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

Stewartia

A few weeks ago, I vowed that if I had an arboretum, I would include Japanese stewartia, for its beautiful, camellia-like flowers.  As is often the case, a stewartia popped up in front of me just a few days later.  Despite the recent infernal temperatures, it was not a heat-induced mirage. I was on a … Read more

Regal Lilies

Early summer is daisy time, with daisy family species like Shastas, echinacea and coreopsis holding forth in multi-petaled radiance.  But all the daisies in the world cannot outshine the tall trumpet lilies that are also making glorious music in gardens right now.  Regal lilies or Lilium regale, with their voluptuous, golden-throated trumpets, are among the … Read more

Editing

Not long ago, Scott Kunst, founder of heirloom bulb purveyor, Old House Gardens, wrote up his simple rules for gardening.  Among the most notable were: “weeding is endless–learn to love it”; and “editing is more important than planting. “ I may not love weeding, but most of the time I enjoy it and relish the … Read more

Peach-Leaf Bellflowers

The past couple of weeks have seen an explosion of the opulent flowers of late spring—gorgeous, multi-petaled roses, big fluffy peonies, and the complicated, twining blooms of double clematis.  The abundance is magnificent, but almost overwhelming. Now that a couple of downpours have put paid to all those petals, I am refreshed by the simpler … Read more