The last year or two I have decided to revamp the garden, as it dawned on me that ten years ago there were aspects of the garden I liked better then than the current one. In the bed east of the house ten years ago there was bearded iris and marsh phlox,
'Clotilde Soupert',
columbine ('Clotilde Soupert' turns pink as the blossoms age),
beardtongue and foxglove,
spiderwort,
the hybrid tea climber 'Aloha',
'Hansa',
'Crepuscule',
and a found rose named Delia's Purple.
Most of these were swallowed by the rugosa hybrid 'Sir Thomas Lipton'
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A young Sir Thomas Lipton
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and a mockorange, eaten by voles or faded away. I wasn't expecting 'Sir Thomas Lipton' or mockorange to get as big as they did. Delia's Purple did not die, however, and I was able to pot up several runners for transplant and put them where the Japanese beautyberries used to be. I removed them last year after realizing that they didn't belong there. I don't even think they have good garden value in the Southeast, as they sulk and droop in hot dry weather and they are invasive, seeding in everywhere. Their one moment of glory was the time that the bluebirds went after the fruits during a snowstorm. I kept them for years after that based on that one incident.
Delia's Purple is a mounding shrub that blooms once a year, grows well in this location when it's not being crowded out by a monster shrub, and has wonderful purple flowers, a nice counterpoint to all of the white of 'Sir Thomas Lipton' and mockorange.
The flowers open magenta and turn bluer with age.
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From left to right: a young mockorange, marsh phlox, beardtongue, Delia's Purple, foxglove, and Hansa. Marie Pavie and a spiderwort are in the foreground. In this picture from 2009 (the house was moved to its current location in 2007) the garden looks quite immature here but I miss all of the different colors and textures and would like to add some back.
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In this 2011 picture you can see how much 'Sir Thomas Lipton' grew in 2 years' time. |
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2011 |
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2012 |
I have added back more foxglove in the drier areas and smooth and Gulf Coast penstemon elsewhere.
Gulf Coast penstemon is short lived but well worth keeping going for its showiness and its ability to tolerate wet feet.
The voles go to town on spiderworts near the house, so I just grow them in the big perennial bed. I think I will try marsh phlox down there too, as it just can't compete with the daylilies.
'Clotilde Soupert' is in a pot and I am hoping it will thrive there. At the North Carolina Botanical Garden there was a CS that was grown in a pot until it got to a good size. I have two 'Hansa' on order with Witherspoon that will be delivered in the spring and planted in the driest places east of the house that I can find. I would love to have bearded iris again but they'd have to be grown in pots with wire mesh at top soil level to keep the voles away, the same with columbine.
'Crepuscule' has been replaced by "Cl. Caldwell Pink', which as it turns out needs a pergola or fence, not an arbor. It is HUGE. Gene gamely replaced the old arbor with a larger, sturdier one but even so, not only is Caldwell Pink huge, the mockorange is hulking on the other side.
The plants in cages are Delia's Purple that were still so little that the rabbits were eating the tender shoots, so I gave them some protection until they got more mature. We have so many rabbits here, but luckily they usually stick to eating the grass and clover. I've even seen does nursing their young on 3 occasions.
To clarify, Caldwell Pink
is huge, but not all of that is Cl. Caldwell Pink. There's a shrub form to the right of the arbor. They all just kind of blend together.
While Cl. Caldwell Pink is a once bloomer (with deep red fall color), Caldwell Pink blooms all season. The flowers lack fragrance but the full lilac pink flowers are so beautiful and the plant so reliable I don't even care. The foliage is relatively clean and the rose is a real workhorse. Easy to grow from cuttings too. I've propagated it to grow in some other parts of the garden.
There have been sudden recent changes to the garden as well. The 12 inches of rain that we got from tropical storm Matthew in 2016 killed off the oakleaf hydrangea 'Dayspring' on the east side of the house and half of 'Pee Wee' on the northern side of the house.
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Hydrangea 'Dayspring' in 2014. Please excuse the unmown grass. I wanted to leave the clover for the bees. The bees just go crazy for it and the rabbits like it better than most of my garden plants. |
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A picture from 2012. Most of the hydrangea on the left side are gone now.
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More diversity in the beds at the front of the house would never be a bad thing, but I'm not sure what to put there. I've added some mapleleaf viburnum, but it's quite a slight plant and you can see directly under the house. We've never put skirting under the porches. I'd consider it if the Carolina wrens could get through the openings, as they have always nested under the porches, although in recent years they've used the front and back porches too.
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Baby Carolina wrens just fledged from their nest on the front porch.
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On the back porch the wrens go in and out under the door. lol It always makes me laugh to see them. They are such cute little birds, always checking things out, always finding routes other birds don't, and they are almost always talking to each other. I used to think they were getting stuck on the porch until I realized a female was nesting there! We were just surprising them checking out the porch as we went in and out the back door.
Mapleleaf viburnum is known for its fall color. Michael Dirr finds "the range of fall colors (creamy pink, rose, red to grape juice purple) intriguing". I can vouch that the leaves actually turn those colors in my FIL's yard. So far I've gotten one pink leaf for my pains. I'd kind of like to get another Florida azalea to go on the far left side (northeast corner), but knowing how big those get, that's probably not practical. The same with sweetshrub. I'd have to prune them to keep them down to size.
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Florida azaleas in front of the house in its original location. They are probably about half their mature size in this picture but it was lovely having them there, they're so fragrant. Now one of these is on the east side of the house. |
I tried an Alabama azalea there three years ago but it wasn't happy so I moved it to the eastern side of the house. Coast azalea wouldn't work because they seem to like more sun - they always leaned out when they were planted north of the house in its original location, even when the Florida azaleas were small. Now the house faces true north, rather than slightly northwest, so the this bed has more shade than the original one. A dwarf form of sweet pepperbush might work. I don't want Virginia sweetspire or dog hobble there because I think they'd look too informal. I wonder how bottlebrush buckeye would look there. Too coarse? Any suggestions?
Dear Sweetbay ~ Thank you for sharing your plans for the new year and the wonderful photos of your beautiful gardens. Today as I view your photos I feel like crying. So much peaceful beauty. Enjoy this last week of 2020 and may 2021 be a better year for us all ~ FlowerLady
ReplyDeleteThank you so much Lorraine. I hope your arm is doing better.
DeleteYour garden is gloriously floriferous regardless of the problems that have beset it over time, sweetbay. I wouldn't presume to advise you on your choices as your climate and conditions are so very different from mine but having flowers somewhere throughout the year if possible has always been one of my goals. I wish my paltry selection of roses, most inherited with the garden, performed half as well as yours.
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DeleteThank you Kris! My chief goal is to have as many flowers over the year everywhere, which as you can imagine doesn’t always work out. lol At the same time I want that big springtime display.
Good for you! I love all of your selections, and together they create a lovely, colorful garden paradise!
ReplyDeleteThank you Beth!
DeleteOh my goodness, so much beauty! I do love the rugosa roses. I finally added one here. I got a freebie from the nursery called 'Purple Pavement'. It looked terrible but has improved since I planted it. We have been seeing a wren and absolutely love them. I don't know why they don't stay but we mainly only get them periodically. Would a camellia work in your spot?
ReplyDeleteI’ve had Purple Pavement for several years, it’s a nice rose! I hadn’t considered a camellia in front of the house because I think it would get too big. Perhaps east of the house at some point? I have two sasanqua I’m not sure what to do with.
DeleteI bet your garden smell amazing in summer, with all those roses blooming. It looks wonderful, too! Do you ever have trouble with azalea lace bugs? They decimate almost all azaleas, many Rhododendrons, even Skimmias here. I'm a big fan of Leucothoe, so maybe one of those would work out front, since you mentioned it. My fave is Leucothoe keiskei - it has lovely large, white bell flowers, and the leaves turn a fabulous burgundy in winter. To my knowledge it doesn't get as large as some of the others.
ReplyDeleteI haven’t had a problem with azalea lace bugs, although out of nowhere azalea moth caterpillars devoured all of the leaves of one evergreen azalea for the first time this year.
DeleteI will have to look into Leucothoe keiskei, it sounds very nice!
Such a beautiful garden! I love to see gardens evolve over the years.
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year!
Thank you Nikki, and Happy New Year to you too!
ReplyDeleteWow-- lots of moves in the garden, which by the way-- it is beautiful.
ReplyDeleteThank you!
DeleteYou have wonderful garden plans for 2021. Will be exciting to watch how they develop over time. 'Clothilde Soupert' is such a lovely rose. Unfortunately it did not like SoCal. The Florida azalea is really beautiful. The fragrance must be a big plus, too.
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year, sweetbay!
Thank you Hoover Boo, and Happy New Year to you too!
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