Seasonal Interest
It depends on what you consider "interest". For me, the whole garden holds interest in differing ways every season. Right now, it's the light - the grasses and seed heads catching the light with the occasional pop of color. Fine foliage also looks smart, but for this post I'm getting in the mindset of most people looking towards flowers for a spark.
While I did not necessarily set out to take flower photos this week, I did gravitate towards what I thought looked good. Thus, there is a mix of flowers, grasses, seed heads and more and though it is officially autumn, there is still a lot to absorb. I am also looking forward to what I consider to be one of the finest times of year in my garden, mid to late autumn, on the horizon. However, let us embrace the now and check out the garden this first week of a new season.
Artemisia versicolor 'Seafoam' loves its new home out in the open with heat radiating from the gravel. Those spikes are flowers, unusual and interesting flowers.
A clash of colors to bang on your eyes. Diascia 'Coral Canyon' is the pink, Tagetes 'Cinnabar' and Salvia 'Celestial Blue' complete the colorful display near the artemisia pictured above. If I removed the orange red of the marigold then the colors would be more harmonious, but lately I have embraced color clashes.
Looking towards the meadow garden with the last remnants of Echinacea purpurea petals mingling with Hylotelephium 'Matrona' (syn. Sedum 'matrona'), silver foliage of Teucrium fruticans, hebes, grasses and more. And can I just mention that no matter what anyone tells you about Echinacea being "drought tolerant" is wrong here in the summer dry climate where I live? They are among the first perennials to wilt in dry conditions.
Solidago 'Fireworks', happily visited by all manner of flying insects and Rosa glauca behind with its gorgeous red rose hips.
If you have the luxury of fruit trees in your garden, they count towards garden interest, especially this time of the year when the Honeycrisp apples are getting sweeter by the day. Applesauce is in our future.
One of the last batches of Rudbeckia hirta (and this patch is self-sown), a cheerful scene this time of the year. They also are like Echinacea in that they sulk when they dry out which is why I no longer have large patches of it in my garden; it was too thirsty to be practical for me.
Penstemon kunthii is having a swell year and has given me many seedlings in the surrounding gravel. It has been blooming for several weeks if not a couple of months.
Rosa 'Mutabilis' and Berberis jamesiana. The rose has been blooming all summer, coming and going, shifting colors from salmon to bright pink.
More upright sedum - Hylotelephium 'Stardust' which is supposed to be white, which it primarily is. I get a few pink flower reversions and I decided I'm not going to keep cutting them out, rather I'm going to leave it to do as it wishes.
Abutilons, if they are happy and well watered and fed, are still blooming. On the edge of being a high maintenance plant for me, I still love it and will keep watering it often in its container so I make sure and see such pretty flowers well into autumn.
A sedum mash-up in a container on my deck. The smoky gray purple foliage is Sedum 'Bertram Anderson', a trailing plant that really looks fine in a container where it can spill down a bit. Others are Phediumus spurius 'Tricolor' (syn. Sedum spurium 'Tricolor') and some other unknown Phedimus spurius.
Epilobium canum (syn. Zauschneria californica) and other cultivars of epilobium have been blooming for a few weeks now and are well-visited by our resident hummingbirds. This West Coast native plant makes a swell groundcover for full sun and even dry sites but I will say if it does get a little summer water it doesn't complain. And it keeps blooming.
Seed pods of Baptisia australis are as interesting to me as its pretty but short-lived blue-purple flowers that come on in late spring.
Symphyotrichum novae-angliae 'Purple Dome' (syn. Aster 'Purple Dome') is one of my favorite asters. it has a great bushy habit and blooms profusely beginning right about now. Each clump grows slowly in size and it doesn't set off seedlings, though I wouldn't mind. Many asters are real thugs which is fine for the right circumstance but sometimes you want a plant to stay put.
Many of my manzanitas have had an epic fruiting year. This is Arctostaphylos pumila loaded with orange red berries (little apples?) coupled with gray green foliage is especially gorgeous.
Just barely visible blooms on Fuchsia speciosa and Liriope 'Big Blue' under the tree are a soft and unexpected bit of color here. The Liriope is not my favorite as it looks kind of crummy much of the year but it has its moments and is a useful plant for the most part.
Salvia 'Brilliance' has been in bloom since late spring, I'm not exaggerating. Such a great salvia with vibrant color, too. Arctostaphylos pumila in the background.
Late morning light catching the fuzzies of Cotinus 'Pink Chamapgne' and foliage textures of the labyrinth garden.
Calluna vulgaris 'Spring Torch' starting to bloom.
Front and center are Teucrium chamaedrys, wall germander. Though their blooms are long over the flower stalks are interesting and catch the light. Behind it is Pennisetum 'Karly Rose' which I threaten to take out every year because it flops in the tiniest amount of moisture. I like my grasses upright, not floppy.
Anaphalis margaritacea, pearly everlasting, is a volunteer in my garden and a most welcome one. With a little bit of summer water it has kept on looking good for weeks.
Marigolds, Tagetes 'Cinnabar' have also been blooming for weeks on end.
Another salvia that keeps on giving is Salvia 'Arctic Blaze Red' front and center. It too has been blooming since spring. To the right is an orange cosmos and to the left Phlomis russelliana among other drought adapted selections.
Even though the flowers of Deutzia setchuenensis var. corymbiflora finished a few weeks ago, the effect is still that it is covered in blooms. This deciduous shrub with somewhat glaucus foliage should be grown more, it is so interesting and its flowers are the prettiest little white things.
Looking towards the blue shed, Geranium 'Gerwat' (ROZANNE) still blooming on the left and Fuchsia speciosa is behind it. The geranium has been in bloom all summer but the fuchsia started a couple of weeks ago.
Closing out this post with a view looking past the fire pit into the labyrinth garden, many shades of green still holding strong and keeping me interested.
Summer as I've mentioned before was a blur and I was certainly not present for my garden this year. That is slowly shifting towards a reconnection and I love it, It is so healthy to be out there working away in the garden just for the act itself. I'm really looking forward to the shifting autumn colors and tackling a few chores once the weather cools and we are officially able to move plants around. I have a few ideas and that is a great sign that I'm back on track. As I mentioned, every season holds some kind of interest and if you are looking for flowering plants for late summer into autumn, I hope you have some ideas. Hardy fuchsias, salvia, penstemon, geranium, abutilon, epilobium, calluna, asters, rudbeckia and others are all great places to start.
That's a wrap for this time at Chickadee Gardens, thank you so much for reading and commenting, we do love hearing from you! And to those of you who came to our little plant sale, THANK YOU! We appreciate your support. Happy gardening.
Interesting to read your post this morning as I too am learning to rest more and trying not to feel beholden or guilty about not tending to my garden enough.
ReplyDeleteAnd, then I sneeze...mortally offending my cat, who was sitting on my lap...and he jumps up and sulks away, turning his back to me reproachfully. How dare I. The nerve.
Back to garden thoughts. It is also interesting to hear your thoughts on Karly Rose. I've a pot of it that I inherited and have been thinking of planting, but the floppy description isn't so appealing. Also the possibility of getting a glut of Rosa mutabilis. Sounds like a winner from your description. Is it fussy? Relatively drought tolerant? Does it get a lot of black spot? I'm tempted to snag a few and bring them home. At the very least they will make a nice snack for the deer. I just planted a Purple Dome - so good to hear it's a favorite of yours. I've enjoyed Betel Nut, though I wish it was a little faster at colonizing the spot where I have it. Our PNW native asters are certainly more assertive!
How dare you offend your cat. Sheesh. Anyhow, yes - Karly Rose is good until it rains, so if it's supported by other plants it's very pretty. Rosa mutabilis is very good, not fussy, drought tolerant - yes, not a lot of black spot even though mine is now thoroughly in a chunk of shade. Give it a try, I really like it. I detest fussy roses. And hooray for Purple Dome. One of my favorite asters - so shrub like as it grows and keeps on putting out flowers for a long time. I love our native asters (whose numbers are literally in the thousands in my garden) but they do take over.
DeleteEasy to see why you consider fall the finest time in your garden -- definitely a restorative time. I keep hearing of salvias blooming from spring thru fall so I'm guessing my garden doesn't have the heat. I need to grow 'Cinnabar' again, such a great burnt orange. I've always been attracted to that deutzia so it's good to know you give it a thumb's up.
ReplyDeleteRestorative....great word, Denise. So interesting about salvias - you're talking your Oregon garden, correct? I would think they love the coast, maybe not it seems. I'll mail you Cinnabar seeds - send me your address.
DeleteYou've captured that wonderful light well, Tamara. I need to follow your example and look for those golden moments rather than dwell on my garden's deficiencies. I'm very impressed by your apple crop. Apple trees and stone fruit trees are hard to grow in my area - we just don't get enough of a winter chill. I have a load of persimmons coming on, though - I don't care for them but I'll have plenty to give away in another month or so.
ReplyDeleteThank you Kris. Oh, this time of the year is often so crunchy and flat and buff colored - so yes, looking for the pretty bits keeps me sane. I bet you can grow figs and peaches and nectarines like nobody's business, though they do take up a lot of room. Persimmons are gorgeous for their fruit and fall color, I often end up giving mine away too.
DeleteSo glad you are finding reconnection and peace. A sign you are moving forwards in the grieving process. And what a place to find peace! It's ethereal and graceful and calming. What a great place to contemplate the end of the season.
ReplyDeleteThank you Elaine. It is ethereal thanks to nature - and I am so lucky to live in it. Being here is really all I ask for in life.
DeleteI've been too busy looking at the scorched, bedraggled & weedy. I do love your positive take, I needed that! I'm happy to hear you are feeling solace in the garden, that's wonderful.
ReplyDeleteThank you TZ. Ah, hopefully the scorched gardens shall soon be replenished.
DeleteSeasonal change is looking lovely at Chickadee Gardens. You show late September in such a way that even this confirmed summer-lover can’t help but be beguiled. I can’t wait to see it in person soon!
ReplyDeleteJane / MulchMaid
Thank you Jane, I look forward to seeing you too! Hugs
DeleteI love Seafoam artemisia! That's one you REALLY don't have to water much. I invited a passerby to take a piece of mine, and when I saw her later, she said it rooted just by sticking it in the ground!
ReplyDeleteBob Nold in Colorado said that many of the award winning xeriscape gardens there are actually heavily watered, so hmmm. I've found that almost everything of mine looks better with water.
I've mentioned my non blooming Berberis Jamesiana to you before. It still hasn't. I finally got in touch with Far Reaches Farm, and they insisted it was the right plant, and would bloom eventually. I sent pictures of the seedling, and the large healthy plant it is currently, and documented my care. Perhaps a warning should be attached, that if you are older, it's not a good choice as it might take years to bloom! 7 1/2 years so far. I hope it's not a non blooming seedling.
Your blog is always such a treat, there are so many good plants to think about, and actual experience with them. Thank you.
You are so right! You really don't have to water that Artemisia versicolor much, if ever. That's amazing hers rooted so easily, good to know! Yes, everything does look better with at least a little water, but our ability to do so varies from garden to garden, watering restrictions and affordability. If one could afford it, capturing rain water is such a solution. Regarding your Berberis jamesiana, gosh! Well - it does flower/set fruit on old wood, that's true. 7 plus years, however, is not normal. Maybe the cutting it came from was funky? I don't know! That's just odd and frustrating. I haven't had any luck propagating it but then again I haven't tried that hard, but your comments make me want to try more and send you a rooted cutting. I'll keep you posted.
DeleteTheir Berberis is seed grown, which is why I think it may never bloom. Seed grown plants are variable. I read about a seed grown wisteria that grew to 50 feet and never once bloomed. It is hugely disappointing. That's a lovely offer, but I'm pretty old, and I wonder if I'd even have time for a cutting at this point. Maybe! You're supposed to garden as if you'll never die!
DeleteAh, I see. Well, maybe by some miracle yours will bloom next year. Fingers crossed. I will try to propagate mine either way ;)
DeleteI share your love of Autumn and it's great to read this post, where you find beauty in the late season garden. Many dismiss it as 'over' as far as gardening goes, (as I heard from a participant in my yoga class... for me it's just restarting).
ReplyDeleteSolidago 'Fireworks' and Rosa glauca hips are such a winning combination you wont's see in Spring. One has to wait for it, and it's so worth the wait. I wish I had room for Solidago.
Baptisia australis seed pods may even be better than the blooms: what a dramatic contrast to the slivery foliage. Same for Arctostaphylos pumila: Wow!
And finally, you sweet blue shed, such an inviting space. Did you ever post about it showing the inside? Is that where all the gourd drying happens every year?
Chavli
Summer means gardening is over? Nonsense! Hilarity! It's the second spring, really for me. As far as the blue shed, I've never posted inside but I'm happy to do so someday. It's not that exciting but maybe curious people would like a peek inside? I dry the gourds usually in the field then they finish in the garage where I drill holes and varnish them but I do dry seeds in the blue shed as it's really pretty dry in there.
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