again!)

You can't really blame me for dwelling on this a bit, can you?




Cliffortia sp.

I haven't had time to figure out which one, but this is South Africa's rather too modest representative of the Rosaceae. When you see the flowers in the next frame you'll see what I mean. They characterize Fynbos, which is why many consider the Drakensberg to be an "Afromontane" cousin to the West Cape's Fynbos (many shared genera like Protea, Erica, Passerina, Watsonia etc.) The sort of thing only biogeographers could salivate over....

I think it's a rather statuesque thing, with a habit rather like a conifer...


I can see you yawning from here, so I'll move on...

Senecio  oxyriifoliusie!) (thanks for the I.D., Ernie!)







Commelina africana
Although this yellow dayflower is found throughout South Africa, it doesn't seem to me as though it would be weedy: I would love to try it in the garden...

I think the flowers are very cute!
Whenever I see a Commelina, especially in South Africa, I think of Bob Faden, retired botanist at the Smithsonian, who was the authority on these: he and his wife are enthusiastic and accomplished gardeners as well!

Helichrysum vernum
It was a tad galling to see the luscious rosettes of this strawflower everywhere--looking for all the world like an Echeveria or Dudleya...and not a single flower or seedhead. It must either not have bloomed this year, or bloomed so early the stalks have disintegrated. The flowers on this are usually huge and bright rose red. If you click here you will see what it looks like in flower (in a blog I wish I had never had to write).

Themeda triandra
The first of my two shots: not terribly impressive. If you click on it it will become a little more impressive (and you can gloss through this blog without my droning on about things)...My dirty little secret.

Had to show two more P. rouppeliae...
Did I mention I love the Proteas? But who doesn't?

Karel De Toit
The water in the Drakensberg (knock on wood) is so pure and clean you can drink it. Really!

Now THIS is a Themeda
There are no end of wonderful grasses, and South Africa has more than her share. I would love to grow this wonderful blue leaved T. triandra!

Berkheya sp.
We saw no end of this sort of Berkheya all across the highveld, almost to Kruger (which is lowveld I know)...

A miserable picture of Cyphia, a vining Campanulad. Haven't quite figured out the focus on my dang camera!
Cussonia paniculata
I know the Cabbage Trees are everywhere in South Africa--especially in the High and Lowveld. But I never tire of them. Love this outside bonsai clinging to the cliff--with the green hills beyond. I am horribly homesick for this landscape already.

A wonderful mystery grass along the road (very pink)

Merxmuellera sp.
The other widespread clumping grass of the Little berg--these are such amazing meadows! I'll inflict this picture on you again below, this time featuring the puffy clouds...

How, prithee, am I supposed to pick between these two? They both epitomize the landscape there I've come to love--the wonderful "platberg" (table) mountains, the green green hills, the blowing grasses and the puffy clouds. Really, the Drakensberg are Heavenly.

Oxalis obliquifolia
Closely allied to the O. depressa often sold in America--this is ubuiquitous in this area (and everywhere else in the Drakensberg). I love it!

Hypoxis sp.
Here's one of the larger hypoxis--the genus is amazing here.
Oenothera sp.
There are a few weeds in Paradise: I saw several species of Evening Primrose, presumably from South America. This and the one below were growing together--very strange!

Oenothera sp.


Karel photographing a Rubus
Haven't yet figured out if this is one of the several invaders, or one of the few native species. Location suggests a weed.

Rubus sp.
The fruit was not quite ripe: guess how I know?

Hypericum sp.
We saw one big patch of St. Johnswort: very pretty...I haven't looked it up but I have me doots. It may be exotic.


Zantedeschia aethiopica
Fast forward forty or more miles--we're on the road to Howick (justr before the fog turned into pea soup consistency). I have been surprised this trip how much of the typical Calla Lilies occur everywhere in the Drakensberg, rather than their spotted (Z. albimaculata) summer rainfall species. There have to be some hardy clones of this...Large forests of Pinus patula cover the slopes in this area.
Agrimonia procera
Just noticed the Agrimony is growing with a Geranium I didn't photograph (I tried to document these for Robin Parer and Ernie Demarie--my two good Geraniaceae fan club buddies). This Agrimony looks exactly like A. eupatoria from Eurasia and several North American species--another of the links between our regions.

The pine woods are not so attractive when they're cut...
I know South Africa needs wood--and forests grow lustily here. But there were never ever forests in these regions: instead, there were fabulously rich grasslands, largely replaced by farms and forest. I find that very sad.
Kniphofia parviflora
We found several dozen showy plants in one tiny strip of grassland left in this area--including several orchids. Surrounded by the utterly impoverished pine plantations (impoverished in terms of biodiversity I hasten to add...) This is in the running for the ugliest poker...

Kniphofia parviflora
And here's an even uglier one!

Ledebouria sp.
I have seen some Drakensberg Ledebourias thriving in Sweden and Scotland, but I don't believe we have any of the higher altitude species yet in the U.S.A.: the flowers are generally not very showy, but the foliage is to die for. This is one of the best. Hate to think of how many of these were snuffed out by the pine woods.

Watsonia lepida
And some fine specimens of the pink Watsonia of the Drakensberg...

A delicate Lobelia
Closer view of the Lobelia above

Asclepias cultriformis
The Drakensberg boast no end of Asclepiads--in all colors and forms. It has to be a major center of the genus (and family). This is one of the loveliest...You can see much better pictures of this at this blog.

One of the hundreds of orchids in the Drakensberg environs
I forgot to key this out--will do so and come back and label it in a few days...

Kniphofia laxiflora
I believe I have the species right--I show many more of these at a locality a few dozen kilometers away further down this blog. A fabulous plant...

Phytollaca octandra
I was startled to see this pokeberry--which is pantropical and probably a weed here.

Phytolacca octandra
It may be a weed, but it looks as trim as a shrub from Monrovia!

Gladiolus ecklonis
This speckled green and black Glad is closely allied to G. dalenii, and has a wide range. I've seen it growing just a few inches tall on the alpine turf of Sentinel in years past (but not this year!)


I was countermanded and we drive perhaps an extra unnecessary sixty miles through pea soup fog almost not be able to see the famous falls at Howick. End of conversatrion...


I was able to get a picture of this rather charming way sign..

Dais cotinifolia
There are great recompenses in this life, however. We stayed at a really wonderful lodge that evening (eventually), and the next morning the fog had lifted and we saw a whole hillside covered with this wondeful cousin to Daphne. It was breathtaking! Dais grows all over the Drakensberg, but had finished there--for whatever reason, they were lingering still in the Midlands (I think they'd had more cool weather) so we were able to see one of my all time favorite trees. I've only seen this in bloom on one other occasion, my first trip when I came early enough to catch the last flowers.


Imagine Daphne cneorum on steroids--on stilts--growing thirty or even forty feet tall. WOW!

Kniphofia laxiflora
On one hillside we stopped to commune with this elegant poker: the next few pictures speak for themselves...
Kniphofia laxiflora

Kniphofia llaxiflora

Kniphofia laxiflora


And we returned to Howick falls the next morning--and fortunately the fog had lifted (mostly) so we could glimpse the falls and shop a few minutes (and get a decent cup of coffee! Our wonderful lodge the day before only had instant--I need to talk to them before I go back. Which I hope I shall)...

We have but one more day and two more hillsides, and I shall have completed the circuit of the Drakensberg for you. I have been blessed to visit mountains on five continents--but there is something about this range that is very near and dear to my heart. I hope you too are becoming smitten!

On the Dark Side: Royal Natal National Park

$
0
0
Cyathea dregei
I'm a sucker for tree ferns. I'm boggled that they are found rather commonly on the east face of the Drakensberg to surprisingly high elevations where they experience snow regularly. Unfortunately, this is just about the most slow growing, challenging tree fern in cultivation. You won't be seeing it in Box Stores any time soon...This whole east face of the mountain range is much wetter, much milder and much more "developed" than the other sides of the Drakensberg. The northern half (from Underberg northward) in particular is almost all Nature reserve, with no end of fabulous resorts at the base where you can hike towards the heights. Just about my favorite place on Planet Earth: I wish I could spend November-March there every year, as a matter of fact, and explore a different "kloof" each day. The biodiversity is astonishing. Unlike 95% of South Africa, there are deep woodlands (mostly Podocarp) in the declivities full of shade-lovers. These are what this blog is about...

Conostomium natalense

I shall add the name later (Thank you Ernie for saving me time!)--but what it basically is is a Bluet--very similar in morphology to our native American ones, although classed in a different genus. The parallels are almost as striking as the contrasts to our North American flora.


Looking suspiciously like Scarlet Runner Bean (Phaseolus coccineus), but Ernie Demarie has persuaded me it's Desmodium repandum, a stunning little woodland bean relative native to Southern Africa.

Barbara Young photographing her favorite!
Here and there throughout this area you find Crocosmia--often a hybrid surprisingly similar to 'Lucifer'. Nevertheless, the Drakensberg is center of distribution for this genus, although the true species are sometimes elusive.


A very strange and uncharacteristic orchid, probably Disperis wealii (although there are many in the genus here that are similar).


This has to be a crassula, although I can't find any in the picture books that look even vaguely like it.

Begonia sutherlandii
What a treat to see this again in the wild! Popular in cultivation--there should be some higher altitude forms of this that possess greater hardiness than what we grow.

Begonia sutherlandii closeup

Gleichenia umbraculifera

One of my favorite ferns,Gleichenia umbraculifera makes masses of forking fronds along the road. Although related ferns occur in tropical and subtropical regions, this is the Southern African specialty in the genus.

Closer view

Elaphoglossum drakensbergense
What a treat to see this rather narrow endemic of the east face of the Drakensberg--an epiphytic fern...

Elaphoglossum drakensbergense
As you can see, there's lots of humidity year around in the deep valley here...

Pteris cretica v.
Always a surprise to find this Universal fern so far from it's (and my) nomenclatural home! There is a fabulous website I use to verify names called i-Spot: you may want to check it out!

Plectranthus calycina
As a confirmed lover of Labiates, I  am thrilled to find this cousin of so many house plants (and kissing cousin to Coleus). I actually grew this for a short time--it's one of the few of the genus (Along with P. grallatus) likeliest to tolerate our subarctic winters.

Plectranthus calycina
I know there are those who aren't nuts about mints. More's the pity! I find this very graceful, and the foliage beautiful.


In addition to having hundreds of orchids, the fern flora of the Drakensberg is vast and multifarious. I've never seen this giant shield fern here before, at least I THINK it's a Dryopteris.

Desmodium repandum
How do you like this for a sophisticated groundcover?...they're is doubtless perennial. This would be a wonderful introduction!

Nancy Schotters next to Podocarp
Yellowood (two species, this one is likely Podocarpus latifolius) soar skyward hear: much of the original yellowood forest (and there wasn't much) has been lumbered for the lustrous wood. They are so painfully slow-growing that their woodlands are generally re-planted with North American conifers, so these havens along the base of the Drakensberg are all the more important.

More ferns and Phaseolus: unlikely combo


Fuzzy closeup of an Asclepiad (Schizoglossum atropurpureum) we saw many places around the Drakensberg. The family is so diverse and glorious in this region--wish more were cultivated!
Same from further away...

Cyathea dregei
More tree ferns. I can't help myself: they're so cool!


The waterfalls and streams of the Drakensberg are myriad--and always beautiful. No two are the same.


Selaginella sp.
There are little club mosses everywhere in the Drakensberg from shady woods like this one to dry open rocks.


Cyathea dregei
And even MORE Tree Fern shots...I get homesick looking at this shot. I think it captures the magic of the "Little Berg"...would that I could be there right now! (It's been snowy and cold for weeks, and more is predicted this next week..uggh).

Bushbuck coming!

Female imbabala or bushbuck (Tragelaphus sylvaticus)
It is always a treat to see antelope in the Drakensberg, where several species occur. This cautious, nocturnal species was obviously aware it's in a National Park!

imbabala or bushbuck (Tragelaphus sylvaticus) with fawn.

But we did not see any Dassies on the road despite the sign!

Two for one...
Seeing the antelope, one might think it's a doe just about anywhere in the Northern hemisphere, but the weaverbird nests bring it back to South Africa. Which is where we all originated, you know!

Platberg: bittersweet endings...

$
0
0
Crocosmia (Curtonus) paniculatus
 The largest of the genus (and the parent of many hybrids), a clump of this wonderful Irid greeted near the beginning of what turned out to be a longer and more dramatic day than I had expected (or hoped). Some days one wishes one could re-program--this being high on that list: we attempted to approach Platberg via the "shortest" road--I quickly realized we'd made a mistake. But we made the best of the mistake and saw quite a few wildflowers, although only a small number of participants made it to the summit plateau. I was not one of them...a disappointment to me personally.
Intrepid travelers!
 Here's the group gathered at the start. We thinned out rather quickly, alas (it was a toasty day, and the trek to Platberg from this spot was long and not that easy.
Galtonia candicans
 Not much of interest for a kilometer or two--but then I found Galtonia candicans in the wild for the very first time: red letter day! This is so showy, so widely and cheaply available in the trade, one almost forgets it's a wildflower.  And here it is IN the wild.

Harrismith
 The veld became more and more pristine, and the town below began to shrink from view--with wonderful "koppies" in the distance (those buttes and mesas that remind one of home)...

Zig Zag Pass
 This is one mis-named pass: it barely zigs or zags--it goes STRAIGHT UP! An example of South African humor at its worst.

Crassula nudicaulis
 The crassulas of the Drakensberg are legion--this is one of my favorites.

Oxalis obliqifolia'alba'
 A pure white Oxalis! Still growing on that slope...
Selago flanaganii
 From a little higher up, Harrismith reminds me of Boulder where I grew up, from Flatirons Mountain. In fact--it's probably not that different in size from Boulder when I first moved to my hometown...this view made me doubly homesick. Oh yes, the wonderful lavender Selago in the grass is high on my wishlist of South Africans I'd like to grow.


A closer look: this has been put in its own family--which is a homonym of a family of Pteridophytes--I must see what the cladists and gene jockies have done with its current status.
Agapanthus campanulatus v. patens
 As beautiful as it may seem, that vast forest of Pinus patula is mostly invasive: such a beautiful Mexican pine is obliterating biodiversity as it goes. The Agapanthus in the foreground is an example of the meadow flower that will not tolerate shade.

Dierama robustum
 I have yet to master my camera--so all my pictures of Dierama are out of focus, but Karel DuToit, who was a fellow tour leader, managed the picture below (albeit likely taken in Lesotho) of the same species. We have yet to master these, but they must have totally adaptable strains...
Dierama robustum (photo by Karel DeToit)


Delosperma ashtonii
 On a previous visit I remember seeing this ice plant in bloom: the seedpods weren't quite ripe--but very attractive in their own right.

Leonotis intermedia
 Always a treat to find Lion's ears....

Hirpicium armerioides (lax leaf form)
 We did see just a few of the giant form of Hirpicium here: this is almost unrecognizable compared to the alpine form from Tiffindell...look back four or five blog postings and you'll see what I mean!

Berkheya speciosa
 We saw this and a closely related giant, willowy Berkheya all the way to Kruger the next few days...I suspect this could become a week...         
Kniphofia triangularis
 I posted about this six or seven blogs ago--but had to show it again. Possibly my favorite poker. In a wonderful color form.
Pelargonium luridum
 This enormous Pelargonium was everywhere--in shades including dark pink. It has a big taproot--and Ernie Demarie has had it overwinter in New York.
Corycnium nigrum
 I have a much better picture of this black orchid I took on Sani Pass ten years ago--but what a treat to find it again!

Gnidia sp.
 I know this looks pitiful--but if you look up Gnidia you will see how magnificent these Daphne cousins can be. I am a firm believer in the "Ark" theory--that many North Temperate families dispersed from India when she collided into Asia--can't you just see an ancestral Gnidia morphing into Stellera? It's not a big leap from Moraea to Iris, nor from Erica to Phyllodoce...if you catch my (continental) drift...

Berkheya maritima
 This was a particularly nasty Berkheya. I'd love to grow it anyway...Love child of a thistle and a sunflower!


Hermannia sp.
 Haven't determined the species on this little wild Chocolate. How annoying that they've lumped these all into Malvaceae!
Scilla nervosa
 This is a plant we should be growing in the Northern Hemisphere!


Gladiolus papilio
 What a treat it was to stumble on a few plants of this widespread species, in a subtle color form. There must be some very hardy forms of this in cultivation!
Striga bilabiata
 It may be parasitic, but this striking flower is always a treat to find.

Acacia mearnsii
 Black wattle is one of the most widespread and weedy plants throughout South Africa. Even though this had been burned, it's coming back even stronger for it! Invasives like this are the bane of the landscape--although the bark is prized for tanning.

Safety!
Rain clouds closed in, the group had splintered into various factions and I was (frankly) deeply disappointed that things had transpired this day the way they did. But the early group had been befriended by the most delightful Afrikaans family, who entertained them and made everyone welcome. One by one, the clusters of the group came back utterly exhausted, and in the final analysis, I was relieved things hadn't turned out worse. How different might the day have gone had I gone out the evening before to scout the "right" route: we would have been together, but may have missed some of the gems we did see...so perhaps All's Well That Ends Well!

And so we end the circuit of the Drakensberg.                                           .                                           .                                           .                                           .                                           .                                           .                                           .                                           .                 and I can't wait to get back!

Relativity: bloom times can vary...Did you know that?

$
0
0
Iris (Juno) nicolai                          March-16-2007                                  Photo by M. Bumgarner
You're supposed to pronounce the title of this blog very colloquially ("D'jou know that?": Juno that?) to rehash one of my worst puns. One of the terrific features of digital photography is all the data that lies buried behind the pictures: these are all pictures taken by my dear friend and former colleague, Maria Bumgarner, when she was amassing a wonderful collection of irises at Centennial Garden (which I have memorialized, as it were, in a previous blog). Most of them are still there, needing some attention perhaps... I think the plants speak for themselves: what I am highlighting right now is WHEN they bloomed seven and eight years ago: this year, many of these that bloomed in February will not bloom until April or even May, perhaps (at the rate we're going). Phenology in a steppe climate is a joke!


Iris aucheri'Deep Violet'                                            3-7-2008                                           Photo by M. Bumgarner
Of course...there is the subject of Juno Iris, which I have blogged about again, and again and again (you're supposed to click on each of those "agains" to access those blogs, btw).

Iris aucheri'Deep Violet'                                         3-7-2008                                                 Photo by M. Bumgarner
What can one say to that color?
Iris aucheri'Snow Princess'                                      3-26-2008                                                     Photo by M. Bumgarner
I hope we haven't lost this one...

Iris magnifica'Alba?'                                                   March 2, 2007                                                    Photo by M. Bumgarner
 I find it hard to believe this bloomed so early: this year March 2 was a blizzard if I remember correctly...

Iris rosenbachiana                                                         2-9-2008                                                          Photo by M. Bumgarner
Although we had the snowiest February this year in Denver history, there were reticulatas starting to bloom in a few gardens: not mine however (although their tips were poking up)...

Iris wilmottiana                                                                 3-7-2008                                                        Photo by M. Bumgarner
Another one we may have lost...

Iris zinaidae                                                                     3-17-2008                                              Photo by M. Bumgarner
I do have plants of this--although I'm not convinced they're accurately named...

Meanwhile I can dream, and hope to find some of these persisting despite the garden they're growing in having changed management several times. It was looking good last summer--so I have my fingers crossed.

Kendrick Lake

$
0
0

 I just scanned this website and found that I mention the Gardens at Kendrick Lake in nearly 40 posts, and probably have pictures of this garden in twice that number of postings. I dedicated one measley post on this garden on Prairiebreak, and a shorter, but more generous post on my Botanic Gardens web presence...I've linked both of those if the dozens of pix I post below aren't enough: I realize the bulb section seems endless--but hang in there: the later spring, summer and autumn are pretty dang good. For a municipal display garden, I think this one is over the top: I've never seen anything that can begin to compare with it. The scope, the variety and the sophistication is really more on the order of a botanic garden's complexity. And since three of the people who created this garden (Chris, Greg and Molly) are no longer there, I am not sure what the future holds. The garden is clean as a whistle, but each year more open spaces expand as plants die and are not replaced. One can only hope for a miracle--a gardener/designer of the caliber of those who created this garden to amplify the plantings in the near future. Fortunately, we've had over a dozen years to photograph and admire the place. I will not be commenting much: I think the pictures speak for themselves. But I shall label where I can...


Probably Erigeron compositus in foreground. One of several red species tulips above.

Tulipa clusiana

Tulipa clusiana


Hybrid of Tulipa clusiana
Tulipa clusiana--a different hybrid?

Tulipa vvedenskyi and Muscari'Valerie Finnis'

Tulipa vvedenskyi and Muscari'Valerie Finnis'

Tulipa vvedenskyi and Veronica oltensis




Tulipa sp.



Tulipa chrysantha and Muscari 'Valerie Finnis'

Tulipa chrysantha and Muscari 'Valerie Finnis'
Tulipa chrysantha and Muscari 'Valerie Finnis'
Tulipa chrysantha and Muscari 'Valerie Finnis'

Tulipa chrysantha and Muscari 'Valerie Finnis'


Tulipa chrysantha and Muscari 'Valerie Finnis'


Tulipa humilis hyb.





Tulipa vvedenskyi

Tulipa humilis forma

Tulipa batalinii

Tulipa batalinii

Tulipa batalinii

Tulipa batalinii

Tulipa australis

Tulipa batalinii


Amelanchier alnifolia

M. macrocarpum (M. moschatum var. flavum) 'Golden Fragrance'


M. macrocarpum (M. moschatum var. flavum) 'Golden Fragrance'


M. macrocarpum (M. moschatum var. flavum) 'Golden Fragrance'




Ribes aureum



Tulipa humilis



Opuntia basilaris

Echinocereus triglochidiatus, Delosperma dyeri, Eriogonum flavum var. aureum

Salvia transylvanica and Osteospermum barberiae v. compactum 'Purple Mountain'

Genista sagittale, Yucca pallida and much much more!


Clematis integrifolia 'Mongolian Bells' (blue)

Gladiolus oppositiflorus v. salmoneus

Kniphofia caulescens

Aster sedifolius

Aster sedifolius
 
Aster sedifolius

Aster sedifolius

Silene schafta

Salvia pachyphylla

Agastache 'Ava'

Agastache  (aurantiaca hyb.)


Opuntia basilaris (see above for same plant in bloom)



Hirpicium armerioides





Agastache rupestris

Agastache 'Ava'

Agastache 'Ava'

Salvia pachyphylla on a nearby median strip

Clematis fruticosa

Hylotelephium 'Neon'

Agastache 'Ava'


Molly and Greg cleaning up after disastrous hailstorm

Scrophularia macrantha (typical form)



Scrophularia macrantha (compact form)

Scrophularia macrantha (closeup)



Origanum 'Amethyst falls' (I think)

Chrysothamnus nauseosus dwf. form

Yucca pallida, Sedum rupestre, Allium sphaerocephalum

Hesperaloe parviflora





Agastache 'Ava'




That's it folks!

A late winter garden: technically!

$
0
0
Draba hispanica and Bukiniczia cabulica doing their thang
Since spring doesn't officially arrive for another two days, I believe we can categorize Bill and Sandy Snyder's* garden as a winter garden still. To show any garden in winter is to do it a grave injustice. To do so on a cloudy day, with rain threatening is tantamount to cruelty: of COURSE the Snyder garden is dazzling in June, with throngs of Eremurus blooming, and the Lotus in the pond, the roses brimming with color. But stroll through with me on a bleak winter day and I think you will be convinced this is our premier Rocky Mountain garden.

*I henceforward refer mostly to Sandy by synedoche: she is the principal gardener after all (though Bill has engineered much of the construction, waters and is a full partner in appreciation and criticism).

Massive Convolvulus assyricus
 Another shot of the same rock garden from another angle, with the champion bindweed I covet horribly. I've featured this in bloom at DBG, but not these monster clumps in this blog yet: just wait!

Tulipa humilis in a vivid shade on the rock garden
 These have naturalized in Sandy's buffalo grass lawn, to be featured at the end (although the tulips won't bloom for a few weeks still there).

Helleborus x hybridus
 I know there are no end of really sexy hybrids nowadays: but I enjoy the classic dark maroon every bit as much when it is this graceful in its bearing. Grace matters as much as color in my book--and no garden has more graceful plants than this...

Genista horrida
 At one point Sandy had a "horrid" broom in her front rock garden swallowing half the garden up: it was unspeakably spectacular. I was horrified one spring when I came and it was gone (but she'd gotten this clump to establish as a token replacement). I'm over it: Sandy was right once again: you really don't need too many of these in a single garden. It has to be over 4' across! Notice--it's swallowing up a snowdrop!


Galanthus elwesii
Here's the doomed snowdrop, growing in full sun (notice the cholla pad fallen next to it). It kills me how plants grow for her!


Quecus turbinella
Ordinarily evergreen, their hollyoak has bronzed this winter: I suspect it will come back beautifully. Sandy has shaped and bonsaied no end of oaks and other shrubs to keep them in scale. Purists believe that native plants should not be "cloud pruned"--but in fact browsers and harsh weather does it as effectively as an Italian gardener in much of the West. Sandy's shaped shrubs are much closer to their wild antecedents than the rangy, hideous monsters most "natural" gardeners insist on letting go! Amazing the B.S. that runs amok in Horticulture.
Cylindropuntia'Snow Leopard in the background, Shepherdia rotundifolia center.
 The rusted sculpture between the two silver shrubs makes a wonderful contrast on the cactus bed.


Rubus "calycinioides"
 It's a tad winterburned (especially this horrible winter)--but this wonderful Formosan raspberry will green up soon: I've seen this making a dense groundcover for miles it seems in Vancouver--but I prefer this gnarly specimen in the open garden!

Of course, the gazebo is most fetching in summer, festooned with roses and clematis: winter does reveal structure and form. Sandy won't tell me what she paid for this (she glimpsed it dis-assembled in a nearby backyard and bargained with the owners for it. I have a hunch she got it for a song and is embarrassed to admit it! I'll probably never find out (Yankees are cagey, none more so than this clever cookie from Cape Cod! )
The big silver in the foreground is Acantholimon hohenakeri
 A garden with this bold placement of rock and plants, textures and masses of form is really what a garden is about. And few are. You really see it in winter.
Another shot of the same berm: their first big new project when I first met them in 1980.

Seseli gummiferum in a rock crevice--emerging from dormancy. Soundly perennial here.

I've not shown much in the way of the Snyder garden sculptures: there are lots, and wonderfully sited throughout.

The first crevice garden in the Rockies
 Sandy and Bill built a crevice garden years ago, after seeing and reading about the great Czech crevice gardens: the dwarf confers and daphnes and other compact evergreens here make it a stunning set piece year around. Abounding in color in spring and summer, of course.


Another shot of the same.

Iris 'George'
 This terrific clump of the stalwart  reticulata x histrioides hybrid may be showing up life size on your screen: it's a perfect specimen caught at its prime!

Helleborus niger
 My Christmas roses are all forming seedpods, but this one, which catches more winter snow, was only now in peak bloom (March 18)--much later than usual.

Galanthus elwesii
 Most of Sandy and my snowdrops are likewise finished--but this one in a shady spot is still fresh.
Viburnum farreri'Nanum'
 Typical V. farreri can grow ten or more feet high and across, but this compact form is perfect for gardens. It blooms heavily and reliably for Sandy: I've not seen this in another Colorado garden (although I have a small one at home!)

V. farreri 'Nanum' from further out...Just starting to open.


Agave damage
Most agaves in Denver have sustained winter damage from the horrendous drop in temps in early November (down to -14F in parts of town after a balmy October and early November). A year we will not forget. As Gwen Moore (my ex-wife) once said: "the secret to good gardening is removing the carcases promptly"). But this isn't a carcass quite yet--and will recover.

Buffalo grass garden
 It's just as well I show this on a cloudy day when the flowers are closed: if it were brighter and they were open, it would be too bright! The various Crocus chrysanthus cultivars have crossed and propagated wildly (interspersed with Narcissus asturiensis and other goodies). This was the first buffalo grass lawn designed to grow bulbs--and after nearly 30 years has proved itself mightily. There must be a million crocuses in here (and later tulips and finally eremurus)...

Another shot of the same...

And another


And this is the last: the reason Mike Kintgen and I came down was to see the crocuses. But there's always a lot more in Snyderland!

Michigan? Impossible!

$
0
0
 My blog OFFICIALLY does not begin until the seventh picture: these six beginning pictures were sent to me by Rimmer Devries, who doubtless wanted his garden to show up in the very best light with his superior photographs! These were all blooming about the time I visited--only were OVERLOOKED by me--do check back on these when you get to his (the fourth) garden I discuss... Meanwhile...enjoy! The captions for the first six pictures are taken from Rimmer verbatim.
"This is Colchicum hungaricum form Odyssey bulbs"

"C. biflorus ssp. crewei JJA 034.1150 ex Turkey Denizli- seed started Jan 2008-"

Another view of "C. biflorus ssp. crewei JJA 034.1150"

. "Galanthus forsteri"


"Galanthus ex Greece"

"C  abantensis"


Dr. Tony Reznicek

My "mission" was Michigan, and it turned out to be possible (to explain my arcane title)...

A few posts back I featured a Colorado garden in late winter: since that time our gardens have exploded with hundreds of spring flowers. I visited Michigan last weekend and they were poised in the same spot: truth be said, if your garden is not beautiful in winter, it sucks. I was privileged to visit four best of class gardens in a single day (Sunday, March 22), and I must say that aside from the two  Stireman masterpieces in Salt Lake City, Ann Spiegel's gem in New York and one or two others (which I shall not divulge), no rock gardens in America approach these four for superb garden design, wealth of plant collections and just plain genius. Michigan has been blessed with a great history of garden excellence: Fred and Boots Case, Bob Stewart and Betty Blake all have been luminaries in the Rock Garden Zodiac. These four gardens are all worthy of them!

A few shots of Tony's amazing crevice gardens
Susan and Tony purchased the house next door: to get a slight sense of the scope of what they're up to, click on this URL to get a Google Map sense of their site.

A few MORE shots of Tony's amazing crevice gardens


I have to say something about the daphnes in Michigan: I thought we grew daphnes well... I've never seen so many grown so superbly: tucked into crevices like this, or forming monster masses in more open sites. I must have seen several dozen that were well over a meter across!

Choice Eriogonum tucked in a crevice.

Xeric sand bed full of treasures (dianthus, acantholimon and yucca here)

He grows lots of cacti too

This very long spined Echinocereus triglochidiatus amazed me

Cylindropuntia whipplei with a very dense form of E. umellatum:v. porteri?

A very happy Aucuba: I believe he'd given it a little protection from winter burn.

More shots of the xeric garden: Cylindropuntia imbricata doing well despite a very cold winter.

The obligatory Hellebore: Tony had lots of them.

Bignonia capreiolata
I envied this magnificent specimen of crossvine--which is native mostly in the Southeast and lower Midwest. I've always wondered about its winter hardiness: here it has gone through -25F and thrived. Perfectly situated along this fence where suckering is not an issue.

Daphne'Stasek'
My specimen is always dying back: this lusty specimen looked wonderful...envy again!

Jankaea heldreichii
What a treat to see this silvery gesneriad from Mt. Olympus growing so well in Michigan. I've not seen anything comparable anywhere in the U.S.A.: Tony is a magician!

Untamed hillside
Tony had purchased the house next to him since my last visit, and there are some areas he has yet to tackle-mostly overgrown with vinca or here, English ivy: there's room to expand!

Pachysandra procumbens
Wonderful mounds of the native pachysandra keeping up their color after a hard winter....

The path climbs and climbs and the garden is suddenly far below!


All manner of rock work, and wonderful dwarf conifers livening up the wintry scene...

Merendera (Colchicum) trigyna
I have grown this Eurasian miniature for decades--but this was twice the size of any of mine...

Cyclamen purpurascens
Tony has lots of cyclamen, especially this species, but this individual was especially brilliant...

What a shock to see Dryopteris sieboldii after a -25F winter!

Lots of coum budding up to bloom...

Wonderful rock garden slope with specimen evergreens...

A hefty clump of Adonis amurensis about to bloom...

An enviable Acer griseum

Who doesn't dote on the bark of Acer griseum

Helleborus niger 'Potters wheel' with enormous flowers.

Very different rock work along this wall...much of it tufa

Another view--love the red Penstemon hirsutus 'Pygmaeus'

Some fabulous cacti--including a huge clump of Escobaria leei: how could a plant from Carlsbad Caverns in New Mexico be so hardy?

Quite the lump of Tufa...(a rock with a story: come to the meeting and find out!)...

The bark on the Hydrangea competes with yet another paperbark maple.



Two kinds of palm trees made it through this hellish winter: Rhytidophyllum on the right and Sabal minor from Oklahoma on the left

I suspect there will be some more rock work accomplished by meeting time in a month and a week!
Don and Mary Lafond
Troughs everywhere full of treasures...
Here is the very beginning of one of America's extravaganzas: Don and Mary Lafond have created a rich, complex and wonderful garden on a grand scale. Just click the link for the Google Map overview to get a taste of just how big it is!
The first glimpse of yet another extravaganza!
I was astonished by the size and scope of Don and Lafond. Everything is here: conifers, perennials, woodlanders, alpines, containers--and fabulous hardscape helped by the fact that Don is a master carpenter (his shop is in the background)..


I love this rock garden in a wooden framework...


Stately views in every direction: can't wait to see these brimming with color in five weeks!

More monster daphnes. Grrrr.

A choice Dracocephalum I have lost...

Gypsophila aretioides--one of the greats.

Even a skull: the Lafonds could join the Rocky Mountain Chapter (you're required to have one here)...

Lots of wonderful conifers--although Don was lamenting the damage on his giant Cunninghamia: I would too actually.

More wonderful graceful views...

A very happy Acantholimon perched on a raised platform...

Another long view...the orange Cunninghamia on the left: he's darn lucky to have had it so many years!

These woodland gardens will burst with color in a few weeks...there were buds everywhere.

Carex platyphylla a new one for me. Tony identified it (nothing like walking in the footsteps of the Carex deity)

Hellebores just coming out: Don was surprised to see them.

More garden next to the house.

A vew to the alpine house on the left of the house...

Goodies everywhere: here a tufa wall and pond.

A wonderful mat of Gypsophila nana

Scots pines are succumbing along the road--but an understory of Japanese maples will make a great screen soon.

Even the shed was elegantly decorated!

Sneaking into the Alpine House

Lots of booty in here!

Arabis cypria--a new one for me.



Conandron and other wonderful alpines for the sale in May...


More good stuff in the cold frames: I love the brick pattern on the patio...
Mystery snowdrop...
I squirm as I am about to attempt, rather miserably, to describe Jacques and Andrea Thompson's private garden in Ypsilanti, Michigan. I suggest you click on this URL: an aerial overview of their garden from Google Map: it has to be the most ambitious and wonderfully fulfilled rock garden complex in North America. Jacques is very tall, very strong and very bright! He has incorporated untold tons of rock, planted the most wonderful plants and boasts a collection any botanic garden would be proud of. If you have not visited the Thompson garden in Ypsilanti, you've missed out on a lot!
Stewartia koreana
Who knew Stewartia was so hardy? This was a brutal winter, and the Thompson garden looked awesome--full of rare trees, shrubs and all manner of alpines in fine fettle.


After seeing this stewartia, I'm not sure I can live another year without one. It was just too beautiful for words!

Dozens of troughs--one more imaginative than the next.

Iris 'George'
The Thompson garden is in a bit of a dell, so things were even more behind than in other gardens. There were nonetheless many early bulbs out already...

This garden will blow people's minds for the Annual Meeting in May!

What's that under the tree?


An especially fine spread of Eranthis


Wonderful conifers and shrubs combined artistically wherever you look...and daphnes up the wazoo. Don't ask where that is.

Three wonderful Rottweilers help keep the garden deer and rabbit free: I think I need a few myself...

The containers are amazing and everywhere, and elegantly planted...

Wonderful rockwork combined with conifers and alpines...on and on and on...

The style differs in each bed, with some fabulous and interesting rocks brought back from trips...

I just love these convered pipe containers: they bring the level of the garden to your face!

This Daphne cneorum had to be six feet across. I was livid with envy.

Maybe the daphnes need an occasional Rottweiler to stand in them to thrive like this?
Here is the man: surely a giant of American gardening by any measure. And a wonderfully good friend to many.

The vistas across this enormous garden are beautiful in all directions.

A look back towards the house, with a few of the "perched" trough gardens..

An enormous tufa garden full of saxifrages and other treasures...


A mini tufa garden to bring the surrounding one into perspective...

More views...What a place!?

A fascinating piece of tufa with calcified stems of Vernonia (says Tony--and who's to argue?) I believe they said this was to bu up for auction at the annual meeting.

A marvellous cactus bed.

Love them cacti!



Get a load of the fabulous Opuntia compressa lower right, next to an Eriogonum, but a variety of conifers further back, and a wonderful treeform Hydrangea: this garden has it all!

Lesquerellas and other westerners ramping around large Oil Shale boulders brought back from Garfield County Colorado in another giant trough.



A local Opuntia fragilis--I forgot to ask for a cutting! It would be fun to have one from Michigan.

The pit house had lots of bulbs coming on.


Some conifers in the pithouse and other shurbs.

Adonis amurensis had just popped...


There was a fabulous form of Helleborus foetidus all over the garden with deep red stems.

An enormous Abies koreana ''Horstmann's 'Silberlocke'
I was so proud of my squinny two foot specimen before I saw this...

Some wonderful conifer plantings--balm to winter eyes...

Yet another rock garden...

Another tufa garden...

Jacques and Tony in contemplation...(Sean Hogan lurking in the shadows beyond)

Yet another trough filled with tufa

Susann Devries on the right with pet in arms, talking to Tony
The last garden we visited was that of Rimmer and Susann Devries: on a city lot, it was brimming with bulbs and all manner of conifers and alpines. Rimmer grows many rare bulbs from seed--and they are coming on quickly! Susann shares in the garden--her passion is conifers.

A terrific spread of Eranthis hyemalis again...


Crocus abantensis
There is something of all styles of rock gardening here--I love the cushions, mats and conifers along with gnarly rocks.

Not sure what species--but delightful backlit.

Another colossal daphne. Harumph! Heck: it's bigger than the car! [this was identified by Rimmer as
Daphne x napolitana'Bramdean'

Wonderful bulb frames filled with rarities

Endless pots of seedlings in the bulb frames.

Another iris to die for: who's ever heard of "Iris zagrica"? But I want it!

The Devries were justifiably proud of their brand new pergola--what a great place to sit and admire the plants!

I loved this elegant rock--and some very nice dwarf pines...

A very healthy Sarracenia bog--vicious creatures apparently need to be caged!
Rimmer has clarified that "the cage keeps the rabbits from eating the Lilium iridollae growing in the bog."  The pitcher plants are not as blood thirsty as I'd supposed!

Another fine spread of Eranthis...

A form of Galanthus elwesii

Gentiana acaulis budding up to bloom...

Chrysoplenium macrophyllum
There were large mats of this in some of the gardens, but this one in a pot had come into bloom--quite different from the yellow species found across the subarctic (including Colorado)...
More wonderful contrasting mounds and cushions (pines, daphne and silene?)

I believe this was Colchicum trigyna...another wonderful spring bloomer...

I'm sorry you've seen these gardens in midwinter: you can see a few more of these garden in full color on their newsletter, just click on this URL to access these. It will give you a sense of what I have NOT shown: but better yet...sign up for the AGM of NARGS and you can enjoy these in REALITY (imagine that)--as well as meeting up with fellow rock gardeners from around the World. You won't regret it...

Click HERE for more data on the annual meeting  See you in Ann Arbor!



Simple gifts

$
0
0
Natural Arch in the Cumberland river area of Kentucky

 Of course, there's nothing simple about arranging a trip half way across the country (particularly for hosts!), but the simple gifts I'm speaking of are the gifts of springtime: gentle breezes, luscious greens and the magic of the ephemeral flowers. I shall be sharing plenty of these simple gifts below: so turn on your Appalachian spring, and dream with me...

 ( In late April of 2012, Jan and I were invited by Allen Bush to visit Kentucky. Allen arranged for me to give a talk (defraying costs, and justifying some time to explore), and he set up almost two weeks to tour his enchanting state. I was horrified to see I never blogged about these. In a few weeks, we'll be re-visiting Kentucky (and Tennessee! that last of the 50 states I've not yet seen!).

Yahoo falls (pronounced Yay-hoo)
I can hear you saying now ("did Google demand a falls be named after them as well?)...

Asclepias quadrifolia
This was a new one for me: and a shade loving asclepiad to boot! I've never seen this in a garden...

Asplenium montanum?
There are a few look-alike aspleniums in the Appalachians--I think this name is right. I have a weakness for rock ferns, and the Aspleniums are aristocrats of the genre.

Asplenium (Camptosorus) rhizophyllum
I would hate to count the times I've failed with this delightful fern. You would think that anything that spreads so easily from tip rooting would be amenable to garden culture. Oh well: I can worship it in the wild at least!
 Botrychium virginianum
I grew this for many years as a very young person. Won't say how long ago that was. Considering that it grows in just about every state, it's surprising it's not more often seen in gardens. I believe it may be extinct in Colorado now.
Cypripedium calceolus (pubescens)
My companion, Jan, is propping the ladyslipper up: it had been knocked down by a passerby. This hardly needs a commentary...

Disporum lanuginosum
I believe the American Disporum are now called Prosartes....

Conopholis americana
Another novelty for me: supposedly parasitic on oak roots! Guess I'll pass this by...

Erigeron puchellus

Geranium maculatum
Not often seen in gardens--this Appalachian geranium has grown well for us in Denver.

Viola hastata (left) and Hexastylis (Asarum) arifolium (right)
I love the bold foliage of the woodlanders.

Hexastylis (Asarum) arifolium
I have a small tuft of this widespread Appalachian ginger: hope some day it does this at home!

Hexastylis (Asarum) arifolium flowers
Wonderful little tubby flowers.

Houstonia canadensis
A ditinctive bluet...

Houstonia serpyllifolia
I once grew this groundcovering bluet in Boulder: need to try it again...but is there a source?
Houstonia caerulea


Hydrophyllum appendiculatum
Surely the queen of the genus. Reminds me a lot of Phacelia.

Iris cristata
We were at the tail end of the flowering on crested iris--but we could see it was abundant.
Iris cristata

Lygodium palmatum
I have seen this growing abundantly in North Carolina--strange that it is so rare in gardens.

Magnolia macrophylla
There were four immense leaved magnolias growing mixed hereabouts. A little tricky to distinguish from afar! They apparently bloom at different times...

Mitchella repens in bloom
We found partridge berry in flower...

Mitchella repens in fruit
And in fruit nearby

Orchis (Galeorchis) spectabilis
Always a treat to find an orchid...

Osmunda cinammomea
The cinnamon fern seems to be Universal in the Eastern hardwoods--we saw them everywhere in Nova Scotia last year as well...

Pedicularis canadensis
This grows in Colorado as well...
Phlox x amoena
I was charmed by this phlox, which was abundant where forest had been cleared for powerlines.

Phlox divaricata
I love this icy blue phlox--so widespread and variable throughout the Eastern woodlands...

Synandra hispidula
A brand new genus for me: very beautiful!

Sedum ternatum
This surely must be one of best of all sedums--yet rarely sold by nurseries! What's up?

Silene virginica
An extremely easily grown woodland perennial..yet not that often seen.

Silene rotundifolia
I've never seen this one in commerce--with its deep red flowers and interesting habit it would be a wiinner.

Thalictrum sp.
One of a dozen species found in the East: which one is it?

Trillium luteum
WE grow this wonderfully in Denver Fun to see it in the wild.
Trillium luteum x cuneatum?
It would be fun to grow this hybrid!

Uvularia perfoliata
I do grow this...fun to see in the wild.

Viola sp?
A wonderful mystery violet...

Viola canadensis
We have a close cousin that is every bit as rambunctious...

Viola hastata
What is it about violets: either they're nearly always weeds, or else impossible to grow.

Viola pedata
 This one is easy for anyone on acid soil, but excrutiatingly elusive to those of us on alkaline substrates...

The trip these pictures were taken on was already four years ago...fun to take a look backward..and this year we're visiting the same locations only weeks earlier in floral time! Stay tuned for what we see this time....


 "Simple Gifts"by Elder Joseph
'Tis the gift to be simple, 'tis the gift to be free
'Tis the gift to come down where we ought to be,
And when we find ourselves in the place just right,
'Twill be in the valley of love and delight.
When true simplicity is gained,
To bow and to bend we shan't be ashamed,
To turn, turn will be our delight,
Till by turning, turning we come 'round right.

First flush of flowers...

$
0
0
Adonis amurensis
Spring is a long-drawn out affair in the Steppe. Or rather, we don't really ever get a "real" spring (except for 2008-2012 when we had four blissful years of English-like springs when the forsythias bloomed for months and apricots and almonds fruited almost every year--but they were the exception) Most years winter and summer simply alternate from Christmas to Memorial Day and beyond). The Adonis was in full bloom (and had been blooming for weeks) when I returned from Africa at the end of January! It can tolerate subzero cold in flower!

Helleborus niger
The Christmas rose also had flowers in January--and does most years. It's already threatening to drop seed in early April!
Galanthus elwesii Giant Form
 This too has fat seed-pods this time of year. My favorite snowdrop towers over the nearby nivalis.                                    

Crocus vernus v. albiflorus
I recall seeing masses of this on the pass near St. Moritz in the Engadine in late June in white and purple...so my little tuft is pretty modest by comparison--but evocative nonetheless. I love to grow plants I've seen in the wild: they bring back whiffs of memory of the glorious Alps and other mountains I've been blessed to tread.

Cyclamen coum
I struggled to grow this for years--maybe decades. Everywhere I planted it it would languish. Then one day it appeared in a spot I would never have planted it and it loves it--self sowing even already!

Fritillaria raddeana
I grew this for many years: the devastating April frost of 2013 killed it and many more plants in my garden. Here it is at DBG...where no doubt they will succeed with it!

Iris'Lady Beatrix Stanley'
I suspect this is an Iris histrioides cross--and a damn nice one. Maybe even pure histrioides? Not sure who the Lady was--but she was lucky indeed to have such a stunner named for her. Here it's growing in the Plant Select garden at DBG: you can bet your patooty I'll be buying this to plant at home this autumn! I presume, perhaps, that you HAVE a patooty?

Eranthis pinnatifida
I know it's been lumped with hyemalis--but it does look different to my eyes...and the cross is sterile.

Iris'Katharine Hodkin'
I lost a dozen plants of this in the great April freeze two years ago, but they survived everywhere at the Gardens: was it the distinct culture where they were growing there? Or was it a tad milder?

Paeonia kavachensis
Some peonies are showier when they emerge than when they bloom!

Galanthus nivalis
I remember planting these several decades ago--and now they carpet a corner of the Rock Alpine Garden...

Thlaspi (Noccaea) aff. caerulescens
The many springtime pennycresses are never planted as often as they should be. This one ramps all over several corners of the Rock Alpine Garden, just as N. fendleri did in the old Wildflower Treasures (one of my favorite, now preterite gardens at DBG--,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,but I'm not bitter)...
Iris reticulata 'J.S. Dijt'
Pronounced "Deet" like the insecticide. I cringe when people mispronounce this. Like when they try and say "Guizhou"--a cultivar name for Artemisia. That

Iris chrysantha cv.

Iris histrioides'Major'

Iris 'George'


Iris tomasinianus

Colchicum filifolium

Iris reticulata 'J.S. Dijt' and Chionophila

Primula abschasica

Colchicum malkensis

Iris aucheri and Draba hispanica

Eremurus robustus

Arctostaphylos patula

Draba polytricha

Narcissus nanus

Tulipa humilis 'alba coerulea oculata'

Fritrillaria michaelovskyi

Saxifraga x apiculata 'alba'

Narcissus 'Jack Snipe'

Phlox kelseyi 'Lemhi Purple'

Physaria sp. and Escobaria vivipara

Fritillaria albertii

Iris sp. (Juno)
Must check my records on this one...

Helleborus x hybridus (white)

Primula elatior

Anemone ranunculoides

Coluteocarpus vesicarius

Narcissus lobularis

Erythronium'Pagoda\'

Primula veris and Anchusa

Corydalis sp. (forgot name!)

Trachystemon asiaticum

Bulbocodium vernum

Crocus sieberi 'Tricolor'



Revisiting Kentucky 3 years later in the spring...part 3

$
0
0

A rather portentous visit to one of America's great National Parks--Mammoth Caves. Biggest cave system in the world (300 miles and counting). I was disappointed to find the verges of the path crowded with garlic mustard: with the thousands of daily visitors, surely they could hire a few weeders? The last blog was written at the end of April, but the season was so advanced then that this time we encountered a whole different palette of plants. Part three, you say? The other parts may or may not be forthcoming...it was a fabulous trip that could produce another six blog entries, but the season marches on!

Saxifraga virginiensis
This trim saxifrage was on every shady slope. Hundreds of them around the cave--maybe thousands. We found these in several nearby spots--on moist, shady cliffs and slopes.

Saxifraga viginiensis duking it out with Bignonia capreolata

Saxifraga above, Sedum ternatum below.

Jack in the Pulpit (Arisaema triphyllum)
These looked as though they'd just come up!

Phlox divaricata
Blue phlox is so variable!
Julian Campbell alongside escaped Pyrus calleryana
Bradford pear has escaped into the wild--here are two husky specimens in an abandoned field alongside our guide--the amazing field botanist Julian Campbell who lives in Lexington and travelled with us the last time we visited.

Gleditsia triacanthos
Now THOSE are thorns--I wonder if they slowed down the mammoths at all?

Viola pedata
We were so fortunate to have Julian, who'd scouted things out. He knows Kentucky like the back of his hand! I've never seen birdsfoot violets looking so perfect before--dozens on the hard, limy clay alongside a road: I always thought they demanded acid soil!


I took this picture to show the variability: two very different seedlings growing next to one another--a giant on the right!



And here was an albino...I was tempted to dig it...


And my favorite of the lot...you can tell I was crazy about these!



Violets growing with pussytoes: the pussytoes are dead easy--why do the violets have to be such a challenge?

Prunus munsoniana

One of four wild plums that grow in Kentucky!

Julian raising cane!
Several species of native bamboo have been delineated in recent years--this is
Arundinaria gigantea,which grow near streams and can get nearly 20' tall. It burned badly this past cold winter.

Lithospermum caroliniense
Another fabulous native: puccoon--which grows all the way to Colorado.

Prunus americana
The American plum in Kentucky was more upright and less wicked than our scrubby little things. I love the fragrance on this plant!

Cercis canadensis
The redbuds were glorious everywhere in Tennessee and Kentucky: we returned to Denver at the peak of redbud season, and they're glorious for us too. In the East, however, I noticed that they tend to be smaller than ours, and more delicate:


Bonanza: a hillside practically smothered with Trillium flexipes var. walpolei (most forms of this species are white flowered.

Trillium flexipes var. walpolei

Dutchmen's briches (Dicentra cucullaria)
Why does this plant leap over the Rockies and grow in the Columbia River valley in the Palouse prairie of all places. A truely annoying geobotanical riddle, that!

Isopyrum thalictroides
This rue-anemone look alike grew in vast mats everywhere in Kentucky as far as I could tell (in moist forests that is). Not many nurseries sell this.

Jeffesronia diphylla and Stylophorum diphyllum
These diphylloid endemics of the Midwest are garden classics: but to see them abounding in nature is one of the great pleasures of traveling for me. A plant in wild is worth two in the garden, to maim a cliche.

Trillium flexipes var. walpolei
More flexipes. Sorry....I was smitten!
More Isophyrum

Mertensia virginica
The bluebells/chiming bells/languid ladies were everywhere. I love this thang (the local twang is getting to me!)
MORE Mertensia

More isopyrum duking it out with Hydrophyllum

Phlox divaricata and Polystichum acrostichoides unfurling at right.
Another wonderful clump of phlox growing with a bevy of cool plants.

And more Trillium flexipes var. walpolei
The dang flexipes was everywhere...here with a choice woodland Cerastium which makes a great contrast!
Trillium flexipes var. walpolei

Dicentra canadensis
I was surprised to see squirrel corn growing right next to Dutchman's britches (who says "breeches"?). They look so superficially similar in leaf--but the flowers and co
Proof I was there! Trillium flexipes var. walpolei

Trillium flexipes var. walpolei

Our guide, JulianandTrillium flexipes var. walpolei

Julian and a cliff...
Julian not only LOOKS like a sprite, he prances around like a woodland spirit: I've met few keener botanists in my day.
Asplenium (Camptosorus) rhizophyllum
And I finish with one of my favorite plants: the walking fern (which refuses to walk for me)...

Thank you, Kentucky, for a fabulous week of plants, generous people and fun. Now back to work (grunt, groan, moan)...

Clearly Clever Clematis

$
0
0
Clematis albicoma
Not flamboyant like poppies or peonies, but for us devotees, nothing beats an herbaceous 'Viorna' clematis (Viorna is the name of a prominent semi-vining species in the Eastern woodlands that is the type of the sub-genus that includes the American clumping clematis: it has even been used as a Generic name for the section--not something I advocate). Superficially reminiscent of the Eurasian Clematis integrifolia--which I suspect they will prove to be related to as well one day--there is a great variation among and within the American clumpers: these pictures have been taken this past week at Denver Botanic Gardens and at my home. I begin with the rare Clematis albicoma, known from eight counties in Virginia and three in West Virginia) here blooming at Denver Botanic Gardens. The chartreuse flowers with a wonderfully hairy (albi=white; coma=hairdo) glow. How cool is that?

Clematis fremontii
I was privileged to see this in the wild north of Wichita on a wonderful fieldtrip four years ago led by Larry Vickerman, who directs Denver Botanic Gardens at Chatfield. I was struck the by the variability of flower color in the wild--and equally so with the colony I myself once planted at the entrance of the Rock Alpine Garden (I put in the personal note: quite a few artifacts of my tenure remain in that garden, but it has been so utterly transformed by my successors--especially Mike Kintgen--that these remnants are increasingly rare). You can't blame me for being proud of this one!

Clematis fremontii
Doesn't it look as though it's dancing?


Clematis fremontii
This one is beginning to form the incredible seedheads that are almost showier than the flowers when fully formed: they glisten gold and irridescent--incredible plant.

Clematis scottii
Mike Bone, propagator at Denver Botanic Gardens as well as the intrepid Curator of Steppe Collections, took me to a colony of this wonderful plant at the outskirts of Denver--I never dreamed it grew so close. I know it mostly from the Wet Mountain valley, where it is abundant.

Clematis fremontii x hirsutissima
Clematis pitcheri (? x fremontii)
I obtained this plant as Clematis pitcheri from Bluebird Nursery--and I suspect it may have some pitcheri in it--but since it only grows to a meter or so tall, and is much thicker leaved than true pitcheri, I wonder if it too doesn't represent a cross with C. fremontii? It seems to have hybrid vigor as you can see, and blooms on and off all summer....

Clematis integrifolia 'Mongolian Bells'
Our super clump of lavender blue Mongolian Bells in the perennial border that Jan oversees in my garden. She approves of this!

Clematis integrifolia 'Mongolian Bells'
And an even bluer form of the same grex growing in the Plant Select garden at Denver Botanic Gardens. Now to get this, the white and pink and purple forms for my home garden....

If you haven't had enough of these, I've referenced these again and again in past blogs....and more than that too: I'm clearly smitten!

Where have you been all my life? A true blue Corydalis.

$
0
0

Corydalis turtschaninovii

 Occasionally you stumble onto a plant you never heard of and suddenly it's everywhere: everywhere (that is) in a certain garden: The garden of Jacques and Andrea Thompson was brimming with more color than seems quite proper, really: vast sweeps of creeping phloxes, Trilliums in drifts here and there in every color imaginable, dozens of daphnes the size of small eastern states and what seemed to be the genetic stocks colletion of Stylophorum diphyllum: I will eventually get around to blogging about all of these (probably in several blogs: that garden is just too dang big to boil down to just one blog) But tucked here and there all over the garden among the many treasures I kept noticing a piercingly, lavish blue corydalis that was new to me: Corydalis turtschaninovii is a cruel Latin name to saddle upon such a graceful little nymph.


 It seemed to grow in all manner of spots: sunny, shady, among other plants, and by itself. In gravelly soil and woodsy soil. Of course--as soon as I could, I Googled it and discovered it's a popular Chinese medicine: so I hate to think of how many of these are consumed each year by organs other than the eyes. Doesn't seem right in my opinion!


Many of us find ourselves growing more and more corydalis in all shades of yellow, pink, rose, nearly red and purples of course. Decades ago we would obtain "Corydalis ambigua" from Japan which shares the heavenly blue color of this waif, but lacks it's durability and staying power in the garden.  And yes, there are a positive truckload of Chinese species of the "flexuosa" persuasion that have piercing cobalt or azure flowers for a long season in summer. Though these are more accommodating than the spectacular Corydalis cashmeriana one sees in Scottish and Swedish gardens (where it's sufficiently cool for it to thrive) they do need to be divided frequently, and insist on fertile, fluffy soils to settle down for their performance...In hot summer regions this performance is often brief and temporary. Not so, apparently, for our Chinese medicinal blue one!


Each time I turn the corner, another monstrous clump. And that blue!


Unfortunately, we  are now going to all have to memorize the spelling of the accursedturtschaninovii: why couldn't it have been named for some crisp, monosyllabic Anglo Saxon instead? Although I'm one to talk with my name.


But when you look at these graceful azure flowered nymphs curtseying here and there all over the garden, it will be worth it don't you think? Easily and quickly grown from seed as well as division: I dare say we'll be seeing a lot more of this outside the Thompson garden in the coming years!

A Michigan quartet, part one...the Harris garden

$
0
0
Charlene Harris
There are people one meets that play the game particularly well. Charlene was the official convener of American Conifer Society meetings for a number of years a decade or so ago: she was assigned to "shepherd" me as her co-host of the A.C.S. meeting held in Denver in 2003. She came out a year or two ahead of that meeting to line up gardens and monitor facilities: we had great fun and the meeting was a spectacular success. I got word about Charlene over the succeeding years--hard to believe I hadn't seen her or her husband for 12 years, until early this month when I tracked her to her lair: a home and garden worthy of a woman of enormous charisma, ambition and accomplishment. Here you can see her admiring the new growth on one of the innumerable coniferous treasures strewn around her gorgeous garden.


But we're not just talking conifers: the Harris' garden is quite large, and much of it is steep hillside falling into a nearby lake. The whole thing is full of naturalized wildflowers--mostly Eastern American natives, and many of these were in full bloom, like the common white Trillium (T. grandiflorum) and the giant dark one (which I believe is T. sulcatum). The Harrises had drifts of these here, there and everywhere (said he enviously)..

Here..

There....


Everywhere...

And how about miniature forms of Trillium grandiflorum (groan...)


Chamaecyparis obtusa cvs.
As a long time leader of the American Conifer Society, as you would expect, conifers held center stage: they came in all shapes and sizes from these tiny false cypress (looking quite good after two extremely cold winters)


Hosta sampling
But Charlene has also been active in the Hosta society, so as one would expect, hostas are everywhere in these woods.

And hellebores...

And lots of Epimediums...

I loved the rustic walls.
Charlene informed me these were made from the sidewalks of Dearborn (I believe): her house was part of one of Henry Ford's vacation home retreats--and Mr. Ford had a flair for recycling a century ago!

The woodlanders were legion and lush

Iris cristata coming into bloom.

Sanguinaria canadensis 'Multiplex'
Vast swaths of what is apparently mostly double bloodroot--I was a few weeks late for THAT spectacle (thank Heavens!)

More awesome vistas...

Wonderful combos everywhere, and nary a weed.


Some Jack in the Pulpits make an appearance....


The last Spring Beauty of spring
The hill was blanketed with these a few weeks earlier, and there was one still blooming to remind us...

More vistas...what can I say? I'll let the garden speak for itself!


Metasequoia on the right, and a wonderful selection I've forgotten center...
The conifer on the left was identified as  Thuja plicata v.atrovirens by my friend Bill Barnes. I believe it isonly twenty years old (as long as they've lived here)!


All of our dawn redwoods in Denver were killed outright in November with our disastrous temperature drop--or at least severely damaged. I recall that Paul Maslin's specimen (which would have been one of the original ones) in Boulder was killed in our late October freeze that year. Not for us...
Thuja plicata v, atrovirens

Knees on bald cypress planted next to the lake...

Decorative knees they'd purchased in the South...


A contemplative garden filled with spectacular plants near the house.

Another view: what can one add?

One of the many superb specimen plants there...

And minmiatures on a rock garden

Arabis karduchorum, I believe...
One of the best specimens of a compact Arabis I've ever seen...

Wow!

Cacti being protected from herbivores...
Charlene even grows CACTI! Love that lady...

The potting area was to die for...

With lots of little treasures clean and lovely to look at.

The obligatory skull: she'd be allowed to garden in Colorado.

And here they are, the Power couple...
I pursued botanic gardening because of my love of plants, but people like Charlene and Wade manage to budge me from my plant obsessiveness and realize that there are indeed people worthy of the wonderful plants they grow, who give one hope for humanity.

Garden of a late afternoon...

$
0
0


For over twenty years I've marvelled at the amazing garden that Rob Proctor and David Macke have created in Highlands: I was pretty impressed with what they'd done before that too--but the scale and the magnificence of their North Denver creation was truly off the charts. I dropped in on them a week ago, and I was stunned: between this years incessant rains and their diligence (and skill)--(and a small army of interns don't hurt) the garden is OFF THE CHARTS. My miserable pictures taken in the gloaming do not do it justice...scroll down to the last frame and you can get the details on how YOU can see this garden (and raise some cash for our furry friends: animals that is. Not Rob and David).


The pictures really speak for themselves: you shall not be inflicted with the usual Greek Chorus of comments on all of them...












The Greek Chorus chimes in: I MUST get a start of this Polygonatum: Rob and David got it from Helen Dillon. Helen didn't give ME a piece of it the evening I visited (I must have been too dazzled to have asked)...



I've never seen this form of variegated Vinca--I love it!


I'm a salvia nut: I'm not sure what form this is (something between pratensis/haematodes/regeliana). Must get it!



The"hell" strip was heavenly.


This plicata Tall Bearded was stunning.







A tad darkish: sorry! I should have lightened the image: it's a magnificent plant of pink Phlomis--probably P. cashmeriana which I grew from Index Seminum seed and which has gone into Plant Select. I just realized I'm not growing it. Harrumph.

A wonderful broken pot xeriscape in the alley...


It's twin across the road...



Oh yes! If you go on the tour you get to go to the neighbor's too--who give Rob and David a run for their money in the Color department.



Back to Rob and David's: a fabulout black TB.


                                                                   Stairway to heaven...

      
And in the crepuscular light, the master walks home!   





A Garden Tour not to be missed!




















Kelly's krazy konkatenation of kakti.

$
0
0
Special hybrid Opuntia bed at Timberline: peak bloom, June 9, 2015
All but two pictures were taken Tuesday afternoon, June 9 at Timberline Gardens. A bittersweet photographic session, since these are not likely to be here next year.

Special hybrid Opuntia bed at Timberline: peak bloom, June 9, 2015

Opuntia 'Chocolate Princess'

Opuntia 'Chocolate Princess'

Opuntia 'Citrus Punch'

Opuntia 'Colorado Sunset' and below Opuntia 'Solar Flare'

Opuntia 'Colorado Sunset' and below Opuntia 'Solar Flare'

Opuntia 'Colorado Sunset'

Opuntia 'Coral Carpet' left

Opuntia 'Dickie's Delight'

Opuntia 'Dickie's Delight'

Opuntia 'Garnet Glow'

Opuntia 'Garnet Glow' on right, 'Apricot Glory' below below

Opuntia trichophora 'Golden Wooly Bear'

Opuntia 'Grand Mesa Peach'

Opuntia 'Grand Mesa Peach'

Opuntia 'Hawaiian Punch'
Opuntia macrocentra
Opuntia pinkavae'Nambe Sunrise'

Opuntia 'Peach Chiffon'

Opuntia 'Peach Chiffon'
Opuntia phaeacantha Paradox

Opuntia macrocentra

Opuntia 'Ruffled Papaya'

Opuntia 'Solar Flare'

Opuntia 'Wartermelon Man'



Opuntia polyacantha 'Citrus Punch'

Opuntia polyacantha'Nebraska Orange'

Opuntia polyacantha'Taylor Red'
Opuntia rhodantha'Snowball'

Opuntia trichophora'Golden Teddy'

Opuntia trichophora'Golden Teddy'

Opuntia trichophora'Golden Wooly Bear'

Opuntia trichophora

Special hybrid Opuntia bed at Timberline: peak bloom, June 9, 2015

Special hybrid Opuntia bed at Timberline: peak bloom, June 9, 2015

A botanist's garden

$
0
0
a
Dr. Robert Faden, left, Dr. Anton Reznicek
 I am always surprised that some botanists don't seem to garden at all. I have read that when Asa Gray was shown Dicentra eximia in a garden once (a plant he collected and named), he said he couldn't recognize it unless it was pressed on an herbarium page! Dr. Faden, retired from the Smithsonian, and Dr. Reznicek--still very active at the Herbarium of the University of Michigan--are engaging in animated conversation. I wish I had recorded it! These two are not only great botanists, but extraordinarily good gardeners too! Some day, perhaps, we can revisit the Faden extravaganza in Virginia, but now we will rewind to Mother's day, when I attended the North American Rock Garden Society's annual meeting in Michigan, which was organized in large part by Tony and his wife Susan. It was one of the best meetings I've attended of any group, and a highlight was visiting the Reznicek garden--which is both beautiful and a living, breathing herbarium of the best plants imaginable! You shall see quite a few of these, because I lack restraint! And the pics turned out pretty good if I don't say so myself. I'd revisit this post in a week or two: Tony will no doubt correct my many mis-identifications (I shall note his corrections in RED)...So you shall see what a mediocre botanist I am by comparison!

Here's part of the NARGS rabble
 You can see what a steep hillside climbs above the two houses the Reznicek's own and garden upon. You'll be seeing more of the crevice garden at the end...


Cardamine heptaphylla?
My first test: there are a wealth of white Lady's smocks (or are they cuckoopints?)--an early cress that graces woodlands across the Northern Hemisphere. There are a number of white ones--I'm guessing wildly here...


Here you can see it artfully naturalizing along with the wonderful native Celandine poppy (Stylophorum diphyllum) a plant I love and seem currently not to have in my garden.


A wonderful wall where many gesneriads have been tucked in, and ferns are spreading by spore. this is what great gardening looks like!

Cardamine macrophylla?
What collector in their right mind would be content with a single species of a good genus? So there has to be a pink Lady's smock as well...

Lonicera
Each of the Michigan gardens I visited had a fabulous specimen of this yellow honeysuckle. Perhaps someone will provide me the name (hint hint)--not easily found on Google--so don't try.





I have never seen more wonderful daphnes than in Michigan. This is a form of x hendersonii, I believe..

Iris henryi
The foliage on my I. henryi had winter damage--obviously protected more here...


Dodecatheon meadia

Corydalis sp.
Tony complained this corydalis was terribly weedy--

He must have had resistance pulling it out!

Many epimediums were coming into bloom...

And this dainty white violet

I am envious of Cinnamon fern--since my garden lacks a moist enough spot to grow it well...

Paracaryum raemosum
An unusual Asiatic borage one rarely sees in gardens...
Iris lacustris 'Alba'
As if the blue form weren't rare enouh....


And the blue form: the avatar of this conference!


An amazing stone with ferns producing sporelings all over it...and lots of gesneriads!


A closer view

More of our native Celandine poppy (Stylophorum diphyllum)


I love ferns when the croziers are emerging--in this case a choice Polystichum.


A wonderful slope carpeted with woodland gems...


The contrast of Jeffersonia diphylla leaves and Pachysandra procumbens is marvellous!

Trillium erectum 'Album' I suspect

Mertensia virginica



Fothergilla gardenii

Lots of interesting graminoids...Tony's specialty


He'll know what this one is...







Corydalis nobilis in full glory

Epimedium grandiflorum in many forms...


Pteridophyllum racemosum
The strangest member of the poppy family!

Lots of odd woodlanders...you won't see THESE at Wallmart.


Lunaria rediviva
The perennial money plant--something we could all use!

Who doesn't know or covet this?

Mukdenia rossii and the great Trillium blooming together...

I should know this!


Ranzania japonica and Beesia

Another shot of Beesia: looks so much like a ginger!

Glorious sessile Trillium (help!)

The lushest clump of Prosartes lanuginosa I've ever seen (used to be Disporum)

I know I should know this woodlander: Tony! help!

Very happy clump of Caltha palustris by the bog...

Darmera peltata and Stylophorum--a great combo

Great woodland textures...

Trillium recurvatum (below) and T. luteum above

Trillium luteum

Escobaria leei
I was more than a little suprised to see this rare New Mexican cactus (from the Chihuahuan desert) growing contentedly--albeit in a protected microclimate...

More wonderful epimediums..

Rhododendron ?dauricum
or possibly a form of mucronulatum?

Even more rhodies...

Two very cold winters have not been to the taste of palm trees--but they appear to be alive!

I remember this smelled good...

The classic Epimedium x sulphureum

Allium zebdanense

A seemingly restrained white violet..

Maianthemum (Smilacina) stellatum in a congested form

A handsome aucuba, although I recall Tony said he did protect it some...

This is trillium country--and I believe recurvatum, grandiflorum and luteum all grow not far away in nature

Daphne genkwa: had to include it although it's out of focus!

A handsome mass of Camassia leichtlinii

Iris koreana

I was impressed with that Trillium recurvatum as you can tell...

The crevice garden

The crevice garden 2

Daphnes love the crevice garden

I believe that's Artemisia assoana in the middle.


Iris humilis (or arenaria or flavissima--depending on your reference)

Aquilegia canadensis

A splendid Thalictrum. Not sure which species...


An unusual member of the mint family

Pitcher plant bog with Helonias bullata

Arabis bryoides

Epimedium sp.

Primula kisoana f. alba

You never know who's coming around the corner: Harvey Wrightman!

A lovely stand of bog bean (Menyanthes trifoliata)

Paeonia aff japonica

Hydrangea petiolaris clinging to a wall...

Orontium (not so) aquaticum
I believe I heard Tony saying this was a form that didn't grow in water!

I was surprised that Acis nicaensis was a reliable garden plant here...

Yet another Stylophorum: they love it here!

Tony, a spellbinding speaker!

Back to the crevice garden












Corydalis bracteata



Iris and Trillium at the Thompson's

$
0
0
I have visited hundreds of gardens in dozens of states and countries...any one of which has been a "favorite" for a while.  But right now (and perhaps forever), I believe my very favorite garden in the world is in Ypsilanti, Michigan. Andrea and her husband Jacques have created a haven that feels vast (and it is many acres I believe), every square inch of which seems to be perfectly planted with nary a weed the day I visited. Two more gracious and wonderful people you will never meet. And their dogs are pretty cool too! But what a garden! I am picking only two genera: Iris and Trillium, that happened to be in peak bloom on Mother's day when I visited. In Denver it was snowing and freezing new growth. In Ypsilanti it was Heaven on earth! Notice that each plant could win a medal in an British competition, and there are no end of choice plants!

  (After I first published my accounts of their garden, Jacques was inspired to add some text--which frankly thrilled me more than I can say! I am appending Jacques' commentary in blue after the appropriate pix: parallax rules!)

Most all of the Trillium grandiflorum in our garden (those which made large clumps), were castoffs from Dicks garden.  You are no doubt going to get tired of reading the name Dick in these pages.  It can’t be helped, as no discussion by me, about this garden can happen without repeated references to the man who had such a profound influence on my life, and our garden. Back in the mid-80’s, Tony Reznicek brought Andrea and me to meet Dick and experience his wondrous garden.  That was like bringing two magnets close enough together, and Snap!, we just clicked together and that meeting made all the difference.  Generous mentor, patient teacher, understanding friend, the person who knows all your quirks and likes you just the same.


We’d get together 2 to 3 times a week  for nearly 30 years.

Dick had a 7-acre plot of forested land within a much larger forested area.   He couldn’t add a plant to  his ‘garden it the woods’ without unearthing Trillium grandiflorum.  He’d toss them to the side and get on with planting whatever new plant was going in.  Often (day’s later), while we walked thru his garden checking out what was new, I would look around for these sometimes quite-sorry-looking castoff’s, gather them up, take them home and add them to my own garden.

Eventually I quit doing so as there were just too many.

The yellowing foliage in the foreground above is Corydalis solida ex ‘George Baker’, they love our clay loam soil and seed-about with great abandon.  Dick had given these to me, repeatedly,  as we had failed to notice that our gardens were in different time zones.

Even though  our gardens were only a 15-minute drive apart, Dick’s garden was on acid-sand and forested with primarily Quercus (huge, 20 -30ft. up to the first branch Quercus).  Whereas here, Andrea and I garden on clay-loam, and all of our big trees are conifers, mainly Picea abies.  Every spring the sun’s rays penetrated the bare forest canopy over Dick’s garden and quickly warmed up his light, sandy-soil.All of these big, brooding Spruce trees here,  stand guard, protecting the snow-cover from the warming sun’s rays.  And so while Dick’s garden is waking up, punching the clock and getting to work, its’ still “Snooze Ville” back in our garden.

As any gardener knows spring is the busiest of times, so much to do and we were both working on projects and not paying that close enough attention as to how things were proceeding, simultaneously, in our gardens.

It was Corydalis solida that (as they say), brought this to light for us.  As I mentioned earlier we got together often, and whenever possible, each visit started-off with a stroll thru the garden to see what’s recently come up.

We’d been the best of friends for over a decade by the time Dick had acquired Corydalis solida,  plenty long enough so that there was no hesitation.  If either of us caught sight of anything the other had, that we needed, ‘Oh, I’d like a piece of that”, it was automatic.

One early April morning, we are touring the backside of Dick’s rock garden, I catch sight of this bright, glowing, pink-red patch near the ground. “Wow” says I,  “You don’t have that ?” queries Dick. “Not yet” I reply. Out of his back pocket comes his ever-present trowel and dig, dig, and it’s onward we go.

Next year, early April, round the bend, (me) “Wow”!, (Dick)“You’ve got that”,  (me) “Nope” I say shaking my head back and forth, trowel whip, dig, dig, moving on.

Following  year, same time, same rock garden, same (me) ‘Wow”! (Dick) “I already gave that ,  didn’t I “?, (me) ‘It’s not in my garden”, out comes the trowel, dig, dig, and away we go to see what’s next. Within the week Dick would be over and we’d tour the garden and sure enough no glowing pink-red C. solidas.

Another early April visit to Dick’s garden,  you know the drill, ‘Wow” “I really like that”,  Dick  gives me a double take, “I’m sure I gave that to you”! (We could have sold tickets to this routine),  While I’m shaking my head, slowly the trowel emerges, poke poke, dig dig, “What are you doing, eating these things”? “Dick says in disbelief. “What can I say, I told you I got a brown thumb”.

Finally the late-April visit from Dick, We’ve just begun the tour in my garden, with shock Dick turns to me, “Hey you Turkey”! “I thought you didn’t have ‘George Baker’”!  “I got it form you” I say with genuine surprise.  “Looks like you got it from me a lot”!  And that’s when we realized how far apart our gardens were in time.


A sessile Trillium in front of a sea of Epimedium: wonderful foliage and flower contrasts throughout!


Trilliums & Epimediums also seem to enjoy clay-loam soil. Same area, however this is a different plant.  The Trillium in photo #2 is T. chloropetalum (from Nature’s Garden) , It’s also shown here, but now behind the bamboo stake along the right edge.

Another view of the same spot...


The Trillium here (centered )is T. sessile, a seedling from a couple of fine plants I  received from Steve Whitsell.

A similar vista nearby with Trillium luteum in a very greenish form...

 

I have never managed to catch seed of this very green flowered T. luteum.  I did however, divide this clump and I could send / bring you s copy of it if you so desire.


I love the brown seedling popping up among the blue SDB....

According to the label this is Iris missouriensis RMRP 99-615, but I’m pretty sure there was some mix up of seed or labeling.

"Not our best pink" aver the Thompsons. Pretty good to my eyes...


In fact this isn’t even T. g.‘Roseum’.  Its just one of Dick’s castoff ‘s, making a fine clump and looking so rosy here due to the unusually cool sprig temps.



One of a half dozen clumps of Iris lacustris'Alba' (they gave me a seedpot full of seedlings!)


Not a single seed pod on any of my Iris lacustris this year.


I'm sure this SDB has a name: tell me Kelly N. if you know!


It does and it’s ‘Boo’.  Though I could not locate the label, I believe I got this beauty from fellow Great Lakes Chapter members John & Laura Serowitz, who are NARGS members as well.  While we’re probably not on par with the Rocky Mountain Chapter when it comes to dual memberships,  the Great Lakes Chapter , like the “kids in Lake Wobegon”is above average.  We have an initiative that we’ll be trying out to promote more dual memberships within our chapter and the National.


Lots of trilliums in front, but get a load of those monster clumps of Podophyllum!


The Podophyllum is a Chen Yi acquisition, again Thanks to John & Laura Serowitz.  For a number of years they placed annual orders to Chen Yi and included many of our chapter members in those orders.

Stylophorum and Trillium grandiflorum pop up everywhere: such weeds!


As I said the Trillium from Dick’s woods really clump up fast!  Once he gave me a BIG clump that he dug from his woods that I divided into 20 separate, 2-3 stemmed plants.


More of those pesky weeds...

Part of a mass several meters across of Iris lacustris!


I still say this is a named form of I. cristata that I got form Holbrook Nursery back in the early 90’s.


Did I mention that Jack-in-the pulpits in a dozen forms were everywhere too?


Arisaema thunbergerii ssp urashima.  Arisaemas are dead easy from seed.  I raised these from a plant I got from Dick,  He had to give me several tubers over several occasions, no not that early spring thing again.  It took several tries to find the right spot for them, out soils are so different, it took a while for me to learn not to copy what Dick, or Tony or Fred were doing, but rather to adapt their practices to the very different conditions in this garden.



And yet once you get the plant established, and you get seedlings growing into and naturally selected to your own garden conditions, well, then you’ll start getting them everywhere they can grow.



Dick received the seed for his A. t. ssp.u’s  from fellow Great Lakes Chapter member Jim Briggs. Jim mailed the seed from Japan years ago, when  he was teaching English there.



Another massive mat of Iris lacustris'Alba'


There are several clones of white-flowered I. lacustrisin circulation.  This one seems to be pretty vigorous, and  it is the one that I had found the seed pods on.  It will be interesting to hear if it seeds true.  This clone was found as a chance seedling growing in the middle of a trail, not far from the Northwestern shore of Lake Huron.



Love this yellow SDB
There is something about pale yellow--just love it! I regret not sniffing it: the smell was undoubtedly lemony...



Me too! Odds are that this came to me from Dick who had a thing for Irises and yellow flowers in particular.  There is a bit of a problem with location labels this time of year.  The causes are two-fold.

First as I said before  I don’t like to see labels in our garden, so I bury them down in the mulch.  Secondly the limestone gravel mulch has set-up like concrete now that the droughts of July are upon us.



Back when these rock garden beds were constructed, I never thought to first lay down a fabric barrier over the ground.  The rock , sand and gravel were hauled in and laid down directly on-top of the clay-loam soil.  The plants really responded to 12 to 18” of lean, well draining soil.   However that changed as over the years, as ants and worms brought  the under-laying clay-loam  up into the sand and mulch.



In the spring and fall when there’s moisture in the surface of  these rockeries, I can scruffel-thru the 3-4” of  the amended mulch and most often come up with a label. Now that the  clay and gravel have dried –up and solidified, it would take a small pick to break up this mixture.



A symphony of foliage and flowers...


A collection of woodlanders.  The Trillium ludovicianum (I think) seeded itself into this tapestry.  It’s parents were “rescued” from a hillside in Northern Georgia.  The timber on those hills was scheduled to be cut for paper.



This one makes the perfect addition to this contrast of foliage with the neighboring Anemone nemorosa ‘Vestal’, A. ranunculoides.



Yet more trillium and poppy--joined here with Primula kisoana...
What a wonderful combo of spring color! Makes me homesick for April and May!

Next...the Thompson Daphne extravaganza!Stay tuned...

Daphneville in Ypsilanti: the Thompson Garden part two....

$
0
0
Daphne cneorum'Pygmaea' and Ranunculus millefoliatus

 
(from Jacques: "Actually this is Daphne x Hendersonii‘Apple Blossom’  and Ranunculus millifoliatusOne of many Daphne’s that were gifts from John Bieber, founder of the Daphne Society.  Can you spot the old plant label in this photo?  It’s well camouflaged.")
 
I have to be honest: I'm taking wild stabs at the names of the daphnes: I know that Jacques and Andrea do label plants in their garden (they went diving and prodding more than one specimen that I'd ask them about and invariably extracted a legible label: quite a trick!)--and I'm sure that they could have done it with many of these daphnes--although they undoubtedly know what many of them are off the top of their heads. Or maybe not--this is not by any means all the daphnes in that expansive garden! Quite a few had bloomed and a few, like oleioides and alpina, had yet to bloom. I think I can honestly say that aside from Arrowhead Alpines--where Brigitta had no end of giant daphnes--I have never seen a better collection more artistically grown than at the Thompson's--which is why they get a blog posting all to themselves!

PLEASE NOTE! Once again I have been very lucky to have Jacques Thompson comment on the pictures in this blog. I have appended his comments in blue! I think you'll enjoy reading them as much as I have!



Yes there is, as yet a reasonable collection of Daphnes here despite the past two winters, ( we’ve lost about a third of our collection).But Daphneville, no, to get to that place one has to take a little drive northwest of here to Don LaFond’s garden.  Last week while I was standing at his kitchen window, looking out at only a tiny portion of his unbelievable garden (those who failed to make the trip to Michigan for this year’s NARGS annual meeting, will  have to make do with the article Award for Alpine Rock Garden in the Summer 2015 Quarterly), I spotted 8 expertly grown specimens, tucked into his truly masterful rockwork.  I know there were twice that number in the same area that were out of my view, blocked by raised beds and his most impressive collection of dwarf and not so dwarf conifers.  Don is a skilled propagator and a generous friend as well, supplying everyone in the Great Lakes Chapter with a limitless supply of rooted Daphne cuttings to add to our gardens.

On the subject of labels; To my taste I find visible labels to be distracting, and often as not, impossible to maintain.  Ill mannered garden visitors pull labels and then invariably fail to put them back where they were,  I once had a non-gardener walk up to me with over a dozen plant labels in his hands that he wanted to ask questions about! 

Then there’s the Corvid’s, those feathered Pack Rats of the bird world, and they have a fetish for decorating their nests with them! So I do my best to hide plant labels by shoving them below the mulch surface, usually along the side a nearby rock. I make my labels out of aluminum, they don’t get brittle, you can get trim coil aluminum white on one side and the other side a color which closely matches the hue of the stone or gravel in ones rockery.  A number 2 lead pencil is all I use and its just about weatherproof.

Daphne cneorum

Unable to find the label, however it doesn’t look like cneorum to me, plus its in a high-rent area (at the top of my tufa wall), for a more-pedestrian cneorum, it could  be D. juliae , or some cool hybrid I got from Ric Lupp.




Daphne x hendersonii
I'm almost willing to guess that this is 'Ernst Hauser'....it looks like mine anyway (if mine were still alive that is).



Nope, it’s Daphne arbuscula ‘Jurasek Select’ in foreground.  Behind the Iris is D. cneorum ‘Benaco’  from Arrowhead Alpines


Daphne x susannae
I am guessing wildly that it is 'Cheriton'. I believe I still have 'Cheriton' alive at least. Although a fraction of this size.



Close,  Daphne x rollsdorfii ‘ Wilhelm Schacht’  from Siskiyou in  05


Daphne x susannae
This reminds me of 'Anton Fahndrich'....unless we're dealing with an x rollsdorfii and it's 'Wilhelm Schacht'...I'm now leaning to the latter as I look at it again.



Daphne Circassica  another John Bieber gift

There is a strong resemblance between this and D. x rollsdorfii ‘Wilhelm Schacht’ in these two images, but its only superficial in reality.  The preceding  D.xr. ‘W Schacht’ has smaller, shiny dark green leaves and is the size of a basketball.  D. circassica is a squat mound, 6” high by 15” across, has dull-flat  grey-green leaves that are considerably wider.


Daphne x hendersonii
I believe this could be a Guiness book of Records x hendersonii: unless it's just cneorum and I misread the leaves? It would be a champion cneorum as well, of course.



There are at minimum 3 Daphnes in this image, all three cneorum’s. There are at minimum 2 pink-flowered D. cneorum’s that were self-seeded.  They have grown up to swamp their parent (D. c. ‘Pygmea Alba’) that previously occupied the entire footprint they now occupy.

That seed-parent(not yet in flower but in bud), shows as the shorter, green foliage, growing between the 2 large rocks in the middle, on the right hand side .  I believe there is even a shoot or two of D.c. ‘P Albasneaking out from under its offspring along the shaded area of the middle rock on the right edge of the photo.

 


Daphne x hendersonii
I'm pretty sure of my I.D. on this...although I'm not sure if it's 'Lupp' or 'Kath Dryden' or another pink variation...



This image is dominated by the winter-damaged foliage of Daphne c.f. arbuscula x verlottii from Mt. Tahoma Nursery in 2000.  It is roughly 5.5ft in diameter by 12-14” tall.  It has mounded over rocks, which makes it appear taller than it really is.


Daphne x hendersonii
This could be 'Aymon Correvon' or even 'Fritz Kummert'...or even 'Marion White': they are all equally lovely...



Photo #8)  Daphne x hendersonii‘Ernst Hauser’ Another Mt. Tahoma purchase planted in 5/05 , so easy and bone hardy. It’s now  a 2ft x 2ft ball.


Daphne cneorum  and Daphne x hendersonii on right
 And here's another champion x hendersonii with its cousin above it...


This image looks back at the route you’ve just taken us.  D. x h.‘Ernst Hauser’ in the forefront followed by a D. cneorum (that is up next).  Continuing back downhill the pathway appears to end at the D. c.f. arbuscula x verlottii, but it veers to the right in order to skirt around the D. c. seedlings & D.c. ‘Pygmea Alba’

At the upper edge of this photo (just a-little right of center), is an old, glazed, fired clay section of drainpipe, which has become a raised container.  To the right of that said container is the green foliage of D. jezoensis v. kamschatensis purchased from Herronswood Nursery in 5/02.  At this writing it’s just starting to drop its leaves (briefly summer dormant),  and tries to starts flowering in mid October.  Not the best Daphne for this climate!

By the way, at your feet (I believe you were standing when you took this shot), at your left heel was D. jasminea Delphi form.


Daphne cneorum
Surely there cannot be many gardens with daphnes like this scattered about with reckless abandon?



 Daphne cneorum‘Winter Gold’

I found this Daphne in the mid 90’s during an outing with my mentor and dearest friend Dick Punnett .  We were scrounging-around at the abandoned nursery of his old mentor Bob Tucker.  Either GM or Willow Run Airport bought Bob out back in the late 70’s or so, but never got around to tearing  down Bob’s house or garden, nor did they fence or post the property.  So from time to time we’d go and see what we could
rescue from his garden beds (I wish we’d made more trips!).   On one
occasion we went out into the fields now overgrown (where he had lined plants out), to see what might be lurking down beneath the overgrowth, turns out quite a bit!  This little bush, (then) with 5 or 6 leggy foot-long stems, was one of several finds.

Once in the open garden this little Daphne took off.  Each winter its leaves turned golden yellow, but stayed on.  Even now during the growing season the leaves have an off color, yellowy-green cast to them.  Bob Stewart of Arrowhead Alpines wanted me to name it ‘Tuckers Sickly Yellow’, but I just couldn’t do that.  I never had the privilege of meeting Bob Tucker, but the Old Guard like Dick and Harry Elkins had nothing but praise for the man.  I did give it the name ‘Winter Gold’ in a very brief  article in one of the Daphne Society’s newsletters.

Last fall, in preparations for the 2015 NARGS meeting and garden tours, I had to cut this plant back about 2ft to get it off the path.
 


Daphne x rollsdorfii
Another wild guess--although I'm not willing to venture a cultivar.



What can I say but, D. x napolitana ‘Bramdean’  Mt. Tahoma  3/07
 


Daphne 'Stasek'
The one and only hybrid I can be positive I'm right on--unless it's a variegated cneorum instead!



Or as listed in Robin White’s monograph, D. x napolitana (?) ‘Stasek’
 

Daphne x schytleri
Not sure which clone of this cross (arbuscula x cneorum) but I'm reasonably sure it's this cross.



I haven’t made up an inventory of Daphnes in the garden since 2005.I show a D. x ‘Schlyteri’ from J. Bieber 8/05 but that was planted into the rockery made of fieldstone.   This is another photo of D.
arbuscula ‘Jurasek Select’ in the tufa bed.  (same plant as in photo # 3.


Daphne x rollsdorfii
Another mystery! Guessing as to the cross.



D. cneorum ‘Benaco’,  It’s the darkest pink flowered D. c. that I know.  (also in photo #3).
 


Daphne x susannae
Possibly 'Cheriton' again or 'Anton Fahndrich' with a wonderful view of the garden, and check out that columnar tree in the distance! What a place...



Close but no, (and another repeat, shown in photo #4).  It’s D x rollsdorfii ‘Wilhelm Schacht’.  However this shows additional Daphnes.  Moving up and right is D. alpina, just leafing out,  and centered in the photo are: D. arbuscula‘Jurasek Select’ and D. c.‘Benaco’ appearing to merge together.
 


Daphne x rollsdorfii
More mounds of fragrant ecstasy!



A miss on the name but you’re spot on with “more mounds of fragrant ecstasy!
I hid this label so well I can’t find it.  I believe this is D. x schlyteri‘Lovisa Maria’, however it could well be a x schlyteri Ric Lupp made and named after his granddaughter’ the name of which escapes me.  Sadly I’ve lost my Journal, which covers the years that included the construction and planting of this phase of the tufa bed.
 


Daphne x arbuscula
I end with this wonderfully tucked specimen of either arbuscula or one of its hybrids. I'm hoping Jacques or Andrea will confirm some of these names. But whatever name you inflict upon them, daphnes are sublime in any form.



Once more your keen editing skills have transformed this winter-damaged eyesore into a little treasure.  This little 12” X 18” holdout is all that’s left of  one of our most impressive looking (once), Daphnes.  I got this from Mt. Tahoma in May of 03 as D. sericea Compact Form.  I put this tiny little thing (and I believe that the best course for success with Daphne’s is to start with very small plants), into the open limestone bed and it’s never dove anything but grow up and out.  It had topped the 30” rocks  around it until it was a 4 ft. mound of pure purple magic. The fall-winter-early spring of 2014-15 just about wiped it out!  Its still a thing of beauty to me, as you’ve done a fabulous job of editing out the crater of missing foliage.
 


I was humbled to see them grow so abundantly and so well. And hope you've enjoyed them too!

A perfect rock garden

$
0
0

(Attention: after publishing this blog, I got a fantabulous email with some elaboration from Jacques and Andrea: it was not intended for me to publish--but I love what they wrote so much I am going to interlard their comments: it's just too wonderful and valuable--and I think should make a great "conversation" between them, myself and you. Their comments will be in blue!...
Jacques and Andrea Thompson live in the fringes of Ypsilanti (a suburb of Detroit). I visited their incredible garden on Memorial Day weekend for a few hours when I took way too many pictures (not all of which are posted here!). I already extracted most of the irises and trilliums and posted those separately, as well as their daphnes. I still had too many pictures...so I took out the garden art and containers (which I shall post separately as well). I weeded out duplicates and the least flattering...but there are still dozens and dozens of images to see...


Start of the Thompson commentary: Your keen eye and much-exercised shutter-finger make this place look better than when one is standing in it!  I will say this, that after going thru and finding what names I could, you have given me cause to reflect about this garden.  From looking at many of the images you’ve posted, that this is a garden in spite of the gardener.

Many of the plants I’ve added over the years have become (in my opinion) weeds, they’ve succeeded that well. That due to the size of the garden I haven’t been able to eradicate them and while I was working elsewhere they’ve been putting on a show for more discerning gardeners to photograph.  You are not the first plants-man who’s selected what I consider weeds to photograph.  Just goes to show that all my taste is in my mouth!



Secondly most of the plants that have persisted have been gifts! Very nice gifts to be sure! While I have spent tens of thousands over the years for a bunch of notations in my journals.  Alas.

Photo #1 Perfect rock gardens don’t have big old dead tree trunks in them with wire scaffolding on them to support winter killed lonicera but I’m nit picking.  This Cornus florida is one of several that came from Dick Punnetts 7 acre garden.  They are native & self so there.
If you never got the opportunity to meet Dick, he was my mentor, my dearest and best friend for over 25 years.  At least 50% of the plant material present is directly due to Dick. To say this garden would not be here without our bromance is an understatement.




Rock and woodland gardens aren't to everyone's taste. But they are very much to my taste: I believe that I have rarely captured a garden at such a magical time: they and their huge staff of zero had the place weedfree and groomed. A large proportion of the plants there were in full bloom (although I start with rather green shots, just wait--this is a season long garden: there will be blooms in summer and fall as well). I have visited well over 100 botanic gardens in North America--and not one of them has been as floriferous or balanced or as well designed as the Thompson garden was last mother's day: we so-called "professionals" have been terribly upstaged by these rank amateurs! Which is a very good reason to join the North American Rock Garden Society. The Thompsons are surely in the first rank of gardeners in this group--but there are others as well around the US and Canada.



Photo #2 Amen about NARGS
  
Anemone trifolia


Photo #3 Another Dick Plant  - DP


Ostrich fern (Matteucia struthiopteris) emering

Glaucidium palmatum


Photo #5 Glaucidium a gift from Don LaFond

Pulmonaria rubra

Stylophorum diphyllulm

Epimedium x sulphureum and Stylophorum diphyllulm in the distance


Photo #8 Epimedium grandiflorum ssp.koreana‘Harold Epstein’ cc 940173 a DP and one of 16 divisions of first rate Epi’s he sent me home with one day, and there were many many days like that.


Asarum caudatum and Stylophorum diphyllulm in the distance

More Epimedium koreanum

Anemonella thalictroides 'Oscar Schoaff'

Paeonia cf anomalum


Photo #12 A fern-leafed peony given to me by Marion Jarvie


Pulsatilla vulgaris (red form)

Photo #13 Pulsatilla vulgaris red form, seed sent to me by a guy in Poland 

Arisaema sikokianum and Anemone blanda and friends

Attenuated Acer


Photo # 15 Acer saccharum‘Monumentalis’.  To see it is to want it. I saw it during an ACS garden tour in Ohio.  Next trip to Gee Farms Nursery I came home with one.  This is exactly how it grows.


Another rock garden view with phlox

A different view

Do we really need captions? will skip unless plant names needed...

Narcissus 'Thalia'

Primula vulgaris (double white)


Photo # 20 Primula vulgaris ‘Dawn Ansell’ ex Siskiyou 3/08

Saxifrage and Ramonda in tufa


Photo # 21 Saxifraga x gloriana ‘Godiva’ a Wrightman’s Alpines purchase.  Harvey used to sell bare rooted cuttings; these were perfect for “greasing” directly onto tufa.


Miniaturized Sempervivum in tufa


Photo # 22 one of many tiny sempervivums from Dick came with out name

Pulmonaria and viburnum

Textures are lovely even without bloom...


Photo # 24 Thalictrum sp. Gift from David Michener from Matthaei Botanical Gardens, he brought this back with him from a trip to USSR. I doubt I can find the label, certainly not until after the foliage dies down.  At first look I thought the geranium was a seedling G.psilostemon that carpets the ground directly behind you when this shot was taken.  A gift from Betty Blake, however the foliage on this one does not look right. So I’ll have to see if I can locate the label.

A mass of Stylophorum diphyllum (native hereabouts)

Hepatica nobilis in a bright blue form

Muscari muscarimi (white) with a blue cousin

Not the showiest Aethionema, but effective combined with the tulip.


Photo # 28 - 29 the Aethionema is some weed that came in with something else from Dick or Arrowhead, I have not been able to weed this out despite concerted efforts.  The tulip is T. linifolia from Brent & Becky Bulbs 9/14


Closer view

Love this Allium altaicum.


Photo # 30 Allium pskemense from Janis Ruksans foliage is peppery-hot to eat!


Trillium recurvatum (a local specialty): forgot to put this in with the Thompson trillium blog...oh well.

Stewartia pseudocammelia: a huge enviable specimen (sorry no close up) I envied this so.

The tree in this photo is Metasequoia glyptostroboides‘Gold Rush’ or ‘Ogon’  same tree. I got mine from Gary Gee.


Photo # 32 You got your notes a little scrambled on this one. Stewartia  koreanais out of the shot to the right and behind the bird feeder.  Some say S. koreana is another S. pseudocammelia.  My own experience in this garden tells me otherwise.

I have tried several pseudocammelias, self-sown seedlings from Dick’s whopping-big one, so they are plenty hardy for our area. And they were 3-4 footers.  They all croaked.  In my clay loam soil, S. koreana I got from Gee Farms seems fine with my higher pH soil and this windy site.  I now have another self-sown seedling from Dick’s garden planted in a much sandier and protected site along the south side of the tall red fence along the north property line.  60 -80 ft. Picea abies to its south, shield it from winter sun.

Cool combos.


Photo #33 -34  Double tulip shown is T.‘Monsella’

From further away: bold couple to plant that double tulip...and it works.

The Euonymus somehow sets off the Cornus florida.


Photo # 35 Euonymus fortunei ‘Emerald N Gold’ started off as a 6” rooted cutting from Betty Blake.  Unfortunately it ‘s covered a cool looking rock.

What wonderful interplays of bloom and foliage and rock!


Photo # 36  A talk could be done on this photo alone.  So many friends, acquaintances, nurseries, represented here.

Paeonia tenufolia from Marion Jarvie, to its right our native Penstemon hirsutus, one on many seedlings, the original one from Tony Reznicek, the red Pulsatilla, seed raised from that guy in Poland, the Aubrieta from Siskiyou, just beyond Meconopsis cambrica seedlings, offspring of a DP, next Trillium cuneatum, self sown there from a very nice form given to us by Steve Whitsell, that is planted 60ft south of here under the Cornus florida.  Go left about a foot and there is self-sown Oxalis acetocella, a  pink flowered form that Tony Reznicek spread around to us.  This show up in all of our shady places with rich soil and sufficient moisture.  Further left still is one of the Anemonella thalictroides‘Schoaf’s Double’ one of the first things I purchased (from Bussee Gardens) after reading about it in “Cuttings from a Rock Garden” by Linc & Timmy Foster.  Above the ‘Schoaf’s Double”, a Helleborus multifidus, yet another DP plant, as are the Epimediums, the Pachysandra terminalis, the Schisandra chinensis, and others we can’t see.  The Berberis thunbergii‘Bonanza Gold’ in the background, most likely from Heronswood.  The Trillium albidum smothered by the Epimedium grandiflorum ssp. Koreana‘Harold Epstein’, comes from Frederick Held ‘s  Nature’s Garden in Oregon, as do the T. chloropetalum.  In the wire cage is a very dwarf rose from Arrowhead Alpines,  between it and the aubrietia is Fritillaria orientalis from Janis Ruksans.  The narcissus with withered blooms probably came from Richard and Elise Havens of Grant Mitch Novelty Bulbs, in Hubard, OR. And the dead sedge seedlings Carex flagellifera‘Bronze’  whose great great great whatever grandparents came from Kurt Bluemel.

In the same bed are others we can’t see like the Erythronium japonicum  one of the very few things I still have from Halda Seeds, Clematis viorna  from NARGS Seed,  Arisaema ringens  from Boots  Case.  The very green form of Trillium lutea a gift from Bob Stewart,  Dewy had sent Bob 3 copies, they were on the top, when he opened the shipment, The tree of us looking down at them and Dick had commented on how different they looked from the rest,  Bob handed one to Dick and one to me, kept the third for the nursery.


A few obligatory Hellebores..you can see a label peeking out here; they're uncommonly tactful. But there.


Photo # 37  Some Helleborus hyb. Seedlings more Marion Jarvie gifts.
I can’t recall the name of the oxalis but its leaves have a heavy substance to them, a distinctive triangular shape, and are quite big and has big white flowers,  I’m thinking it cane from Heronswood but it’ll take further investigating.  The Trillium grandiflorum that’s just starting to open is one of Fred Case’s Doubles, T.g. ‘Pamala Copeland’ It’s a division of the one that came to me via Tony, and that’s a story in itself.  I Divided this clump about a month ago, got to spread em around.


An outrageous Polygonatum from Chen Yi.


Photos # 38 -39 I got this yet another DP as Polygonatum sibericum, Dick got it from Heronswood.  This is a tough site with severe root competition from the big Picea abies, and so can get droughty.  And yet this thing goes to about 5 ft. here and sets copious amounts of seed.


Closer view

Epimedium ? davidii (there were many forms)


Photo # 40 You could be right about the Epimedium but there’s no telling, so many things dug out of Dick’s garden cane with bonuses tucked in among the roots.


A fabulous double Anemone ranunculoides


Photo # 41 like so many of the anemones this is another DP

A large patch of Papaver alpinum naturalized...


Photo # 42 Papaver alpinum holds a very sweet and tender spot for me.

It comes to our garden via a dozen seed capsules from the garden of Betty Blake.  I met Betty at Matthaei Botanical Gardens where I volunteered so I could be around plants as I had moved from across the State and I was renting so no garden.  Eventually I was the Spring Plant Sale Coordinator this was in 83-84 Tony was the assistant director at Matthaei then as well as working at the herbarium,  Betty was in charge of the rock garden plants. This was still 2-3 years before Tony introduced me to Dick, Before I crossed over to alpines, and fell in with the likes of Fred Case, and Jim Briggs, Harry Elkins and Leila Bradfield and so many others who would become the core of my

world.   Before Tony and Dick, Betty was such a patient and generous teacher, who always sent one loaded with treasures.  In her closing years I visited her every 2-3 weeks and called her weekly.  I

deer-hunted in her garden and there’s tales to tell there.   With these poppies she is always near by.

White form of Lunaria rediviva


Photos #43 -44  Lunaria rediviva, these are seedlings of the original plant that Tony probably brought to a Great Lakes Chapter plant sale.
Currently the seedpods look good but still green.  I have not forgotten to send you some seeds.


Love this pale Anemone x seemanii


Photo # 45 Anemone x seemanii.   One of the most asked about plants during the garden tours. As I said most of the anemone came in as bonus plants with other dick Plants.  So many threaders wove a carpet throughout Dick’s woodland garden beds.  The weed in the middle is all mine.





Photo #46 The Petasites japonica is a DP. (Dick Punnett) the geranium looks exactly like the mystery geranium shown earlier on the tufa, which is directly west of this one and so down wind, hmmm, still no name.  The Night Heron figures are from my mom as are just about all the garden art.





Photos #47 – 48 Another composite of shared memories.   Already discussed A. x seemanii, Tulipa sylvestris from Betty, and she introduced me to frits and gave me my first F. pallidflora, Trillium kurabayashii and Corydalis solidas beneath, came from Ruksans, the Oxalis acetocella arrived with any one of the plant that came from a Great Lakes Chapter member, but introduced to the group by Tony.   The white flowered disporum ( D. cantoneuse– Chen Yi spelling) is battling with 
Disporum uniflora, which Fred Case gave or put into a chapter plant sale.



Add caption

Dicentra eximia or formosa forms


Photo # 50 Dicentra from DP. Rhody is  a yak ‘Ken Janek’  from Roslyn Nursery

Disporum uniflorum (formerly flavum)

Disporum uniflorum (formerly flavum) closeup




Could this be a mere juniper? A pleasant palette cleanser from all lthe color!



Photo # 53 No juniper this is Paxistima canbyi  a plant I introduced to the group so it most likely came from an east or west coast nursery, maybe Forest farm  or Roslyn no wait I believe it came from Eastern Plant Specialties out of Maine.  Wow I pulled that one from way back!  I think I hurt my sphincter.
 
Rheum palmatum in a dark form


Photo # 54 Rheum palmatum (Atrosanguineum)  from Heronswood 3/2003





Photo # 56 Sedum Angelina gold.
A honking big Abies koreana'Horstmann's Silberlocke'


Photo # 57 – 58 Abies koreana ‘Silver Show’  an improvement on ‘Horstman’s Silberlocke”


Abies koreana 'Horstmann's Silberlocke' closeup


A magnificent mystery peony

Photo # 59  Magnificent mystery peony is P. ‘Early Scout’ at least that’s what dick gave it to me as.  He got his from  Reath’s Peonies out of Vulcan MI. in the U.P. !


bloodroot seed about to pop!

A magnificent clump of river birch (Betula nigra)


Photos # 61 – 62 Betula nigra  this clump needs to be cut to the ground again.  It sprouts from the stump and you get much better looking bark from the younger trunks.  I did so about 15 years ago.

See what I mean? with the garden beyond




Photos # 63  way in the back where the sand comes up to the surface and I can grow Rhodies like these yaks they were seedlings Dick raised.





Photo # 64  Isopyrum biternatum  wild collected from an abandoned sandstone quarry about a 2 hr. drive NW of here.


Lamiastrum goleobdolon at the fringes of the garden (where it belongs!)


Photos 65 -66 Lamiastrum goleobdolon   if you say so, I have no idea this hitched a ride with something else and as its way back here I’ve let go but I’ll probably regret doing so as I run out of room.  May have come in with the Berberis (see black cane to left), stoloniferous Berberis division came from Dick who got it from Tony.



Mertensia virginica

A gnarly old Picea abies'Pygmaea' (I think)


Photo # 69 Picea abies ‘Little Gem’  On the first conifer order from Robert & Dianne Fincham’s Coenosium Nursery.




Photo # 70 Self-sown geranium hyb.  Crossed with our native G. maculatum





Photo # 72 Close up of Fagus sylvatica‘Horizontalis’ foliage

Geranium carolinianum

Photo # 73 One of countless Geranium (I thought) maculatum seedlings .

I selected the largest flowered forms  from a woods about 5 miles NNW of our Garden.



Photo # 74 Arisaema sikokianum  very first plant from Roberta (Boots) Case who gave me my first Arisaemas  I still have My A. ringens from her, it must be 25-28 yrs. old now.   Later others came from Arrowhead Alpines.  Now I raise them by the hundreds.
On and on it goes! I can't keep up with captions!

Photo # 75  Juniperus procumbens nana.  There are several large (across) specimens in the garden, all were rooted cuttings from Dick. The Arabis (flowering ) also from Dick.

Adiantum venustun

Photo # 76 Adiantum venustum  this mat, which is starting to recover from its winter nap, measures about 12 ft. in diameter, with a Pinus strobus at its center (not shown in the following photos.  This fern started off as a little division, another of Betty’s little treasures.



Photo #77  Same bed, now east side of Adiantum mat.  The Corydalis nobilis self sow.

First one a gift from Tony or a plant he donated to the Chapter’s plant sale that I purchased.




Photo # 78  Same bed however across the path (west) from previous photos.  It was in this bed that the Oxalis acetosella  pink flowered form was first planted.  As I said earlier Tony introduced it to the group, he got it from the first owners of Rice Creek Nursery.


Photo # 88  Thalictrum coreanum  I have no recollection of just who gave this to me but the usual suspects are Betty, Tony, or Dick.



Photo # 89  I grew this peony from Archibald’s  Seed as P. mlokosewitchii from pink flowered forms.  As I recall he collected the seed from a botanical garden in the country of Georgia.  I’d have to check my seed lists.



Photo # 90  Another seed raised peony. Paeonia suffruticosaGansu mudan type. I got the seed from Phedar Nursery in England. I won the gift certificate as a door prize or a can raffle prize at the NARGS meeting in Snow Bird UT. In '06.  This one is one of my most favorites.  Its raspberry pink petaled with a purple-black blotch at the base.



Photos # 91 - 92 Epimedium acuminatum  with emerging Syneilesis palmata.




Photo # 93 Epimedium grandiflorum‘Sirius’ cc 920024 ( I believe )



Photo # 94 A study in white and yellow. E.g. ‘Sirius’ over  receding Corydalis solida foliage,   balanced by blossoms of Leucojum vernum,Trillium flexipes, and Stylophorum diphyllulm.  The bent wire supports in the garden are usually for various Lilies, however in this instance they are for the largest of the Arisaema consanguineum, which will follow later on.  Those arisaemas will come in such numbers as to completely smother everything in this area.


A garden without thistles is sad indeed!

Photo # 96 Eryngium giganteum‘Miss Willmott’s Ghost’  These second year bi-annual’s are perhaps twenty something generation plants so I’m not sure they are correctly named.  Regardless I have a thing for BIG WEEDS in the garden.




Photo # 98 Tufa under weeds. (I think Jacques is being a bit unkind here: those "weeds" are all manner of veronicas and other choice groundcovers)



Photo # 99  Rheum sp.  A gift from John & Laura Serowitz.  There will be no finding this label until after the foliage dies down.  Corydalis ornata foliage peeking out from beneath will not be visible for much longer.  This corydalis has milk white flowers with a very heavy substance.




Photo # 100  That  same Thalictrum sp. That David Michener brought back from his trip to the USSR.  It does seed about (sparingly).



Photo # 101 Arisaema thunbergii var, urashima.  These are seed raised form my own plants.  I got my first ones from DP, he raised his from seed that Jim Briggs (another Great Lakes Chapter member) sent him  over 30 yrs. Ago when he was teaching English in Japan.



Photo # 102  A Dysosma sp. From Chen Yi, the Trillium grandiflorum’s are DP divisions,  the Cornus alternifolia‘Golden Shadows’ was a gift from Don LaFond.



Photo # 103  the ubiquitous Oxalis acetocella, with a Helleborus multifidus seedling.  (seed came from Phedar Nursery).  The fern was a gift from local nurseryman Andy Duvall.  He picked it up at a nurseryman’s meeting, it came with a label that reads Temple fern ‘Trudi’.



Photo # 104 Allium victorialis ssp. victorialis.  Seed-raised from Chapter member Bev Walters plant.


Photo # 105 Oxalis acetocella ever-colonizing with it’s eyes on a dwarf Chamaecyparis.
Polygala vayredae (not often seen)
Photo # 106 Polygala vayredae from Arrowhead Alpines, another plant that Dick added to their inventory.



Photo # 107 Callianthemum anemonoides. (PK adds that I photographed this entirely for my own interest: I've not been able to grow callianthemums very well, and was impressed to see this husky specimen--a month or so past prime: I think I just missed it on my first visit earlier),,,



Photo # 108 – 109 Sedum pilosum  another little treasure from Betty.

Sedum pilosum self-sowing (not often seen!)



Photo # 110  Phlox sp. I haven’t found its label, will have to consult the journals.  Behind are another weedy allium I am still trying to weed out, these have since been pulled.  The veronica is another old mistake, and one that gets regular tearing out but always returns.



Photo # 111  The viburnum was elsewhere on the property when  we arrived.  The dead magnolia was M‘Galaxy’, the rest are weeds !  Oh yeah perfect garden!



Photo # 112 Daphne arbuscula



Photo # 113  Another D. arbuscula selection in the foreground then Gladiolus 'Polestarfoliage emerging thru recedingCorydalis solida leaves.  The next Daphne, I’ll have to get back to you on, but its one of Ric Lupp's.  There are two sempervivums battling it out to see who will reign the top of this section of tufa bed, both from Dick (sans names) the red one will turn pale, lime-green in late summer.  Across the path is  a dark purple form of Allium insubricum, I was hoping for A.narcissiflorum, but them aren’t we all.



The low shrubby mound on the right is my very first Daphne D. alpina from Betty.

The tall spire of a conifer was called Chamaecyparis nootkatensis‘Van der Aker’,  but nootkatensis have been moved into some xantho-something-or-other, the likes of which that makes mlokosewitschii just roll off your tongue.  The bare tree is a vet to leaf out Robinia pseudoacacia‘Frisia’.



Photo # 114 Gentiana acaulis  ex. Arrowhead Alpines



Photo # 115  The usual alpine subjects, Saxes, Dianthus, alpine poppy,  Daphne velonovskyi, Semps, et al.



Photo # 116 There is a black plastic fishpond buried under here.  The downspout from the gutters is piped out at the base of the tufa wall (behind you), into a shallow depression and then piped under the gravel path (you are standing on), and empties into this bog-ish bed. I’d have to pull the Primula a part to find the label.




Photo # 117 Thuja occidentalis‘Yellow Ribbon’ sans any kind of winter burn, which is more than can be said for the yellow needled Taxus next to it.


Photo # 118 Aquilegia flabellata v. nana ex. Laporte Avenue Nursery.  The conifer above and to the left is Thuja occidentalis ‘Golden Tuffet’



Photo # 119 Iris lacustris‘Alba’  wild collected from the northern lower peninsula,  along with Iris x histrioides  ‘Katherine Hodgkin’foliage and Trillium nivalis.  I warn everyone who asks for Stylophorum seed that it’ll be everywhere, but it is easy to pull.



Photo # 120 Cypripedium x andrewsii (C. candidum x C. parviflorum).

Ranunculus cheiranthifolius: a Thompson specialty!

Photo # 121 I got this from Dick as Ranunculus millifoliatus a lifetime ago, its tiny bulb-lets  get scattered about.
A wonderful Clematis hirsutissima

Photo # 122  Clematis hirsutissima, as all of the western clematis in the garden comes from Kirk and Karen at Laporte Avenue.



Photo # 123 Phlox subulata and Allium cernuum out of control …



Photo # 124 While Pulsitilla vulgaris holds its line.



Photo # 125  This plant alone (in flower)is worth a return trip. Just a week away form opening here, had it been, it would have been the most asked about plant in the garden.  I raised this from Archibald’s Seed, and I never pass on getting more seed whenever I find it.  This is the Real Deal, Paeonia mlokosewitschii!  Colchicums love our heavy limey soil and the hostas (H. ‘Sun Power’) and Eremuris himalaicus don’t complain either.



Photo # 126  a stray Magnolia‘Elizabeth’ in the forefront, with Allium or Nectaroscordum tripedale, shooting up behind and to the left.



Photo # 127 Anemonella thalctrioides‘Schoaff’s Double’  in much need of dividing.  “Keep dividing or you’ll lose em” was an oft-quoted Betty-ism.  Carex siderostricha ‘variegata’ is on the more.

Helleborus multifidus (DP), Oh so very slowly, grows.


Photo # 128 Anemone nemorosa‘Vestal’,  one of the first DP gifts.



Photo # 129 I believe this is Epimedium grandiflorum‘Silver Queen’ above some out of flower Anemone ranunculoides.


Photo # 130 If this is the same plant as the previous image then it's Epimedium grandiflorum ssp. koreana ‘Harold Epstein’  with faded flowers.



Photo # 131  Berberis thunbergii‘Bonanza Gold’  getting a little too shaded for maximum leaf coloring.




Photo # 133 – 134  Dwarf Quercus  palustris  wild collected from western Washtenaw Co. in a sandstone trough, a lone Viola pedata.




Photo # 135 Arum italicum  patch.  A squirrel or chipmunk buried an entire seed-head and I never did get around to doing anything about it.



Photo # 136 A Smilax (perhaps S. rotundifolia) got seeded in with some hostas. It hasn’t misbehaved in the dozen or so years its been here.  Just another example of gardening by benevolent neglect.



Photo # 137 Early Nature’s Garden purchases which have succeeded to the point of becoming weeds.



Photo # 138  More (emergent) Arisaema thunbergii var. urashima This clump (once its up) will be the sinister-looking Black Flowered Form.



Photo # 139  A mess-O-foliage, emerging Kirengeshoma palmata, self-seeded native geraniums, Erythronium americana,  seedling Dicentra spectabilis ex ‘Gold Heart’, Frit. meleagris, et al.



Photo # 140  This  shot is back in the narrow bed along the west side of the house.  I believe the Anemone nemorosa shown is one that came from Janis Ruksans with the improbable name of A.n.‘Fire and Ice’, the Erythronium leaves belong toE.  x ‘Pagoda’



Photo # 141  This Cypripedium parviflorum ssp parviflorum was one of hundreds that were rescued from a road-widening project in the U.P. It now resides in the same bed as the previous photo.



Photo # 142  Back to the front of the house.   Lower left to right,  A seedling  Asarum europaeum, one of countless native geranium seedlings,  more European ginger with Erythronium americanum behind, Kirengeshoma palmata coming up with Dicentra spectabilis in front, next a white flowered Helleborus hyb. More native geranium s with Lycoris squamigera foliage  (I think) and finally a Paeonia suffruticosa. 


Photo # 143 Winter-killed Magnolia soulangeana ‘San Jose’ with a Stylophorum skirt.  Another BIG WEED although just a seedling, of Heracleum maculatum, center left and another weedy filler Hesperis matronalis, and of course the star of the garden, at least to the gardener



Photo # 144  Mixed border west of the pond.  Lilies, sedum, and narcissus, and then Chamaecyparis pisifera‘Mops’, next Pinus strobus 'nana',  then Fagus sylvatica v. purpurea‘Pendula’ with a complement of colchicums, and another Berberis thunbergii ‘Bonanza Gold’, in front of another Thuja occidentalis ‘Yellow Ribbon’, followed by a Pinus strobus ‘Pendula,  sedum ‘Angelina’ lights up the front edge of the bed, and a spreading mound of Juniperus procumbens 'nana' finishes the other end.


Sorry I gave up the commentary:I am grateful Jacques took the time to complete and complement the commentary this garden is simply too much! It even wore me out. But I am delighted to have this of a record of the most enchanting garden visit imaginable. Don't even THINK of going to Detroit without giving them a call and visiting.e commentary: this garden is simply too much! It even wore me out.
Viewing all 805 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images