Thursday, July 23, 2009

Mystery solved -- and yet, I'm not happy

Three years ago, I joyfully purchased an Annabelle Hydrangea for the front garden. It was one of those things I'd wanted for years: "One day, when I have a house and a garden, I'm going to have an Annabelle Hydrangea."

So I researched it, bought one, planted it, nurtured it, did everything I could do provide it with the right environment and make it happy. I waited for it to bloom. Nothing happened.
I pruned it sharply the following spring, as one is supposed to do with Annabelle Hydrangeas. Nothing happened. Just this big, overgrown green montrosity sitting beside the front steps. I went online and found gardening forums and asked why it mightn't be blooming. One person had the answer: Maybe it was mislabelled. Try not cutting it back in the spring. So in 2008, I did not cut it back. It got bigger, and bigger, and bigger, and finally I saw buds on it! But the buds didn't do much of anything; the odd individual flower bloomed, but the rest of the head remained sort of fuzzy and then it went to seed.
All summer, everywhere I went, I'd see Annabelle Hydrangeas in bloom. Everything for gorgeous, luxuriant shrubs to puny, spindly, pathetic-looking things in earth you could only call dirt, wholly neglected...and every single one of them was in spectacular bloom.

All winter I threatened to dig it out, but in the end I didn't have the heart. Instead, this spring I cut it back again. A few days ago, it started to bloom. It looks like this (on the left; it's supposed to look like the picture on the right):
Suddenly I thought "Lacecap Hydrangea?" and looked it up. The site from where I got this picture, http://www.hydrangeashydrangeas.com/annabelle.html, says:

"I often hear from gardeners whose Annabelle blooms will not fully develop. They report that the blooms are a flat, lacecap type bloom, which is not typical of 'Annabelle'. Sometimes these blooms are described as "fuzzy." I believe that these hydrangeas that were supposed to be 'Annabelle' are really a wild type arborescens. Some of these hydrangeas are quite beautiful in their own way, but they are usually not what the gardener had in mind. This is the reason for purchasing Annabelle (or any hydrangea for that matter) while it is blooming."

Sure, now you tell me. It's still mostly just a big monstrosity beside the front steps. It's way too big, doesn't bloom well, and doesn't please me. Next spring, I'm digging it up.

Sunday, July 19, 2009

The latest tulips ever

I can't believe I never posted pictures of my tulips -- they're only my favourite flower. More pics of the back garden are coming, but for now I'm going back a couple of months or so to show you the tulips.




































































Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Quick Peek at the Back

A quick peek at the back garden...

No time to write today...
But I realize I need better pics of the back garden, and a couple of the daylilies have started blooming now.Here's my hot pink Clematis that just won't quit...it just keeps creeping farther and farther sideways along the fence.



I also realize I never showed you the tulips that bloomed this spring (I really am terribly neglectful. Good thing I'm more attentive to the garden)! They were gorgeous. Maybe tomorrow.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Better late than never...

I hereby swear that I will try to be a better blogger. Here's the deal: first I was super-super-busy doing non-gardening stuff. Then I had major password problems and couldn't post anything, and Blogger kept wanting to send my password to an email address I haven't used in about 5 years. Then I was too busy actually gardening. (See fruits of my labours here:) My favourite thing that I didn't get a chance to blog about in the last long while was pilfering violets from a neighbour's yard. Which is not as bad as it sounds. A bunch of people moved out of an ugly rental down the street. The owners appear to be renovating it to either sell or move into themselves. They're gutting the place and were throwing the demolition debris in the garden! It was kind of neglected and overgrown anyway, but had masses of beautiful dark violets. Figuring they obviously didn't care what happened to them, I took a small spade and a bucket and pilfered their violets three nights in a row. I must have taken two dozen. Being a Robin Hood-like thief, I shared them with my next door neighbour. Now, for anyone who's totally aghast at this, the debris continued to pile up on the garden. Ultimately, those violets would have wound up beautifying some landfill. Anyway, they were so thick you could barely see where I'd dug up. Hoping they spread as beautifully in my garden next spring and smother some of the weeds, which I can't seem to keep up with.

Here's what else has been happing in the garden recently (I'll save the biblical aphid infestation for another time):

Monday, May 18, 2009

Bad blogger. BAD.

The trouble with spring is that I'm too busy actually gardening to be tending to this blog! (Okay, I have a lot of extra commitments right now, too.) So I haven't had time to write anything, but I finally found time to at least upload some recent pics.


(Disclaimer #1: Some of the white in the photos (and I have a lot of white flowers) is sort of blindingly white and I don't know how to change that. If anyone reading this has any tips, I'd love to hear them. Disclaimer #2: No matter how carefully I format everything, especially in a photo-heavy entry like this one, it can look perfect when I'm doing it and go all wonky when I publish.)


These are the Frittilaria I thought would never bloom! They may be the most adorable little flower I've ever seen. They're certainly the most adorable flower in my garden, with their little nodding heads of plum fringed with chartreuse.


















The front garden, above, early spring (left) and mid (right).










The two photos above were taken this morning.



Some of my tulips – my favourite flower.

Come to the back and I'll show you what's busy coming into bloom there...















On the left is the view from the gate; on the right there are tulips, Lutea, Astrantia, daylilies, Tiarella, bugbane, bleeding heart, and a Texensis Clematis climbing the trellis so fast you can practically stand there and watch it grow.

On the other side of the back yard is the shade garden – almost my favourite part, and doing beautifully. Anyone who says nothing will grow in the shade can come talk to me. I love shade gardening.













That little naked spot between the trellis and the birdbath will have its own Clematis soon, too – I'm waiting for a Guernsey Cream that Dugald at Garden Import (see link on right) is currently hardening off. (Dugald is clearly unfamiliar with my infamous lack of patience!)

The planters are juuuust beginning to fill in a little bit (below), and we finally set up the table we bought last year.














Still have to finish the hardscaping, and Husband is building a lattice privacy screen that I'll stain to match the fence. I'd love to get a couple of huge pots to have by the back gate. That space still needs something (more garden not an option as we have to park in the back in the winter). I see something quite sizeable, maybe glazed ceramic, with foliage spilling over the sides. And on wheels so I can move it! Maybe next year.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

The Heuchera Lost

This morning I looked out the back window and and saw Heuchera leaves strewn all over the shade garden. It looked like somebody had a vicious fight with the Heuchera and dismembered it just for spite.

It must have been a raccoon, but why? The raccoons always leave my garden alone. I’m the nice lady who doesn’t yell at them, or throw water on them…Hell, I even tried to help a sick one last winter. (Sadly, he died under the back porch. A friend of mine has suggested that word of Rocky’s demise may have gone out in the raccoon community and sullied my reputation as a lover of wildlife.)

Anyway, I don't know if there's enough left of the Heuchera to salvage it…The majority of the plant seems to have been eaten or hauled away. I tried sticking a few bits back in the soil, but I'm not hopeful.

They could at least dig up a plant I'm less fond of. I have a heinously expensive Hellebore out back that must have been mislabelled, because it's much taller than I wanted and the blooms are the wrong colour (i.e., one that does not please me). Why don't they dig that up? Hmph.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

The flowers are coming, the flowers are coming!

And about time, too. I have been terribly delinquent with this blog -- too busy, no time to write. That should change by the second week of June. But I have been taking pictures. Almost everything is coming up -- the Hellebore is in full bloom, tulips are up (lots of leaves but no
flowers yet), there are buds on all the shrubs...All the daylilies are coming back...I even have buds on the Frittilaria, which I wasn't sure I'd ever see. When they open, I'll take a picture of them, too.

Oh! And my white Monkshood is coming back! It's got wonderful lush foliage, as does my Mourning Widow. I just love seeing everything coming up in the spring.
























I'm also keeping an eye on the spots where I've planted seeds, in the hope that they may do something. Like sprout.