Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Some of the things I missed this summer...

Summer is usually the busiest time of my year - after spring, or perhaps after fall cleanups and winter preparations. Since it is a busy time and try as I might to keep up with the blog inevitably because it is a busy time I missed a number of things -- things that didn’t quite fit in elsewhere, or that I didn’t have time to write about and try to fit them in.

First is the Bronze Friendly Thistle, or Carlina acaulis. I found the plant at Valley Farms in Helena a couple of years ago. I wasn’t sure what kind of conditions it needs, only that “it performs well in hot sunny sites even in poor soil,” but it seems to be happy and productive where it is. I’m sure that living on top of a gravel pit qualifies for the poor soil part. The flowers are unusual and have attracted attention by visiting gardeners.


Arisaema triphyllum, or Three-leafed Jack-in-the-pulpit: to be accurate I didn’t actually forget the Jack-in-the-pulpit since it is in one of the early chapters, but it is a summer bloomer, doesn’t quite fit in elsewhere and I like them so here it is again.

Cold hardy gingers are an odd plant that have a found a spot in my garden. Unrelated to our ginger used for cooking it nevertheless smells strongly alike and can be used for some of the same things – teas, candy, medicinal remedies and so on. I have two species. I ordered Asarum europeam from one of my favorite nurseries, waited patiently for several months but the plants failed to arrive because of availability. I happened to be visiting another nursery and found “native” cold-hardy ginger so of course I bought a pot and planted it. About a week later I got a message from the first nursery that the plant was there! Feeling guilty I obligated myself to buy at least one plant. It turned out that the first was a North American native, either Asarum caudatum or A. canadense, I’m not sure which. Unlike its European cousin the heart-shaped leaves are deciduous and “ours” has a softer, velvety leaf whereas the European ginger has a shiny leaf, easily distinguishing the two in the picture. (I thought I had successfully separated them but I missed a bit.) Our native ginger is more drought tolerant and deer resistant than the European species and seems to establish more quickly and spread more rapidly, but the European variety is green and pretty all winter unless covered by snow.

This little Malva, or perhaps it is a Verbascum, has volunteered as an ephemeral plant – meaning that it shows up now and then and not necessarily where it was planted originally -- at a garden in the middle Rattlesnake. The flowers are pretty individually and as I encourage them to proliferate into a small colony they will be showier. As a bonus, the deer don’t eat them. There is a yellow dianthus that periodically and unpredictably appears in this garden as well.


Campanula persicafolia, or Peach-leafed Campanula, more commonly known simply as Bellflowers rarely do what they are supposed to in our area since too rapid growth in the spring tends to produce weak stems resulting in plants that fall over if there is a hint of extra water weight from sprinklers, rain or dew or simply because they feel like it. This one however was perfectly splendid at Beth’s last summer. They do tend to seed everywhere so are in constant need of control. Deer seem willing but unfortunately they also eat the flowers depriving you of a nice flower for cutting.


Monkshood, or Aconitum, is one of the more poisonous plants in the garden, and may have produced the poison used by the Borgia family. This fatal flaw however also makes it highly unpalatable to deer. Originally only dark blue varieties existed but a Stainless Steel, pink and variegated Monkshoods have appeared in recent years.

Euonymous turkistanica was another find
browsing through Earth and Wood two years ago. Related to the more common and better known Burning Bush (Euonymous alata) it has a much more interesting flower that resembles an earring or Asian lantern of some kind. Results so far indicate that it is hardy in Missoula, not very picky about where it grows, although it does need full sun, and is strongly deer resistant.

Saturday, January 9, 2010

My mailbox since New Year’s Day has been filled with many new “seed” catalogues. My mother and grandmother waited all year for the seed catalogues to arrive, shortening the winter with their promise of spring planting time to come. But the seed catalogues of my grandmother’s day now also carry a raft of plants – from asparagus plants to nut and fruit trees. And the local nurseries of that time, which sent out those precious catalogues, are now often multinational corporations like Burpees and Guerneys. But they still make winter seem shorter and not unfalsely promise that spring is on its way.

While I strongly believe that “local is best” in all things plants it is still hard not to be struck and enticed by a particular picture, or a new plant or a new variety of an old plant, and a “need to really have it” in my garden. My garden is full but the new “black” Hellebore from Heronswood Nursery in Pennsylvania http://www.heronswood.com/ is an absolute must have, as are the Astilboides tabularis and North Hills strain of Candelabra Primroses from White Flower Farm in Connecticut http://www.whiteflowerfarm.com/ Well, maybe not in my garden but certainly in one of my client’s. Shady Oaks has one of the nicest selections of hostas around but fortunately they are only a wholesale nursery. Unfortunately I have to wait until their new selections show up locally or in another catalogue.


My favorite catalogue won’t arrive for a few weeks yet but when it does I always drool far more than is seemly. Fortunately most of the plants they sell are for areas farther south, zone 6 or warmer, so it is easy to resist most of their offerings. Plant Delights Nursery http://www.plantdelights.com/ operates in conjunction with Juniper Level Botanic Gardens in Raleigh, NC. Perhaps I should consider moving to North Carolina.

Johnny’s Selected Seeds http://www.johnnyseeds.com/ and Totally Tomatoes http://www.totallytomato.com/ are equally tempting, but fortunately I have outgrown the need to grow tomatoes. More accurately I have almost outgrown the need to grow tomatoes. Last year I had three plants that were unusually overabundant and with gifts from other gardeners I have a freezer half full of tomato sauce.

Websites are not the same as catalogues and never quite seem as precious, but here are several that are favorites and which sometimes accompany a “real” catalogues.
Edmunds roses are some of the best I’ve ever bought, and they have several new varieties every year. http://www.edmundsroses.com/ Schreiner’s Iris Lovers Catalogue is one of the older and best for the northwest. http://www.schreinersgardens.com/ John Scheepers has two catalogues – one for garden seeds, the other for bulbs and a few perennials: http://www.kitchengardenseeds.com/ and http://www.johnscheepers.com/ respectively.

Seeds of Change works to preserve biodiversity, by maintaining old strains of modern vegetables and flowers, and promote organic and sustainable agriculture. They produce organic seeds and a part of their mission is to teach gardening. http://www.seedsofchange.com/
Select Seeds, heirloom treasures for modern gardens the catalogue is subtitled, has a similar assortment of seeds but tends more to flowers than edibles. http://www.selectseeds.com/

High Country Garden is in New Mexico and specializes in drought tolerant plants for xeric landscapes. http://www.gighcountrygardens.com/ I was more impressed before I discovered that their part of New Mexico receives almost twice as much moisture as the Missoula valley does, which may explain why some of their plants have not done well for me. But they are nevertheless worth checking out. The bright red-orange Zuaschneria and purple ice plant are samples of what they sell.

Keep in mind that many of these seed companies are in other parts of the country, not Montana, and that their plant and seed offerings reflect their local growing conditions far more than they may ours. Day length, water, water quality, soil, soil type and conditions all affect how plants and seeds grow and how well they produce, whether it is flowers or food for our tables. Buying locally from local growers and nurseries increases the chance of a bountiful crop.

Garden City Seeds formerly from Corvallis, Montana was absorbed by Irish Eyes Seeds in Ellensburg, Washington which has also absorbed a number of other smaller seed companies. Their products -- seeds, seed potatoes and onion starts mostly – are usually available locally at Marchie’s Nursery, Caras Nursery, ACE Hardware and elsewhere.
http://www.irisheyesgardenseeds.com/

See you again soon, or at planting time in the garden.

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Hellebores


Hellebores: this is a group of about 20 or 25 species of garden plants from central Europe and western Asia.
This seems a good day to write a few words about Hellebores since my Christmas Rose was on the verge of blooming right before we got the sub-zero Canadian blast two weeks ago. Now that the snow cover has gone somewhat it appears that the buds may survive, providing they are not frozen again this week. Helleborus niger, an alpine native of Switzerland, Austria, Italy and Germany, usually blooms in the very early spring – January or February -- in its native habitat but mine is usually in bloom by Thanksgiving although this year it may not make it at all. Or it may be on its “native” schedule of later in the winter. Regardless, the pure white flower that blooms in mid-winter snow has attracted gardeners for a long time.


I have four other Hellebores: another white that closely resembles the niger parent but that blooms in late spring; a white one spotted with “red” (although the pictures on the web look purple to me) that has yet to bloom even after four years but I'm hoping that this year it will put forth buds and flowers; and a Helleborus foetida, or Stinky Hellebore, whose unusual clumping and spiraling foliage rather than the somewhat inconsequential small light green flowers is the main attraction.
The fourth is the Lenten Rose, or Helleborus
orientalis, with large green flowers that blooms
near Easter time. The leaves are rough and serrate-edged which discourages deer. This species, native to Greece and Turkey, has given rise to many of the named varieties now available in nurseries.

Hellebores have begun attracting considerable gardening attention the last several years and many new attractively marked and double varieties in a range of colors have entered the market. They are showy, blooming at unusual times of the year, are easily propagated from seed, grow well in shady parts of the garden, readily adapt to a variety of soil types and are moderately drought tolerant although they appreciate an occasional big drink. A big plus for Missoula is that deer tend to ignore the coarse foliage and occasional unpleasantly scented plants.

For more information on Hellebores check out the website for Sunshine Farms near Renton, Washington: http://www.sunfarm.com/ Or, a site devoted completely to Hellebores http://www.hellebores.org/

Friday, October 9, 2009

What better thing to do on a blustery cold January-like day in October? But add something to my blog. I've been working on a short blog on weeds since mid-August and today seems like as good a time as any to finish it. In August we could actually see the weeds; today most of them are under a new layer of snow.


When is a weed not a weed? When it is growing in your garden because it has pretty flowers, perhaps? A friend’s mother, new to the area and blissfully unaware of the destructive nature of the beast, happily transplanted some Knapweed plants to her new flowerbed. Quickly apprised of the real status of the plant she removed it from her garden, but it is nevertheless easy to see how the mistake was made. The flowers are beautiful and a large plant in full bloom is spectacular but beauty does come with a price.




Some of Montana’s noxious weeds have been introduced into this country, and state, as ornamentals or possibly for medicinal purposes, such as Tansy and supposedly Mullein. Teas made from the leaves were used to treat a varity of chest, bronchial, intestinal and other afflictions. IN the case of tansy the results were sometimes fatal and it is generally not recommended for use today. Wild Mullein has always been one of my favorite plants and is a winter food source for many birds. It is related to the showier garden mulleins. I like it for its statuesque, sculptural quality, and imagine it to be rather like a smaller skinny saguaro cactus cold hardy enough for Montana. As a child I remember being told it was very invasive and a noxious weed. Today it is not even on the Montana Noxious Weed list. Looking at the wider perspective, and considering Knapweed and Leafy Spurge, it is really a rather benign visitor.

Even if Common Tansy is in Category 1 on Montana’s Noxious Weed list I’m sure the Tansy bed along the north edge of the Kim Williams Trail near the university practice field, and south bank of the Clark Fork River, help stabilize the bank so I would like to think it is of some practical use. I like the medicinal smell of the plants, but that is also one of the reasons many people dislike it. It can be very invasive in certain locations and is difficult to remove if it establishes a foothold. But it does make a good, durable cut flower and dries reasonably well.


Sulfur Cinquefoil, related to our native cinquefoils and the flowering shrub Potentilla, is also a category 1 weed in Montana. While individual flowers are pretty the plant as a whole is not apt to entice one to plant it in the garden. Fortunately it is easy to pull and responds quickly to weed killers.

Yellow Toadflax, Dalmation Toadflax (not pictured but with flowers very similar to the yellow species), and Bindweed are also in the category one designation. Again the flowers are pretty and in the case of Toadflax, may have arrived in this country as ornamentals. However, the deep roots and spreading rhizomes allow all three plants to form huge colonies that can quickly take over a part of the garden that has been ignored, or take over large areas of pasture or wildlife habitat. Bindweed takes its name from the difficulties it causes farmers when they plow a field and the miles of ambling vines bind up the plows.




















Some of our native plants however, like this small fall blooming aster, are often weeded out of our gardens but given the right location are an attractive part of the landscape. Marge lives on top of a windswept hill west of Missoula which is kept mowed low to prevent the proliferation of noxious weeds, but the location seems to be perfect for the aster which put on an exceptional show this year.
For more information on Montana’s noxious weeds, how they are categorized and for control methods ask the county extension office for a copy of their small spiral-bound brochure Montana’s Noxious Weeds. Or online, check at www.weedawareness.org/weed_list.html , or at www.agr.mt.gov/weedpest/noxiousweeds.asp


Friday, August 7, 2009

Daylilies. There are hundreds of varieties of daylilies available in catalogues, from private hobby growers and breeders, neighbors whose gardens have been filled as well as local nurseries, and ach one seems to be more beautiful than the last. One of the best mid- to late summer flowers for gardens they are often overlooked as a desirable garden plant because of their past reputations. The older varieties are often messy or invasive, dying back early and growing rapidly into neighboring plants, and the bloom season is thought to be too short to make them worth while, and flower colors were limited, usually some shade of orange or yellow.

That is true of many of the older varieties, but many of the newer varieties show improvement in all these areas including pleasing fragrances. Some new varieties are very slow to multiply, taking several years to establish a clump large enough to provide a good display. An advantage of daylilies in the garden is that they are both fairly drought tolerant and moderately deer resistant, depending on how hungry the deer are. Just ask Marvie whose backyard daylily display was devastated by the neighborhood deer herd last summer and again this year, just as they were starting to bloom. A good deep watering every other week, even in hot weather, is usually enough to keep daylilies going, and they don’t seem to demand much in the way of nutrition or soil, adapting to sand and clay with equal ease.

Modern hybrid daylilies range from very very dark purple to nearly white. White being a relative term for plant breeders. I’d go with pale yellow to old ivory. The trick to nearly white daylilies is to plant the “white” one near truly yellow flowers and the contrast will make the “white” look whiter. There are even double flowers, like this bright yellow from Grace's bed.



The best display of daylilies in Missoula is at the Reserve St. Post Office behind Costco. And right now they are in full bloom so drive by if you have a few extra minutes. But even when the display is not spectacular individual plants and flowers can be beautiful, even spectacular.






Sunday, June 28, 2009

The “next weekend” is obviously long past but late spring has been interesting in my garden. The interesting but not very showy Arisaema, or Jack-in-the-pulpit, bloomed on schedule, but one of my daylilies (Happy Returns, described in catalogs as “the bloomingest daylily ever”) and a small hosta are far ahead of schedule. I can’t tell you a name for the hosta because the tag is gone, but it is an interesting spot of color at the end of the walk. Normally these two would not start blooming until summer has officially started. I have seen a few other daylilies around town this week that are probably Happy Returns as well. Maybe it is the “bloomingest” because it starts early and ends late, and keeps on going in between. The Fritillaria was not unexpected but the bulbs have finally gained enough momentum that this year there is a nice display.

Three weeks ago winds early in the week blew over the iris in my back bed that had blooms, which made the display not too eventful. The rest were OK and were soon in full bloom although because of the heat none of them lasted long. In the meantime, north at Arlee, Mary’s iris stood up to the wind and with this, the third season in her Garden of Dawn (my name for it, since it stands at the east end of her property) were the dominant color focus and a spectacular display although perhaps a bit past their peak.

However, Beth’s lower bed in the upper Grant Creek area was in full bloom and at the peak of color. Because this garden is higher it tends to be behind gardens in Missoula by a week or so. I didn’t see any tulips when I was there this week, but the first year I worked in her garden she had tulips until almost the Fourth of July!












Leaving their place I happened to spy a small colony of Montana’s native orchid, Cypripedium montanum. Some of the flowers had already faded – it is a bit late for them, even in Grant Creek – but several were still good enough to photograph. The two pictures show the variation within the species – a nicer, darker more chocolate color and the lateral sepals are held more horizontally.

Finding them didn’t come as a big surprise since I had seen them there before, but I did understand suddenly how my dad could be driving along a narrow mountain road and suddenly see a cat track (bobcat or mountain lion) at the bottom of the mountain. There is something that pulls us to look for what we are most tuned into, and whether we consciously see something or not the unconscious part of our brain suddenly wakes us up when we see it, and “poof” there it is. Almost magic. Growing up my dad had cat hounds and hunting them was a winter pastime. He turned 90 on Tuesday June, 23rd, so here is a picture of his first party.




Happy 90th Birthday, Dad!


Wednesday, June 10, 2009













It seems that spring has fled by us, leaving the daffodils and tulips behind and the next crop of flowers not quite here yet. Here are a few pictures of that early crop, a few because they were so magnificent it was hard to pick out just one or two or three. For reference the statue of St. Joseph is just over two feet tall.
More or less, in order of appearance, these are: Tulipa vuylstekeara Tangerine Dream, one of the most brilliant mid- to late season small tulips I've found and a spot of bright color that truly attracts attention; a large grouping of Rembrandt tulips, grape hyacinths and white pansies greet you as you go through the entrance to Beth's front yard; the entrance to my home guarded by St. Joseph and what I think are Tulip Mrs. John T. Scheepers; and the last photo is a cluster of Tarda tulips that has done exceptionally well at the front corner of the bed.
I could post another dozen pictures of tulips and daffodils but it is almost summer so the next post, which I will try to do this weekend, will bring you those.