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  • Archive for July, 2008

    Looking forward

    Thursday, July 31st, 2008

    Sunny sunflower looking ahead to tomorrowWe can’t – or at least don’t – always live in the moment. The past is good to revisit sometimes for what it can teach us (you know what they say about hindsight and all) and it’s exciting to cast ahead to the future. Right now I’m slightly single minded about the coming week — I’ll be on vacation!! My bag is packed and I’m waiting by the car.

    When I’m not busy picturing myself being supremely lazy, dozing and drooling with a book in my lap, I’m thinking about all I’m going to miss here at Blithewold. Highest on the miss-list is Lilah’s last week here. She, alas, is abandoning us for new adventures in academia. I’ve tried to help her with Worst-Case-Scenario projections – she’s oddly confident that it will all be wonderful… – and she’s taken very many unflattering pictures of me (as payback for the W.C.S’s) and some pretty ones of Gail for her bulletin board. If anyone has any sage advice for Lilah as she starts her first semester at Bard College in New York, please share! The Ellipse Garden - beforeWe will miss her madly and have already asked her to sign a binding contract to intern again next summer. Perhaps by then she will have changed her mind re. ornamental vegetables. College can be a mind-blowing experience after all…

    the Fountain Bed - beforeI imagine that I’ll miss a lot in the gardens as well and have taken the befores pictures to compare with the afters I’m back. If I had been away this week instead I would have been so surprised by Fred and Dan’s newest structural addition in the Display Garden. Not 10 minutes after the guys finished installation, visitors were already ogling and photographing it. I haven’t asked if Fred has a name for his creation but to me it’s like looking at a hive in cross section…

    Hive

    Looking over the Fountain Bed to the Kid’sAnd when I get back I’ll have to be at least a little more mentally prepared to acknowledge and accept Julie Morris’ (our Director of Horticulture) impending retirement. She might be ready but I’m for sure not. More on that much later.

    For now, this week we are looking forward all the way to spring. It’s time to order bulbs! We cut the pictures out of the Scheepers catalog and played them like a high stakes card game. We came up with several combination selections that we think would be winning in the North Garden and many must haves for the Rose and Cutting Gardens. It will be up to Gail and Lilah to make the final cut next week. I hope they choose my North Garden “hand”! How do you play your bulb choices?

    Lilah and Gail playing cards

    And what are you looking forward to? I’ll be looking forward to finding out when I get back! Have a great week, everyone!

    It’s easy being green …

    Tuesday, July 29th, 2008

    The red maple on the great lawn - full summer… with envy! Today dawned as an envious day – the kind of day that calls out for a sit in a shady sea breeze with a fistfull of watermelon and an icy lemonade. gazing at Nick’s hillside gardenHow serendipitous then that today was the day Nick (a.k.a. Nick the Willing) opened his house and gardens to us and the volunteers. As we strolled up and down and all around Nick’s hillside on the Sakonnet River in Portsmouth, every single one of us turned shades of chartreuse. Nick’s view of the river through the zinniasIt was obvious to us all that his garden is a beautiful consuming passion and he never takes a break on his dock, in his pool or kicked back on his sun porch gazing at the river. And when he’s not in his garden he works on making the most amazing images with a ginormous large format camera and collecting art. And we were all struck by how he is completely surrounded by things to at least rest his eyes on!

    I think it’s very important to have restful things for our eyes to refocus on even in the garden – most of us have lawns for that very reason. Even if we don’t give ourselves a grass nap, we can use it as an eye break. — It’s funny to me that green is the color of the envy monster because it is so gently calming and easy. Green flowers are a fun way of bringing that restful break right into the garden beds. Here are my current faves:

    Lisianthus a.k.a. EustomaNicotiana langsdorffiiZinnia ‘White Wedding’Hydrangea ‘Lime Light’ and the North StarEuphorbia marginata - Snow on the mountainEchinacea ‘Green Eyes’Nicotiana knightianaNot a flower but about the coolest seedhead!  - the lotusmy favorite salvia - S. lanceolata

    How do you rest your eyes in the garden? (- don’t tell me you actually let yourself nap!) And I’ve heard some say that green flowers are “weird” – what do you think? Informal poll: green flowers, are they easy-eye-rests or just plain bizarro?

    Garden music – part 2 (dissonance)

    Thursday, July 24th, 2008

    a garden mixSometimes the garden resembles a well thought out mix-tape that keeps you swaying and singing and other times it looks like we put the ipod on shuffle. Sometimes the needle hits a scratch or we just can’t find the right song to follow the daylilies. I think it’s one of the reasons we keep gardening – to get it right, we rewind, start over and press record again season after season. And every time we get a song or two closer to a perfect mix.

    Here are some of our current clunkers:

    A river of Swiss Chard running through the Plectranthus fruticosus seemed like a good idea when we planted them together but there’s not enough contrast between them to make it interesting – it’s like a Hank Williams and Patsy Cline mix – not to mention that the plectranthus (Patsy) has overwhelmed the chard (Hank).

    Swiss Chard and Plectranthus fruticosus - Hank and Patsy singing the same song

    The record is skipping in this corner of the North Garden. For too long we have let plumbago (Ceratostigma plumbaginoides) and various nepetas asters and chrysanthemums play on and on and to me, there’s just no tune there anymore.

    broken record

    Daylilies plague me like an earworm – we keep looking for the right plant that can shift the focus away when the foliage starts to drive us crazy. – What do you plant with your daylilies (and moldy Phlox!) to hide the leaves?? (Really, truly – I’d love to know!)

    Please help!

    We often allow Nature to add to the mix and occasionally her choices are a little on the funky side. A wide bluestone path narrowed by sticky Nicotiana is perhaps a little like mixing Motown and Mozart…

    Nature’s self seeders busting a move on the path

    And this dodder (Cuscuta spp.)- a parasitic weed that the Rockettes discovered yesterday in the Water Garden is just like fingernails on a chalkboard!

    dodder - fingernails on a chalkboard

    What do you have in your garden that doesn’t sound quite right?

    Music to my eyes

    Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008

    Son of a son of a son of a son of a - son of a son of a sailor.  (ding ding)Sometimes when I’m doing something tedious like watering I’ll get a random song on repeat in my head – usually a catchy ditty that I can’t stand and can’t tune out and I never know all the words so I can’t cut the loop. I am plagued by ear worms! But today I saw music while I was watering and wasn’t irritated by it at all.

    It occurred to me that planting a garden is a bit like making a mix-tape. (– I mean cd – I’ve just dated myself, haven’t I? I am a good deal older than 26…) We gardeners take a bunch of different plants that we love to look at (or smell or pick or eat) and place them all together where we can thoroughly enjoy them. Sometimes we put together visual medleys within a genre – like a particular color scheme or food group and sometimes we go a little wild and mix country with punk. And just like with a mix-tape, in a garden there can be jarring clunkers that don’t quite fit along with seamless and surprisingly perfect segues. Here are some of my favorite mixes: (mouse over for names/captions and click on for magic picture enlarger.)

    a circus mix of echinacea, eryngium, monarda and rudbeckiaalt rock Phormium and plectranthus fruticosaCabbage on bass and eryngium snare drumdulcet greens:  nicotianas and Caryopteris divaricatus ‘Snow Fairy’LOUD!  Celosia ‘China Town’ and Phlox drummondii ‘Scarlet’folk singers:  Senecio viravira and Zinnia ‘Profusion Apricot’A mix I could listen to - I mean look at - over and over again

    What are your favorite mixes? If you have pictures, please send a link! I promise to also show the clashes and clunkers (yes, we have some dissonance) in a later post… You too?

    Wishing well

    Thursday, July 17th, 2008

    A decorative wellhead near the North GardenNo rain in sight. The thunderstorms that have been in the forecast periodically haven’t materialized for us in Bristol since a month ago in June. It’s dry dry dry and even the pond has emptied already just as if it’s sprung a leak. The watering rotations have begun in earnest.The pond is drying up but the waterlilies are still blooming away

    I feel sort of hyper conscious about water usage and whenever I suggest that the gardens are alright without a dousing, my co-workers* look at me like they might hiss “Blasphemer!” and start throwing stones. (*Lilah excepted – she doesn’t want to water either.) Admittedly my garden at home suffers somewhat. The blooms on my Clematis ‘Roguchi’ are half the size of the ones here and I almost lost a new Star magnolia last year due to an extended period of miserly neglect. I have a rain barrel at home that is still somehow miraculously half full although I draw exclusively from it to water my parched potted plants. I know the Blithewold gardens need to be on a rigid watering schedule to remain lovely and I know in my heart that mine at home would be happier for it too. The trick is to be careful while being generous. It’s best to water early in the morning – especially if you’re running a sprinkler so that you don’t lose too much to wind and evaporation – and to water really really well and deeply. blurry watering shot - my eyes must have been full of sweat!Here we water whenever we can and most of the gardens are done by hand under the blazing sky which is hot and awful but affords plenty of time for daydreaming and wishing. I wish for a rainspell and a new hat with a fan attachment…

    The trees on the property are watered by sprinklers and the web of hoses running around the property amazes me. I’m glad the guys take care of all that because I can’t be trusted to remember to turn off a sprinkler once I’ve turned it on… Blithewold recently received a grant to service and utilize the network of cisterns on the property and yesterday we heard the new pump working for the first time. pumping the cisternDrawing water from a large cistern in the enclosed garden the guys were able to run 2 sprinklers on the Giant Sequoia and one on the Katsuras for a total of about 6-7 hours. Two sprinklers on the Giant SequoiaUnfortunately it’s only a drop in the proverbial bucket since the ground under the Sequoia is still dry deeper than 2 inches or so from the surface. We need more rain to really drench that ground again – and to fill the cistern back up. I think it’s really astounding that the owners of Blithewold had the forethought to conserve water and install these giant underground tanks. Hopefully soon, they’ll all be in working order again and we’ll hear the thrum of pumps occasionally over the buzz of the cicadas.

    Making use of the old well on the front lawnWe are also watering with town water and from the wells on the property. The Pump House where we store our tools actually does house the pump for the main well. Dan and Fred used the new portable pump to finally tap the old well on the front lawn today (I don’t know how many years it has been out of commission).

    Are you experiencing a dry spell too? What do you do to conserve water?

    In other news: The house today has been a veritable hive of activity in preparation for the RI Federation of Garden Clubs’ Flower Show. There are gorgeous arrangements and horticultural specimens displayed all around the first floor of the house. They all look like winners to me – despite some cutting criticism from the judges. Come see!

    A stunning Magnolia from Tiverton steals the show