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!





Storm in the Garden

12 06 2011

A storm swept through the garden last Sunday, shredding young leaves and flower buds without mercy. No wind, fortunately, but the pea-sized hail bombarded the garden for at least 20 minutes, leaving the lawn a flooded mess and many of the garden stalwarts in a shocked, tattered state.

The  Pacific Waterleaf, native to the PNW, took the brunt of the storm and much of it was reduced to a lacy pattern.


The Hydrangeas, already weeks behind last year’s flowering schedule were battered, the leaves torn in half or severely pockmarked.

Even the tough corrugated-leafed Big Daddy Hostas were ripped and masticated by the hail.

Amazingly some plants made it through with little damage. My new favorite young rhododendron continues to put on a good show, the blooms quite resilient to the storm, the leaves not so much.

A young Geum coccineum “Borisii” also escaped the worst and is now adding some fiery orange cheer in the sunniest part of the garden.

And a glossy leafed, first-time bloomer, is providing some interest beside Tlaloc, “God of the front garden”. Wish I knew what this plant is, the tag is long gone :-(

Yes, I’m fortunate. The damage could have been much worse.





What’s Blooming in the Shade: May 22, 2011

22 05 2011

It’s a white flower parade!

Viburnum plicatum f. tomentosum “Mariesi” (Doublefile Viburnum)

  Smilacina racemosa (False Solomon’s Seal)

Rubus parviflorus (Thimbleberry)

Dicentra spectabilis (Bleeding Heart)

Geranium x cantabrigiense “Biokovo” (Biokovo Cranesbill)

Convallaria majalis (Lily of the Valley)

Gaultheria shalon (Salal)





What’s Blooming in the Shade: Mother’s Day 2011

8 05 2011

Chaenomeles speciosa (Flowering Quince, variety unknown).

First time bloomer after 6 years in the garden.

Stylophorum diphyllum (Celandine Poppy)

Trillium ovatum





Spring Rhubarb

1 05 2011

After many years of trying to grow rhubarb in the PNW and California,  it’s finally happened!

Three fine stalks and about a pound of organic  fresh strawberries gave us a most delicious strawberry-rhubarb cobbler last Sunday.

Why this year? What’s changed?

#1: The rhubarb is finally getting enough sun to produce a multitude of ruby red stalks. For a number of years, the rhubarb languished  in the back garden shade. In its former position, it got 4 hours of very dappled sun, at most, and apparently that’s just not enough. Since I moved the rhubarb out to the roadside, it enjoys many more hours of sun, even if it’s filtered by the neighborhood trees. Kudos to the neighbor who “limbed up” his Doug Firs late last Summer, allowing even more sun into our shaded neighborhood.

#2: Well-rotted steer manure. Two bags of it, one in late Fall last year, as a cold weather mulch, the second in late January before the rhubarb surfaced.

#3 Patience. Last year, the first year after relocating the rhubarb out by the roadside, I was so tempted to pull a few stalks for pie. I’d read that you shouldn’t pull rhubarb the first year after planting, and although technically the rhubarb was planted elsewhere for a number of years, I decided to let the spindly stalks die back into the root. I can’t prove this was of benefit to the plant, but I can’t rule it our either. If I’d read I should refrain from harvesting a second year also, I would probably question that wisdom a little more, and likely sneak a few stalks from the plant.





What’s blooming in the shade: April 23, 2011

24 04 2011

After a few warmer, sunnier days here in the shade, the tulips came out in full bloom today. Take a look.

Wish I’d noted the variety back when I planted them. All I know is they’re early (!)  doubles and are 10 to 12 inches tall.





Enough already!

16 04 2011

The rain keeps coming down and the back garden is, once again, a flooded mess. I know the garden has a drainage issue, or two, but really this is too much.

Most of the plants don’t seem to mind too much, except the Carex Ice Dancer which is looking a little yellow and drowned.

This is one tough plant so I expect it to pull through and get back to its former glory.

The ferns, planted specifically for their love of shade and damp places in Fall last year, are being put to the test.

On drier land, in the deck planters, some mid-season red and yellow tulips are a short while away from blooming, This year’s crop are shorter than  usual, at 12″ tall and more able to withstand wind gusts and corgis that whirl through the trees when you least expect it.

The Bleeding Hearts, in a dog-free drier location out front, are temptingly close to blooming. Right now, I’m declaring Bleeding Hearts as my favorite flowering plant. I do this every year, about this time, and stick with my choice until one of the Japanese hydrangeas bloom.  And then. Well, then I’ve got two favorite flowering plants. It’s okay to have two #1 favorites, right?








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