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Backyardnotes

~ All things botanical in photos and words—in my West Seattle garden and elsewhere; seeing and creating art and assorted musings.

Backyardnotes

Tag Archives: clematis

RAIN, RAIN, HOW DO WE LOVE THEE?

22 Friday Feb 2013

Posted by backyardnotes in Flowers, Inspriation, Musings, Rain, Weather, Winter flowers

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

blogging, clematis, Early tulips, hamamelis, pear & apple trees, rain, winter, winter flowers, winter gloom

TODAY A BIG RAIN STORM IS MOVING IN after some pretty fair days.  But no complaints considering the weather everywhere east of here. We even managed to get some general maintenance and weeding done over the past week or so.

Witchhazel, Hamamelis x intermedia

Witchhazel, Hamamelis x intermedia

SOMETIMES WE NEED A BREAK from our routines. I needed a break from this blog. Keeping up on a regular basis was becoming a drag and I no longer felt that inner voice to be engaging. So I gave it and myself a rest. The busyness of the weeks between Thanksgiving and Christmas seemed like a good excuse to ignore the beast. I spent time painting and creating; baking with my granddaughter, hanging out with family; having dinner with neighbors and generally enjoying the hustle and warmth of the holidays. After the holidays were over it was time to take a break from the monotony of long, gray, days here in the Pacific Northwest by spending 14 days in Death Valley National Park. And now with winter flowers popping and some early spring ones too, I’m back to feeling like I still have some thoughts and pictures worth sharing.

A lovely winter blooming clematis on a clear day

A lovely winter blooming clematis on a clear day

This clematis cirrhosa blooms continuously from November to March when little else relieves winter gloom.

yellowcrocus

Nothing lightens the spirit like the first crocus on a sunny winter day.

 

A red blooming hamamelis in the warm glow of a setting sun.

A red blooming hamamelis in the warm glow of a setting sun.

The earliest tulip has just pushed up over the past week

The earliest tulip has just pushed up over the past week

Silhouette of pear and apple trees at sunset. Hooray! The sun is now setting closer to 6:00 p.m.

Silhouette of pear and apple trees at sunset. Hooray! The sun is now setting closer to 6:00 p.m.

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SOME WINTER SUNSHINE

27 Monday Feb 2012

Posted by backyardnotes in Cameras, Desert, Flowers, Travel, Winter

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Tags

clematis, crocus, Death Valley, hamamelis, hellebores, railroad locomotive, sunshine, Travel, winter cyclamen, winter flowers

Hiking above Texas Spring campground, Death Valley

WE TOOK A BREAK IN JANUARY IN SEARCH OF SUNSHINE and warmth. It’s hard to believe it has been more than two months since the last post! And now I’ve gotten out of the blogging habit. So time to do some catching up. We spent a total of eleven days in Death Valley over two visits, and explored some old and new territory in Arizona and California. We took ten great hikes in 30 days and plenty of short walks too. So much to see and explore…

Los Banos Reservoir walk

I’m not used to thinking of my phone as a camera, but on this trip I tried to use it as well as the point and shoot. Mixed results with the phone camera; this photo was taken at Los Banos Creek Reservoir St. Park (California) turned out pretty well. This was our first time here and we were the first visitors of the year!

Front of Death Valley railroad locomotive

I had forgotten to bring the regular camera when we walked through the Death Valley museum so used the opportunity to take some ‘arty’ photos with the phone.

Big logging wagon wheels

I managed to take more than 700! photos in 32 days and still have a lot of culling to do. Will post more later.

WHILE WE WERE AWAY the winter blooming clematis that we planted in 2010 began blooming in earnest. Masses of blooms and still blooming!

Clematis cirrohsa

Everywhere around the garden the drive to spring is in full swing.

Hamamelis x intermedia 'Diane"

A yellow variety of hamamelis x intermedia

WINTER’S SENTINELS. I like to think of crocus this way. A bridge between winter and spring. Some are sunny and cheerful, others taller and stately and in a range of colors.

Giant crocus–purple 'Pickwick' with white 'Peter Pan'.

These giant crocus are quite tall at four-five inches tall. Good multipliers, not too vigorous.

HELLEBORES! These cheerful, nodding flowers also show up in many color variations. White, pink, pale yellow, maroon, green, and nearly black. They tend to be free hybridizers so offspring can be a surprise.

An unnamed, lovely pale yellow specimen

Pink ones from Grandma T's garden

Another dark pink/red variation.

We have lots of sun over the last few days, so I’ve tried to take advantage of the naturally backlit petals.

Dried seedheads of eryngium giganteum 'Miss Wilmot's Ghost".

Even the dried seedheads of long ago bloomed perennials have interest through the winter garden season.

Lichens on ribes sanguineum.

Even the bare branches and trunks of shrubs and trees can be beautiful with the icy, glaucous color of these fluffy lichens and spots of mustard colored ones too with counterpoints of swelling buds of this native flowering red currant.

And to end this sunny day post parade are winter blooming cyclamen. I never tire of their dainty disposition.

winter blooming cyclamen

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THE PERSISTENCE OF PLANTS

31 Thursday Mar 2011

Posted by backyardnotes in March flowers, Spring

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Tags

clematis, Gardening, hostas, tomatoes, trillium

I HAVE BEEN ROLLING THIS POST AROUND IN MY HEAD for some time now. About three weeks ago I spotted a little slip of a clematis. I nearly pulled it out while weeding and adding some new plants that I purchased the garden show. I remember planting it here several years ago under an aging lilac thinking it would be a great support for a clematis. It didn’t seem to do well and I was sure that it had died or that maybe I had moved it. I have a vague memory of moving it, but apparently did not get all of the rootstock; what a surprise! How has it managed to survive?

THIS kind of plant behavior always amazes me – I know it shouldn’t – but it does. Plants getting a foothold in the tiniest crack in a rock wall (and turning into large trees), the crotch of a tree, a little hole at the edge of pavement. The will to grow and reproduce is paramount and seems to take place against great odds. And this clematis is a case in point since I broke off a six inch piece of it when weeding – what a klutz! But, the roots are strong and there is new growth as seen in the photo above. Now I will baby it and see what happens this year. With luck it might bloom and then I will know which one it is.

I think that one of the most lovely forms in early spring are emerging hostas. They seem elegant and the color is so fresh. This is a new one, June Fever, from Naylor Creek Nursery, one of four hosta varieties that I purchased from them at the garden show in late February; the others are ‘UFO’, ‘Clear Fork River Valley’, and ‘Blue Angel’.

Speaking of the garden show, the display gardens were big! And showy of course, with fancy hardscape details, and lots of large specimen plantings. For me, there were few new ideas to incorporate into my garden; but that is not the reason I went. I went for the plant vendors. I was not disappointed and this year I made up for what I did not purchase through all of last year. I bought three daylilies: ‘Seal of Approval’, ‘Night Embers’ and ‘China Bride’ (Naylor Creek-great hosta selections); hachonechloa macra ‘Beni-kaze’, crocosmia x pottsii ‘Culzean Pink’, paeonia mascula ssp. russoi (tree  peony), echinacea ‘Sunrise’, and aruncus ‘Guinea Fowl’ (dwarf goat’s beard) from Far Reaches Farm (they have some very cool plants); lilies from my favorite source, B&D Lilies: ‘Rexona’, Belladona’, and ‘Yelloween’; ligularia ‘Osiris’ from Woodland Gardens of Port Orchard (no website), to add to my collection; and a small waterlily type dahlia, ‘Lauren Michele’ (I am partial to simple dahlia blooms) from Swan Island Dahlias in Oregon.  Every plant has a home in the garden except for the daylilies and dahlias which are in pots until I figure out their final locations in the garden.

Aquilegia ‘Lime Frost’

Signs of spring are everywhere and it is such a delight after a very dreary and rainy winter. We have of late, had enough fair days to accommodate general cleanup and weeding. Why is it that weeds don’t seem to have a season and grow the year ’round?

Trillium grandiflorum are in peak form with some are still emerging.

And the beautiful, but briefly appearing sanguinaria canadensis.

It is nice to have a camera available and in working order. The biggest challenge is in learning how this one works. I think the macro is pretty good, but I need to study up. Tomorrow it’s time to start tomatoes and peppers. Hooray, summer is on the way!

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HOORAY FOR SPRING, PEAS, AND FAVA BEANS!

11 Tuesday May 2010

Posted by backyardnotes in Iris, May flowers, Spring, Transplanting, Vegetable garden

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Tags

cabbage, clematis, fava beans, iris, pears, peas, Spring, tomatoes, transplanting

PICKING THE FIRST PEAS AND FAVA BEANS OF SPRING IS SHEER JOY! The favas may need another four to five days, but we’ll see. I planted two varieties, Negreta (3ft tall) and Aqua Dulce (5ft tall). The Negreta are about a week or more ahead of the Aqua Dulce for harvesting.

And, the some of peas that were a real mixed bag of age, varieties, and viability and planted in December are nearly ready to harvest. Can I exercise a little restraint and keep myself from picking a pod or two as I admire them?

They have really taken off!

The Arrowhead cabbage that I planted last fall are nearly ready to harvest too, it’s surprising since the other cabbages have long since bolted. One Savoy is still forming a head.

On Friday and Saturday I transplanted all of the tomatoes and some of peppers, most into one gallon pots, then into the coldframe they went. They were twenty-eight days since seeding. Tomatoes grow like weeds; happily for us they certainly taste better! Just about the time they are ready to outgrow the coldframe, the fava beans should be nearly done and can come out to make room for tomatoes.

I’m excited to see that we will indeed have pears. There quite a few of each type. We’ll wait another week or so before thinning them. These are the Bartlett’s. This is a great time of year!

In the flower garden, the iris ‘Saturday Night Fever is in full swing. Very large flower and tall stalks. I purchased this one at the Seattle flower and Garden Show about ten years ago and it has multiplied nicely. Time to divide this year after blooming has finished.

Another lovely, delicate bearded iris is ‘Lenora Pearl‘ from White Flower Farm. It is a reblooming iris, blooming again in the fall. This has proved quite vigorous and in also ready for division after ten or elven years.

We have several clematis trellised up against the house and this one, ‘Crystal Fountain’, is quite showy. Deb and I each bought one from here in 2005. I kept mine in a pot on the deck until last fall when it went into the ground (much happier and growing like crazy), against the house and behind the miniature climbing rose, The ‘Rocketeer’. This clematis is a rebloomer throughout the summer.

Time now to attend to matters outdoors and take advantage of more fabulous weather–predicted to last the rest of the week!

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GOOD PLANT, BAD PLANT

08 Monday Mar 2010

Posted by backyardnotes in March flowers, Problem plants

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Bad plants, clematis, hostas, weeds

TIME TO BE FRANK THAT ALL IS NOT ALWAYS WELL IN THE GARDEN. A weeding session on Saturday prompted this meditation about what constitutes a bad plant. A bad plant is one that does not respect its neighbors by encroaching and runs rampant without invitation. It is a thug, invader, pest, and a bane to good riddance. The particular plant that brought this to mind is campanula persicifolia. While the white and blue flowers are charming, it seeds with abandon and travels where it is unwanted by dense, underground root runs; it is most difficult to pull them out roots and all, because I can never get out all the roots. A good plant on the other hand is one that spreads slowly or stays put where planted, gives its’ neighbors plenty of space and is easily divided or easy to pull like a weed when there are too many. This is of course, highly subjective and subject to local conditions and tastes! I unknowingly accepted a small piece of this plant from a friend who had received it from her neighbor and now it shows up everywhere and far from the original location.

I noticed that the first hosta is shooting up and there is oxalis oregana (wood sorrel) around it and for me, oxalis is a pernicious pest so, it too, became part this screed. The roots probably came along with a small native iris from Grandma T’s garden. It looks great in a large shady area under tall trees or rhododendrons, but I have a relatively small garden. Luckily it is largely confined to one area of the garden and every year I rip out as many of its’ roots as I can find as soon as the leaves start to appear; the fleshy roots can be up to eight inches deep. Another univited plant is a rampant alstromeria that came along with polygonatum hirtum (Solomon’s seal) from another friend’s garden. The Solomon’s Seal is stately and elegant with lovely white, late spring flowers is pretty well mannered in a shady dry spot with no supplemental irrigation, but it too can spread unchecked in more favorable conditions.

So what this all comes down to is be alert and if possible do a little homework before you take home that ‘have to have it’ or friendship plant. We all become enamored of some plant(s) that we just have to have, and on occasion experience a lapse in good judgment. Even if when we know better we bring it home anyway and plant it because we know that it will behave in my garden. Be vigilant and look for the unwanted hitch hiker when unpotting plants you receive from friends. If possible read about your plant and the conditions it likes, before planting! This is especially true with ground cover plants; there are lots of great ground covers, most are well behaved and spread slowly and are easy to control, but others, while quite attractive, are very invasive and need containment. Right plant, right location–easier said than done sometimes!

The first hosta to emerge is hosta ‘Lancifolia’,  (also from Grandma T’s garden). I love the funnel shaped leaves as they push up skyward through the earth and slowly unfurl and lay outward. The leaves are a medium green, lightly ribbed and  shiny. (It’s sharing a a somewhat isolated spot with oxalis)

Glorious on a warm, sunny afternoon is clematis armandii, with an abundance of fragrant flowers. It is evergreen and will grow fifteen-twenty feet in a season. We have two that run along the edge of our L-shaped covered porch, one planted at each end. They are severely pruned back every other year and require some frequent tidying since they run along the roof edge just under the gutters.

As the erythronium continue to bloom the dainty blue flowers of brunnera macrophylla ‘Hadspen Cream’ on the other side make a nice contrast to the bright yellow flowers.

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