Blue Stars

When I look out at the sea of asters in my front yard, it is hard to believe that there was a time when I had none.  In search of some fall color, I planted one small pot of tall, pink-flowered ‘Alma Potschke’ asters. ‘Alma’ prospered—so much so that now, if I didn’t pull out … Read more

Summer’s End

My garden is a riot of activity at the moment, with honeybees, bumblebees, skippers and pollinators of all kinds swarming over the exuberant asters and rampant perilla mint.  All that frantic action almost obscures what is missing—the big butterflies, like monarchs and swallowtails, which floated through the garden every day in the summer.  They are … Read more

Beautiful Monsters

  “Ampelopsis” sounds like something out of a children’s book.  I can imagine a large, lumpy monster—possibly friendly, but definitely massive.  Ampelopsis brevipedunculata is a monster, but not of the animal kind.  Better known as porcelain berry or Amur peppervine, it is a non-native vine that grows rapidly, spreads like wildfire and dominates everything in … Read more

Surprise Gourd

Late last spring I noticed a large leaf sprouting in my front garden.  It didn’t quite look like a weed, but it also didn’t look like anything that I had planted intentionally.  Curiosity coupled with an inclination to benign neglect led me to leave the plant alone.  It rewarded my non-efforts by growing…and growing and … Read more

Sweet Autumn Clematis

My behemoth quince bush has been taken over by a plant that has had more names than a check forger, is bound and determined to run completely out of control, and makes regular, unscheduled appearances in respectable gardens everywhere.  Sweet autumn clematis is the plant, and if America’s Most Wanted had a plant list, this … Read more