Hidden Jewels

It has been a wet summer in my region and plants are lush and green.  Lurking everywhere among that lushness is poison ivy, which is having a banner year. And, if that news is not enough to make you itchy, consider mosquitos, which also thrive in rainy, humid summer weather.  The pesky insects, with their … Read more

Willow Wrangler

I do not make a habit of wrestling with trees, but occasionally it becomes necessary.  Last week I finished a several-round bout with the coral bark willow, Salix alba subspecies vitellina ‘Britzensis’, which grows smack in the middle of my front border. I want to emphasize that ‘Britzensis’ is a wonderful plant.  A male member … Read more

Cute as a Buttonbush

When you see or hear something—plants, animals, situations—several times in a short span of hours or days, the universe is probably trying to send you a message.  This past week, the message I received was about buttonbush, known to botanists as Cephalanthus occidentalis.  On three separate days, I saw buttonbushes in three separate parks in … Read more

The Universality of Coneflowers

It occurs to me as I peer out over the happy array of coneflowers—Echinacea—in my front yard that the coneflower has become the “little black dress” of the world of ornamental horticulture.  Every woman and a good number of the men of my acquaintance know that “little black dress” is metaphor for something that is … Read more

The Year of the Vines

Gardeners tend to remember days, months and years by certain significant events and conditions.  Right now, too many people in the western United States are sweating through The Year of No Rain.  Five years ago, many of us who grow hydrangeas in the northeastern part of the country went through a couple of late spring … Read more