Spotted Bellflower

About five years ago I bought an alluring plant from a roadside stand in the Finger Lakes region of Central New York State.  The “stand” was actually a large cart, laden with perennials that were clearly surplus specimens from someone’s well-stocked garden.  The “someone” was nowhere to be seen.  Among the offerings were gaillardia daisies, … Read more

Rose Requirements

I love my roses.  Something about them has stirred my imagination for far longer than I have raised them.  I am not alone in my passion for these flowering shrubs.  They have been in cultivation for thousands of years, and have been objects of fascination and desire for the entire time.  The Empress Josephine of … Read more

Pincushions Redux

When I first wrote about pincushion flowers, which go by the unattractive Latin name, scabiosa, fifteen years ago, I had just purchased a lovely one.  It was a striking dark purple-flowered variety, ‘Ace of Spades’.  Billed as a perennial, I cosseted the plant for its entire first year, giving it sun, water and a prime … Read more

Lost Garden Centers

I dislike most kinds of shopping, but there are two kinds of “brick and mortar” merchants that I will happily visit: book stores and garden centers.  Why?  Because they offer unique experiences that I find irresistible. In my part of the world, at least four independent garden centers have closed over the last five years, … Read more

Tradescant’s Children

Garden spiderwort or Tradescantia x andersoniana is one of those plants that invariably pops up on lists of flowering specimens for partial shade.  To say that it flowers is an understatement.  It actually rampages.  A mature clump of spiderwort may boast scores of flowers, but it conceals another talent—self seeding.  Right now I am up … Read more