Showing posts with label acanthus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label acanthus. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Bloom Day, May 2012

May is certainly the month Longview Ranch bursts into flower. In addition to some long-blooming shrubs, many perennials are now doing their spring thing, adding eclectic color and texture to the mix.

I love Ceanothus, but for space reasons I had only one for years. Recently, I found Ceanothus 'Joan Mirov', a lower-growing smaller-leaved variety with deep blue flowers. It's still in its nursery pot, but lovely in bloom!

Ceanothus thyrsiflorus 'Victoria' is much closer to bloom, but right now it still looks about like I showed it in April, with a couple of open blossoms sprinkled here and there.

Regular readers of this blog know I am not a big fan of the hybrid tea roses I inherited with the garden. But to document, and for the Mulch Man, who is quite fond of them, here are two just coming into bloom along our sidewalk.


I'm more enthusiastic about several other roses I actively grow.  A semi-climber, 'Sally Holmes' is just beginning to bloom across our wide brick chimney.

 I found a ladybug helping keep the aphids in check on 'Sally'.



My other sentimental rose is 'Perle d'Or', a polyantha rose given to us years ago as a cutting by Great Aunt Jenny. It's a pretty peachy-pink color, with slim, strappy center petals.


The story goes that Great Uncle Carleton would tuck one of its perfect little rosebuds in his lapel each morning on his way to work as a railway conductor.


We're awash in a sea of Helianthemum. The dark orange flowers are 'Henfield Brilliant' and the apricot-colored flowers are 'Cheviot'.

Trachycarpus fortunei has six blooms this year. Later, when they have completely unfolded, I'm planning a separate post on these strange and unearthly flowers.

Potentilla 'McKay's White has popped.



Lewisia cotyledon, a sweet PNW native.


Helianthemum 'Ben Nevis'.


Sedum spathulifolium 'Cape Blanco'.


Sedum spurium 'Tricolor'.


The inherited Camellia japonicas are still in bloom. This is their second Bloom Day appearance this year. They can't last much longer, especially with the hot, dry weather we have this week.


Enjoying an even longer run are Vaccinium ovatum 'Thunderbird', the evergreen huckleberries. This is their third consecutive Bloom Day in full flower.


The last few fresh flowers on the Cornus 'Eddies White Wonder'.

In the rain earlier this month, it was a frothy little wedding cake of blossoms.


I love the way the Calla lilies peek over the window so I can even see them when I'm sitting inside.

Penstemon subserratus (Fine-tooth Penstemon), a Pacific Northwest native adding welcome color to the mostly green "Northwest Territory" area of our garden.

Cistus x obtusifolius, loving the sun.

After four long years in the garden, I was getting a little cranky about lack of bloom on the Acanthus mollis. Finally this year, flower spikes! All is forgiven.

And last, in anticipation of fresh snap peas, I show some quiet but deliciously promising pea flowers.

Click over to visit our host Carol, at May Dreams Gardens, to see what else is blooming this lovely May day.

Happy Bloom Day!



Thursday, February 11, 2010

The first spring garden show of 2010

I've been slow at posting about the Northwest Flower and Garden Show I attended last Wednesday in Seattle.
First, I've had no time.
Second, I pulled a rank amateur move and ran out of battery power after about a dozen pictures. (So that's what that flashing little red icon was for. I thought it was telling me to use the flash!)

But I figured I'd better get a few impressions committed to "print" before my personal memory chips were dazzled by the next show, the Yard Garden and Patio show beginning tomorrow.

I was particularly taken by one of the display gardens by Susan Calhoun of Plantswoman Design. Her garden was called Swimming a la Naturale. Skinny dipping, right? But no, she had a natural pool filtered by a plant-filled bog, so no chlorine was needed. It's supposed to be good for people and animals alike, and must be better for the plants that surround it. I loved her choice of plants around the pool.
Just look at this little dark reddish-brown conifer and the manzanita species beside it.

The echeveria and the coprosma 'tequila sunrise' made a great warm purple combination.

The pond was supported and surrounded by a gridded iron enclosure containing stones, like the ones you see along the highway when there have been rock slides. I liked the muscular, industrial look of the structure, topped by contrasting gentle foliage.

I think this is rhododendron sinogrande. I know I'd want it around my pond.

Strong color contrasts seemed to be a hallmark of this year's display gardens.

And the gardens were lit very dramatically to enhance the contrasts.

This garden had wonderful rusted steel "batons" that provided great vertical interest and a nice repetitive element. There were a dozen or so and they were about five feet tall. Nice!



More color, but with gentler contrast. Looks like rhododendron PJM with its bronzy-red, small leaves.

These three colorful pots made a fabulous fountain.
The very first plant I saw upon entering the Convention Center was this amazing variegated acanthus. It's 'Tasmanian Angel', and the grower also has one called 'White Water' that's a bit creamier.

Want.

Textural contrasts were in good supply, too. I have to say I fell in love with this gorgeous combination of papyrus, rhododendron leaves and (I think) echium.

This beautiful 'Yellow Wave' flax mocked me, as I thought of my poor garden specimens languishing flat on the ground at home. But it was beautiful, surrounded by crinkly purple heuchera.

I finally saw a 'Chief Joseph' pine. What a breathtaking yellow for an evergreen!

A Golden Hinoki cypress (camaecyparis obtusa 'Aurea'). The shades of gold and brown on its scales (technically, they're not leaves) were not to be believed.

I want to leave you with this lively, yet soothingly zen image. In the Pacific Northwest in winter we have lots of moss...so we might as well love it!
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