Showing posts with label Patio Garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patio Garden. Show all posts

Friday, July 1, 2011

Some Summer Blooms

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I thought I'd share with you all a few blooms going on in the garden at Tiger Gardens. Above we have a coneflower (probably 'Magnus') and a cotton candy bloom of Queen of the Prairie (Filapendula rubra).
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Daylilies rule the summer and this year they look good (as they did last year).
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I transplanted most of my mophead hydrangeas this spring, but this one escaped the big move and has rewarded me with lots of blooms. I love hydrangeas! The little coneflower next to it is also a favorite plant. It is 'Harvest Moon' coneflower and looks great near the blue hydrangea. 'Highland Lord' daylily, veronica, impatiens, and a variegated miscanthus round out this picture of part of the Sunny Perennial Border in front of the vegetable garden.
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More veronica and a dwarf white phlox 'Flame White'. Some of the phlox is suffering from powdery mildew this year. Not complaining though-bring on the rains.
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'Moonbeam' coreopsis is one of my longest blooming perennials. It and veronica hold the borders all season long and make a great match.
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A long shot toward the greenhouse looking across the Sunny Perennial border, the Rear Center Garden and past our new patio area. More on that later as today I'm showing just a sneak peek since the patio is not quite done. Mr. Fix-it is working on it though.
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Crinums are scattered all over the gardens. I really must consolidate them because planting them the way I have does not do them justice at all. My issue is the bulbs are SO big and there is such little room in the soil for big bulbs without disturbing established perennials that I get lazy and tuck the crinums wherever there seems to be an empty spot.
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Looking toward the back of the yard along the Rear Center Garden-sunny side. Groups of daylilies along with alliums and other perennials comingle in this garden happily. I worked hard last summer to design the clumps of flowers for long term interest. This garden is tough because it is under the trees and suffers several blank spots in July and August during our droughty periods.
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Looking back toward the house at the same side of the Rear Center Garden. Here you can see the daylily groups. Sedum, asters, gloriosa daisies, peonies, irises, mums, and shrubs round out this side of the garden.
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I love my orange and pink combinations. This grouping is in the Greenhouse Garden. The astilbes are one of my favorite perennials. Once the flowers pass by they will remain looking good for a very long period of time. All they need is a moist area in shade or part sun.
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Here we are sitting on our new patio-which is not finished yet. This patio is built in a natural amphitheater like area in the middle of our backyard. We are looking out from under the mature oaks toward the Sunny Perennial and Vegetable Garden. The vegetable garden is doing fine. I should do a post on it but I have no camera with which to take pictures:(. I've harvested cucumbers, potatoes, and peas. The red cabbages are ready to eat and so are the blueberries. Unfortunately the only ones eating the blueberries are the robins. They are bold little boogers who love eating the blueberries and when I try to chase them off they simply fly about two feet away and sit there scolding me. I don't mind sharing but I would like to eat at least ONE blueberry from my garden this year. 


It is not too late to sow another succession of cucumbers, squash, and corn if you are of the mind I've already sown mine. I am so excited I got it all done too because I am usually very bad about successive sowings. I expect I'll still be enjoying fresh cucumbers and squash all the way to frost. I do not grow corn in my garden. I also sowed some pumpkins, carrots, and kuri squash. We'll see how they do.
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Okay, here is a sneak peek at the new patio area. Right now it is simply a gravel patio until we decide on a patio stone and have the time to finish it all. The firepit is the center of the patio and Mr. Fix-it out did himself when he built this firepit. I'll post more on it later. It is not finished because we still have to cover the cinder blocks with faux stone. This patio is about 20 feet in diameter, maybe larger. We spread eight TONS of gravel on it in order to level it. Mr. Fix-it had to build a wall around it on the low side first. While this patio is not finished it is still a wonderful spot to sit in the shade and enjoy looking out....


into the garden.....
Words and Photos Property of In the Garden Blog Team, In the Garden

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Patio Garden

I talked about building my new Secret Patio last week, so I thought I'd talk about the garden itself this week. There is still one more post concerning this garden, but I'll post it tomorrow.

The soil that was excavated from the hole for the patio itself was turned and spread around the patio itself in order to create a garden area. While I am lucky with my soil in that it is not too clayey, I find it best to build up gardens rather than going down. This was the case in this area. There are some mature trees around and I am pretty sure they extend to this area, so I went up with the soil, but I did turn the existing sod prior to adding the extra soil. The few inches of extra soil added here will not hurt the surrounding trees and will make an ideal garden area.


Since the soil excavated and moved contained some turf, I not only turned it over, but amended it with organic matter such as coffee grounds and rabbit 'beans', and then covered both beds with lots of newspapers, leaf mold, and hay to hold the leaf mold in place. The coffee grounds and rabbit pellets will provide a good source of nitrogen for microbes to work on decomposing the grass, and the newspapers will ensure the grass rots by blocking the light. This is a good procedure I have used many times on new gardens. It works well for me.


This picture simply illustrates a part of the pre-existing garden. Since the area slopes slightly to the west, I had to compensate for the slope in this raised bed. Nothing grows in the bed since it holds two oak trees and a cedar tree; which make the soil so root bound that it dries out too quickly to support good growth on any plants. However, I added some soil and the bricks to raise the bed up a bit, and planted a 'Tamukeyama' Japanese Maple. This is one of two which are planted around the Secret Patio. The 'Tamukeyama' is a weeping Japanese maple. I already had a 'Crimson Queen' weeping Japanese maple, but added these two when I found them marked down to only $15 for a 3 gallon pot at a Home Depot in Maine last fall. Yes, they traveled back from Maine in the back of our truck. What a trip! Good thing they were and still are dormant. I also planted one for my mother in her Maine garden. I so hope it does well for her. This area of my garden where my small trees are planted are on the downhill slope, I expect moisture will be fairly adequate here but will watch them closely. If they do not work in this garden, I will surely move them.
The patio area is in a partly sunny area. It probably will only get about 2 hours of sun max. You see this area is surrounded by mature oaks and faces west where some more mature oaks grow. There is a gap in between the oaks to the east and the oaks to the west so the area directly above the patio is fairly open. I am thrilled with the area and its light. I think light is very important in a garden and one must first always determine the light the garden receives, and of course, the type of soil the garden contains. Since this area is mostly shade and I had planned from the very beginning to install a very special tree in it, I have planned for mostly shade perennials. Some of the perennials planted here are: Tiarella Foam Flower, Bergenia 'Perfecta', Leucothoe 'Rainbow', Candytuft, foxgloves, Yellow Twig dogwood, and a 'Rocky Mountain' penstemon. I am still in the process of adding perennials. Hostas will join the mix, as well as heucheras, a Night Blooming Jasmine (aka Cerastum nocturnum), Star Magnolia (Royal Star), several oakleaf hydrangeas, some annuals, and who knows what else? You can see many of the new plants in the picture above. I also added several daffodils into the mix.

In case you did not guess the 'pigsqueak' plant I mentioned in my Patio Post, it is Bergenia cordifolia. It is Carolyn Gail's Signature plant. She blogs at Sweet Home and Garden Chicago. I used to grow bergenias in Germany and really liked them. I am not sure how they will do in the heat and humidity of our southern climate, but I'm willing to give it a try since all I've read on the bergenias say they are quite adaptable to moist or dry soils. We will most likely have the dry soils. I am hoping that the fact I have them sited under a special tree in the shade will help it even more to withstand our summers. This plant is evergreen and changes color in the winter. It turns a red/maroon and I just love it. I was fortunate to find a bunch of these at a favorite nursery in Indiana where the kind owner let me have them at 50% off since they were left over from last fall. He told me, "They are still good though." A very nice elderly gentleman who was adamant these plants were still good; which of course I knew. If any of you all ever travel to Evansville, Indiana, or there are readers in this area, do check out Hillside Commercial Landscaping just outside of Evansville on St. Joseph's Avenue. I love this place and posted about it before.

While at the nursery I was ever so fortunate to find my long sought after tree. It is a special tree for me and one I had planned would grace this garden way before I even began building the patio. More on it tomorrow, but I'll leave you with some hints to get you thinking about this tree.

This tree is: native to the United States, can be grown as a tree or shrub, blooms white in the spring, is small to medium sized with a moderate life span, its roots are not invasive, its bark is quite thin, it grows blue/black berries that are delicious for humans and birds, and is a highly recommended tree for street side and residential plantings alike. It is susceptible to some pests and diseases since it is in the Rosaceae famiy, so it is not a perfect tree.

I bet this will be a very easy tree to guess if you are of the mind to do so. I'll post the answer tomorrow.

in the garden....

Don't forget about Skeeter's contest.