Monday, July 30, 2012

If You Love It

"If you love it, set it free."  Or something like that was a flag statement during the make love not war 1970s.  The idea is if something is free, it will return when it realizes it has a choice.  OK, we've all seen how well that works with teenagers...

This year (granted this year is odd on many gardening levels) I've been surprised by many a plant thought long gone only to have it pop up and put on a show.

I buy cheap gladiolas bulbs because I'm typically so sick of gardening by early November there is no way I'll get out there in the semi slush of cold weather and dig them up.  I figure they rot and become a compost of sorts (rationalization is ever a friend of the lazy gardener.)

This year there are glads popping up willy~nilly in most every garden bed where they've been planted over the years.  Even in places where we now mow, a three-some popped through (thank you husband for not mowing the first sprouts).    Because those beds have changed so much over the years, the glads are nestled between and among, but, pretty never-the-less.

Violas and cleomes have self seeded in every little crack among the stones and bricks of the back walks.  The cleomes even self seeded in an old wash pot I'd forgotten to empty of soil last year.  Both have tiny seeds that manage to lodge in minute cracks and push a piece of cement aside as if it was nothing.

I have sunflowers blooming where the grass has gone dormant.  Tough little beauties.

The year we had to replace our north basement wall, all the soil was back-hoed out, piled high and then refilled in construction guy manner.  Top soil was mixed with soil that had laid in place since the house was built over a hundred years ago.  Nothing should have survived.  While we let the ground settle for the rest of the year, to our surprise up pops an array of cannas.  How did they survive?  How did they manage to be replanted near enough to the top to make it push through?  How fun!

Another bulb made a surprise visit the year I decided the tacky old bathtub water feature was going - going - gone!  It had never lived up to the vision although the toads loved the mosquito breeding ground.  I had planted a couple of cheap elephant ears.  They did especially well because I would empty the goldfish poo poo water on them about once every two weeks.  After serious reconstruction to fill the hole left by the tub and landscape, up pops the elephant ear to make a repeat performance.  Elephant ears are very tender and should not have survived the weather let alone all the disturbing.

Morning Glories and a lone little sweet potato vine have emerged to brighten the summer. 

Have you ever had the accidental success of a repeat?  I'm sure it was all the peace and love!

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Annual Business

It’s beginning that time of the year when we can be thankful for the annuals we’ve planted.  Whether in pots or in the ground, they’re just now reaching their best.  Meanwhile in the perennial corner, most are about done blooming and beginning to look tattered.  It’s especially true this year where most all plants are suffering with drought conditions.

I tried something new in my shaded flower pots:  Totally planted with coleus.  Typically, I stick with all impatiens.  Impatiens grows to form late summer lushness.  I’m good with lushness.  They also take an enormous amount of watering in the fall, fertilizer and pinching back.

Coleus has been hybridized into so many beautiful colors, patterns and sizes.  My current determination is they also take a lot of watering, but, can die from too much water.  The bigger leafed ones can break in high winds.  If they are to remain compact, the tops must be pinched.  OK – a little different care than I’m used to performing. 

On the scale of beauty and the look I was wanting, the coleus makes a much larger statement especially when several distinctive types are grouped.  I do rather miss my impatiens and how they get a second wind late in the fall.   Their light parfait-looking flowers are pretty scrumptious.

The other new thing I tried is the entire front row of my new raised garden bed was planted with cannas and gladiola bulbs.  Since I couldn’t put landscape fabric over bulbs, I figured it was the perfect place to plant some real old fashioned annuals.

This is going to be a riot of color.  My Cannas are red and the glads are multi colored.  Coming up from seed is four-o-clocks, bachelor buttons, nasturtiums, and cosmos.  They fill in nicely around the bottom of the bulb plants.

Four-o-clock flowers are multi colored bright pinks, yellows and whites.  As the name suggests, they open late afternoon.   Foliage is dark green and the plant forms an 18 inch bush.

Bachelor buttons have light moss green strap-like leaves with white, pink or cornflower blue flowers.  They grow to about 24 inches and continue to bloom until frost.  They do well in a vase. 

Nasturtiums are low growing and this particular variety has variegated leaves.  Their flowers are shades of orange, yellow, and red.  Nasturtium flowers are also edible in fresh salad or with seafood.  They last a long time in a vase.

Cosmos have medium green lacy foliage and can be short or up to 30 inches.  They also come in a variety of bright colors and white.  For years I had cosmos self seed and then one year they were gone.  It’s going to be nice to see them in the garden bed and to pick for vases.

In another area of the gardens, cleomes have self seeded and just coming into their own.  Beautiful heads of white, pink and purple on top of 36 inch stalks. 

The birds have spread sunflower seeds in various unsuspecting places much to the joy of me and all the little goldfinches attracted to the seeds heads as they mature.  All of these annuals are loved by birds and bees.  

I’ve planted all these annual seeds in years past and I must say I’m glad they’ve returned.   At a time when perennials are ready to call it quits, they leave no doubt why people still indulge in annuals.

If I squint, I can imagine my entire yard is lush with beautiful blooming flowers and healthy green foliage.  Narrow that squint and I don’t see the effects of the drought conditions.  Annuals can be a little paradise in the dessert. 

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

S4P


Sucker Assortment           4    

Sucker for punishment!  I know - not the most inspired graphics and I spent so much time searching the web for these pictures that I forgot what I was trying to illustrate.  I'm blaming it on one of my huge HUGE sinus infections.  Aside from getting to sleep all day in the air conditioning, it pretty much takes all my brain matter and turns it to mush. 

I may have reached a plateau this year:  I'm growing less fond of July.  Getting up at 4:00 am to take garden pictures, so as not to go into heat stroke, has lost it's charm (did it ever have charm?)

Looking at the front porch (facing south) thermometer and it reads 105 degrees, is just wrong for Illinois.

My rain gauges have more Japanese Beetles in them than water and sets a bad omen for crops.

Buying a hibiscus bush last week was either an exercise in optimism or just plain crazy.  I'm already watering too much and  I'm loosing this battle.  Have you ever noticed the sound of water being sucked into parched ground is the same sound as money being sucked into a black hole?

Apparently, some things are going to die.  We've lost a pine and others are either being forced into an early fall, their shedding leaves to conserve water or their coughing up their last hurrah.

"J" adjusting well to AC
Bitsey, my little cat, doesn't take the heat well.  Left out too long and she will be crying and panting.  Left outside too long, I'll be crying and panting  Even our outside cat, "J", has decided she is pretty good with being inside for awhile.

Have you noticed if we have a 85 degree day, people are high fiving the blast of arctic air?

Do residents of the humid and hot areas of this world suffer and complain like we do in July?  Are they tougher? Acclimated?  Thinner blood? 

Is it harder to tolerate the hot weather because we have become so used to air conditioning? 

Are we simply not made from the tough genes are ancestors were made and have become a society of mambly pambly wimps.  (OK that was seriously a brain mush statement I'm crediting to William Shatner in Boston Legal.)

To add to my thinly veiled complaining:  Blogs are now being attacked under the guise of "let's all be friends".  Someone writes a comment on a blog article that goes something like this:  "I love your blog and think you will love mine, too.  I will add your blog to mine and you do the same."  Note that I have written this quote using the correct English grammar which is never the case.  Their blogs have nothing to do with gardening, and have only one purpose.  Every time someone clicks on their blog site, they receive money.  Yeah, let's be friends and I make money off you.

Now back to S4P - I still have no idea but I'm not taking the pictures off this story because I'm hot and cranky and taking azithromygin (I know you don't care the name but just wanted to type it out because it sounds like some kind of moonshine).     

Wonderful World

Coneflower

Daylily "White Temptation"


Shasta Daisies
Sweet Autumn Clematis

Hollyhock

Bee Balm





Thought I'd just add a few pretty pictures with no real theme. Louis sum it up well, "What a wonderful world"!  Click on this YouTube version to enjoy while browsing the pages.





What a wonderful world - LOUIS ARMSTRONG.
www.youtube.com

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Fifteen is Good

I once announced: "You can really never have enough daylilies."  As our fifteenth grandchild is born, I can announce: "You really never can have enough grandchildren."


I'm always on the lookout for daylilies (pretty daylilies) with a name at least close to that of my family.  I have one bed devoted to these; called the "family bed".  The "family bed" name can raise a few eyebrows until it's understood just what it contains.   

Since the criteria is names, the colors have no rhyme or reason.  It's a wild uncoordinated mess of daylilies that I love.  It's located right off the screened in porch and enjoyed the entire daylily season.

Every morning, I head out bright and early to deadhead and take pictures.  It's fun to note, "Oh Betty is blooming so pretty today."  OK if that puts me officially into crazy old lady - so be it!  Here are a few of my "family bed" daylilies that have performed really well this dry hot summer.

Bryan Paul Daylily
Donny Delight Daylily


Katisue Daylily
Lunar Max Daylily


Megan's Love Daylily
Siloam Betty Woods Daylily
Susie Wong Daylily
Timeless Grace
  And we are expecting our sixteenth grand baby this week.  I'm just sure sixteen is better!

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Gardenstock 2012

Save August 18, 2012 for a road trip to Distinctive Gardens, 2020 Lowell Park Road, Dixon IL for the 4th Annual "Gardenstock".  (11 AM to 11 PM).  Copied the following from their fb page:

Gardenstock Page: www.facebook.com/Gardenstock Get ready to rock your heart out with the fourth annual Gardenstock Art and Music Festival benefiting the Sinnissippi Center’s Gardening Program. Bring a chair and cooler or sample scrumptious offerings from local drink a...nd food vendors. Make yourself at home while you listen to bands ranging from folk, to bluegrass, and rock. Wander the art festival grounds and check out the best in local creativity. A nominal donation at the gate gets you in for the day. Information online: www.distinctivegardensinc.com

Bands:

11:00 - 12:00 Chuck Gall
12:15 - 1:15 Flying Fish
1:30 - 2:30 Lojo Russo
2:45 - 3:45 Carsick Radio
4:00 - 5:00 Wrong Element
5:15 - 6:15 Route 88
6:30 - 7:45 Robbie LeBlanc & the Real Live Show
8:00 - 9:30 Australian Blues Guitarist, Gerry Joe Weise
9:45 - 11:00 Acoustic Circus

Artists and Veteran Gardenstockers:

Jewels, Kimberly Clark and Heather Houzenga, graphic artists, Chuck Cook and Jesey Nicholson, painters, Tim Drane, Maureen Gazek, Ken Reif, Emily Garcia, and Deb Cleary, sculptor, Paul Algueseva, basket-maker, Linda Hinklemann, and photographers, Brian Lutz, Tina Rockwell, and Chris McCormick. New artists include: photographer Kurt Schmidt, jewelers Sasha Tweel, Natalie Picchi, Kristin Jones, Judy Gregory Gonzalez, Ellen Repass, mixed media artist, Brittany Waterhouse, painter, Sarah Wells, and ceramicist, Bob Milano. There will be a live “Pour Painting” demonstration by Tim Drane during the day.


Food:

Mama Cimino's
Baker Street Cafe
Sow Belly's
Salamandras
 
 

Monday, July 16, 2012

Farming Fun

This has been going around the net for a few weeks.   BUT just in case you haven't seen it, turn up the sound and boogie with some pretty darn cute farm boys.  Good message and good fun!