Fencing With the Garden

Sometimes you choose to make changes in the landscape.  Sometimes the landscape does the deciding.  In my case, the situation is a little bit of both.  The wooden perimeter fence that bounds my backyard is decrepit and needs replacing.  It was handsome once, but that was fifteen years ago.  Weather and normal aging have done … 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

Porcelain-berry

Porcelain-berries are among nature’s most beautiful fruits—shiny in jewel-like shades of lilac and azure to dark blue-purple, with speckles that make them look like little Easter eggs.  The berries appear on long, vigorous vines with medium green, deeply dissected leaves that remind me a bit of wild grape, to which it is related.  In short, … Read more

Saint Vitus Riparia Dance

When I am doing battle with the English ivy at home, I am convinced there is nothing worse.  It inveigles its way into the garden beds, climbs the sides of the house and races up and over the perimeter fence.   Some days it scales the trees faster than the squirrels.  If you tear it off … Read more