Thousands of Stars

THOUSANDS OF STARS             There are many reasons to grow garden asters.  Butterflies of every description flock to them, as do the bees so essential for pollination.  Asters are mostly carefree, giving you more time to thumb through bulb catalogs, pull the weeds that persist in coming up, and finish all the chores that you … Read more

Chinese Lanterns

CHINESE LANTERNS I am always searching for plants that make great combinations. Right now, fall asters are everywhere. In the “waste spaces”–ditches, roadsides and undeveloped areas–wild white asters predominate. Home gardens and retailers’ establishments display a stunning array of pink, purple, blue purple and white cultivated varieties. I am especially partial to the dark blue-purple … Read more

Bulb Rules

BULB RULES I was wandering around the local big box store the other day and in my enthusiasm over the cheapness of the chrysanthemums, I walked right into an enormous crate loaded with bags of daffodil bulbs. That painful jolt made me recall that I put “order bulbs” on my to-do list back in August, … Read more

Nerine or Lycoris

NERINE OR LYCORIS A month or so ago I made a trip to Austerlitz, New York to tour the house and gardens of poet Edna St. Vincent Millay. The property, called Steepletop, after a flowering shrub that flourishes in the area, was Millay’s primary residence from 1925 until her death in 1950. Both house and … Read more

Campsis Rambunctious

CAMPSIS RAMBUNCTIOUS There are some plants you should not grow if your garden is smaller than the state of Delaware. One of them is trumpet vine or Campsis radicans. In the marvelous book, Passalong Plants by southern garden writers Felder Rushing and Steve Bender, the latter refers to trumpet vine as a plant that “brings … Read more