Hydrangeas, Hydrangeas

2 08 2011

The Summer is racing past.

For a variety of reasons, I have less time to time to work in the garden, less time to plan new projects, and less time to write about it all this season. I’m okay with this. Except for an hour of weekly maintenance, and a relaxed watering schedule due to our cool humid Summer, I’m not putting a lot of time into the garden these days. Instead, I’m taking a lot out of the garden; working on my laptop from the deck overlooking the garden, enjoying how wonderfully large and full the landscape has become, and admiring my all-time favorite flowers: the hydrangeas.

Despite the torture they endured in a June hail storm, the hydrangeas are looking good, if I say so myself. Take a look:

And the still homeless Pink Annabelle:





Fighting Back

3 07 2011

The violent hail storm in June left the garden in tatters and many of my beloved hydrangeas beheaded. The damage was heartbreaking, and the cleanup painful as I removed tens of dangling, half-mature blooms and branches to the compost bin.

Right after the cleanup was complete, Joe the Gnome arrived from California in the company of my charming nephews Cole and Alan.

Joe quickly found a sheltered perch on a small ledge on one of the biggest Ponderosa Pine trees in the center of the back garden. It’s a great lookout, high above the garden hoses which could decapitate him, and prominent enough to see Joe from the kitchen and living room.

Since Joe’s arrival, things have been looking up in the garden. The remaining hydrangeas have “pulled themselves together” and are poised to come into full bloom in the next week or two:

A few early  bloomers are cheering me up tremendously:

Hydrangea macrophylla “Endless Summer”

Hydrangea serrata “Preziosa”

Hydrangea paniculata “Quickfire”

No more hail storms, please!





Deadheading Hydrangeas

25 03 2011

I love hydrangea blooms. From the tiniest flower kernels in Spring, to the weatherbeaten, translucent blooms of late Winter; I like to have them around in the garden for the longest possible time. Some people snip the blooms off when the color is spent, I don’t. I keep them for Winter interest and delay deadheading until early Spring.

Last Saturday was  “deadhead Saturday”. Armed with a large bucket,  #9 Felco pruners, and a 50 lb bag of Alfalfa meal in a wheelbarrow,  I started in on the task. It takes about 2 hours start to finish and that includes  feeding each plant with a cup or two of Alfalfa meal, a general purpose, slow-release organic fertilizer.

The task is really quite simple. Snip the dried flower heads off as close to the base of the bloom as you can. If you can confidently identify where the first leaf bud is, you could cut all the way to just above the bud. I don’t trust myself though. In past years, I’ve gotten too happy with the pruners and cut away the previous years wood, eliminating the possibility of blooms later in the year. This is true for mophead, oakleaf, and lacecap hydrangeas which bloom on old wood and make up over half of my hydrangea collection.

I take a different approach with the Annabelle hydrangeas (Hydrangea arboresence) and the Kyushu hydrangeas (Hydrangea paniculata). Both these types and my Endless Summer hydrangea bloom on new wood. This means you don’t have to worry about taking too much of the cane off when you deadhead. I tend to deadhead the Endless Summer to a similar size as the neighboring mopheads. Depending on the year, I may deadhead and prune the Annabelles at the same time, cutting the plants  to 2 -3 feet. Some years I’ve left the canes longer at about 4 feet to encourage larger blooms, as suggested on some online forums. In reality I’ve not seen a significant difference in bloom size with short or long canes.

I leave my 7-year old climbing hydrangeas (Hydrangea anomala ssp. petiolaris) alone.

They’ve yet to bloom and so there are no dried flowers to deadhead. They embed themselves on the pine trees and twist upwards, clambouring for the sun. Fingers crossed this is the year they start blooming.





First Garden Show of the Year

19 02 2011

The weather has been chilly and very damp since I declared the end of my Winter hibernation. Not the kind of weather to draw me into the garden. I look at the mounds of pine needles that need to be removed from the emerging plants but after a few minutes outside with a rake, I quickly return to the warmth of the living room and my pile of gardening books on the coffee table.

Yesterday though, I was able to indulge my gardening fantasies and stay toasty-warm by attending the first garden show of the season: The Yard Garden and Patio Show in the Oregon Convention Center.

The show is a fine mix of display gardens and outdoor vignettes; plant vendors, garden art sellers, and random purveyors of stuff, not necessarily garden-related. There’s even a wine pavilion which showcases smaller local wineries; a welcome non-gardening addition to the show. It’s amazing how thirsty you get wandering around a convention center!

We made it to the show in time for a 1pm talk by Richie Stefen, curator for the Elisabeth C. Miller Botanical Garden in Seattle. Richie’s talk “Creativity in the Shade Garden”, provided just the right amount of inspiration for new projects and  plants to try in the shade this year. On my new iPhone, I started a list of must-have plants for the year:

With phone in hand, hubby and I checked out the plant vendors.

Cyclamen coum was an easy one to track down and so I came away with two tiny plants; one with predominantly silver leaves, the other with silver mottling on dark green leaves. Both are labeled Cyclamen coum.

No luck finding any of the other plants. Guess I’ll just have to go to more garden shows and plants sales ;-)

And then, the Hydrangea Plus stall just sucked me in. Not that I necessarily have room for another thirsty hydrangea but, I just had to look. You know how this is. Before I knew it, I had a tiny Hydrangea japonica “Coeurulea” in one hand and my credit card in the other.

I should have stopped with the hydrangea. The attractive red and purple flowers of Fushia glasloviana caught my eye and soon the cyclamen and hydrangea had company in my bag.

It turns out that although it was labeled “Hardy Fushia”, a Google search reveals it’s only hardy to zone 9b, a zone unheard of in Oregon. Oh well! I guess I’ll be fussing over this plant if it’s to survive here in zone 8b!

Next up: Northwest Flower and Garden Show next weekend in Seattle.








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