Masses of bulbs – why do less? Let’s be like P.

When I visited with P. Allen Smith earlier this spring, the timing was such that I missed the display of daffodils, planted en masse. The photos were enough though to connivence me that I’m not doing enough to enhance my spring.  While my attempts were honorable, there were nothing like P’s.  I want to be like P.

In the heat of the summer, I wait for the bulb magazines to arrive.  This wait is not too different from waiting for the seed catalogs to arrive in early January.  The middle of summer has me planning for the next season.  Two favorite old standby catalogs, that I eagerly await to place orders are Brent and Becky’s Bulbs and Old House Gardens.  This year, I plan to order enough daffodils, in a new area of my lot, with a few varieties, extending the season from January through April.

The area next to my driveway is the area I plan to plant daffodils en masse.  I also have the idea of putting a river of an ornamental grass growing through the garden.

 

This is the area of my lawn that will be planted, en masse, with a variety of daffodils.

 

The blue line marks where a river of grass will go.  The area on either side of the river will be for daffodils planted en masse.

Here is a photo of the area dug out.  As you can see, I somewhat corrected my squiggly blue line.  Only one plant wide, a river of ornamental grasses will move through the side of the driveway.  In the spring, the lawn will be filled with daffodils.

The daffodils I choose will be a mix of early bloomers such as ‘February Gold’ and some mid season bloomers likeWisley. I also have my heart set on getting Butter & Eggs. A few others that strike my fancy will also be planted.  I’m estimating it will take about a 2,000 bulbs.

I’m looking forward to the effect both the grass and the daffs will afford.  My attitude will be like P’s —  more is better.

Helen  Yoest is a garden writer, speaker and garden coach through her business Gardening with Confidence™.

 

 

 

Rock garden journal entry 5

Rock gardeners are a special breed. I touched on this a bit when I made my big announcement to become a rock gardener.  To many, my big announcement wasn’t really that big, since my friends and readers know me to be big on gardening.  And anyone who has read Elizabeth Lawrence might be familiar with her quote, All gardeners become rock gardeners if they garden long enough. She was speaking about the likes of me.

After commandeering the herb garden, which I did adore, I ripped most of what was in there out to make way for the Rock Garden.  Sloped, sunny, and dry, this garden space is an ideal location for both types of gardens.  But it was time to move on.  It was time for a change.  Herbs now happily grow all over the garden, tucked with the veggies and ornamentals.

Now I’m nearly finished with the basic design – adding ten good sized rocks from a client’s old garden, supplemented with rock from David Spain, and top dressed with fifteen hundred pounds of  #78 Chesapeake gravel from Charles Luck Stone, in Wake Forest, NC., the garden has taken shape. [Read more...]

50 Ways to love you garden: twenty six – add an arbor

As you journey through a garden, stumbling upon an arbor will make you stop to admire the view or even stop to rest in a shady spot.

A properly placed arbor can make a garden sing.  Grand, rustic, sculptural, architectural,  or simple, each complementing a certain garden style.

An arbor covered in vines gives the visitor even more pleasure.

Usually, arbors are placed at a distance, beckoning you in to enjoy the view.  As a transitional point or focal point, arbors provide a reason to continue the journey.

A classic climber combination is a rose and clematis.  Chosen carefully, the bloom cycle coincides, creating more than the two alone could contribute.

Helen Yoest is a garden writer and coach through her business Gardening with Confidence™

Follow Helen on Twitter @HelenYoest and her facebook friend’s page, Helen Yoest or Gardening With Confidence™ Face Book Fan Page.

Each week, Helen host’s a garden talk WebTalkRadio.net show called Gardening With Confidence™.

Helen also serves on the board of advisors for the JC Raulston Arboretum

50 Ways to love your garden: twenty five – garden seating

50 wyas to love your garden: twenty – tall, lush plantings

50 ways to love your garden: twenty one – attracting hummingbird

50 ways to love your garden: twenty two – attracting butterflies

50 Ways to love your garden: twenty three – detracting voles

50 Ways to love your garden: Twenty four – detracting deer

50 Ways to love your garden: twenty five – garden seating

Benches, dining sets, pairs or chairs, a lone chair; there are as many reasons to add seating to the garden as there are seating arrangements.

While busy gardeners may not find the time to sit; we can alway dream.  In the meantime, viewing the garden seating, from the weeding chore, can bring great joy.  And who knows, the garden seating might just lure you in to take the time to sit a spell.

A chair or bench can be placed anywhere in the garden to savor an attractive view.   Or, place the chair or bench in an area to be the view.  Pair a chair with a shade tree or put a dining set there to enjoy meals alfresco.

A bench near a water feature or a sweet smelling shrub, will make for a destination spot.

Wooden benches, metal, even plastic in the right situation, will provide years of service.  The style you choose should complement your garden style, blending into the landscape.

Helen Yoest is a garden writer and coach through her business Gardening with Confidence™
Follow Helen on Twitter @HelenYoest and her facebook friend’s page, Helen Yoest or Gardening With Confidence™ Face Book Fan Page.
Helen also serves on the board of advisors for the JC Raulston Arboretum

50 Ways to love your garden: twenty four – deterring deer

How often have you heard, “They will eat anything if they are hungry enough?”  This is true.  Even people who know little to nothing about deer, know this to be true.

As the populations grow and grow, the need for food grows too.  You can’t “deer-proof.” but you can “deer-deter.”

For the most part, deer don’t like plants that smell, such as rosemary, lavender, garlic.  Nor do they like plants with textured leaves such as lambs’ ear and Russian sage, or those that have needles such as conifers, and thorns such as Bougainvillea.

A regular spraying with a natural repellent such as  imustgarden is also helpful.  Many will not wash off with rain or irrigation; but remember to spray new growth as it emerges.

Deer can be fenced out, but they are also very good jumpers.  If deer are a problem in your area, enclose your garden with a strong sturdy fence at least 8 feet high.

There are certain plants if you plant, they will come…hostas for one.  They just love those tasty leaves.

In summary, its best to plant the plants whey don’t like; but remember, deer will eat anything if they are hungry enough…

50 Ways to love your garden: twenty-three – detracting voles

If your hostas were here today and gone tomorrow, you were very likely visited by a vole. Voles feed on a variety of herbaceous plants with particular fondness for hostas, roses, and camellias.

Voles feed on above and below ground plant parts, munching their way through foliage, seeds, stems, roots, and bulbs. When food is plentiful, their damage may go unnoticed as food other than your garden plants are available. As food sources become scarce, and vole population is high, damage from voles increases.

There are various methods to protect your favorite plants which may also be favorite vole noshing plants.

For your hostas or other plants voles enjoy, make your beds less hospitable at the same time improving the soil. VoleBloc, made by www.permatill.com aids in keeping voles from digging and getting to the plant’s roots. But to qualify this, nothing is fool proof.

Planting hostas in a container will also help, just be sure to block the drainage hole with rocks so voles can’t enter the pot.

After years of fighting voles in my shade garden, I decided to plant hellebores. Hellebores are poisonous to voles, so they stay clear. From this experience, I gained more than I bargained for. I gained an evergreen and flowers in the winter, and hellebores require less water, saving time an money.

No doubt there are there, but here’s hoping the are feeding on something nature provided and not what I so lovely planted.

Helen Yoest is a garden writer and coach through her business Gardening with Confidence™

Follow Helen on Twitter @HelenYoest and her facebook friend’s page, Helen Yoest or Gardening With Confidence™ Face Book Fan Page.

Helen also serves on the board of advisors for the JC Raulston Arboretum

50 Ways to love your garden: Twenty-two – attracting butterflies


If you build it, they will come…the butterflies, that is.  One of the best ways to encourage butterflies to your garden is to grow the food to attract adults with nectar-rich flowers and sustain them with host plants so they will stay and lay their eggs.

Adult butterflies like to land to sip.  Umbrella shaped plants make a nice landing pad to suit their needs.  Pansies, Zinnia, marigold, Joe Pye weed, coneflowers, sedum, black-eyed susans, Lantana are some of the kinds of plants adult butterflies like.

If your garden also have specific plants to host butterfly larvae, not only will you attract butterflies to your garden, you will also sustain them for much longer.  While butterflies are attracted to the nectar-rich plants, once there, they will look around for their specific host food.

If you want monarchs, plant milkweed; the only host plant for the monarch butterfly.  If you want Spicebush swallowtail, plant a Spicebush; if you want Zebras, plant a Pawpaw.  Fennel, Dill, and parsley are hosts to many eastern swallowtails.

Open your garden to the magic of butterflies….if you build it, they will come.

Helen Yoest is a garden writer and coach through her business Gardening with Confidence™

Follow Helen on Twitter @HelenYoest and her facebook friend’s page, Helen Yoest or Gardening With Confidence™ Face Book Fan Page.

Helen also serves on the board of advisors for the JC Raulston Arboretum

50 Ways to love your garden: Twenty one – attracting hummingbirds

If you plant the plants hummingbirds love, filling feeders will be a task of the past.

Hummingbirds feed from the air, inserting their straw-like beaks into trumpet shaped flowers.  Planting sages, agastache, bee balm, honeysuckle, cardinal flower, pentas, are some of the hummingbirds favorites. Plant en masse to act as a beacon the hummingbird looking for a sip.  This also gives plenty of plant creating reason for the hummingbird to hand out just a little bit longer.

Did you notice the plants listed above are native?  That’s right, our native plants are favored and designed for our native bird.  Plant today and see what tomorrow may bring.


50 Ways to love your garden: twenty – tall, lush plantings

Take your garden from the ground up by adding height.  With tall, willowy, nodding or upright, flowers or leaf, grasses or bananas, adding height to the garden, adds drama.

Tall plants have a place in any garden size.  They can dazzle a demure garden, rocket a medium garden and garnish a grandeur garden.  Adding height, will have your garden reaching for the sky.


Helen Yoest is a garden writer and coach through her business Gardening with Confidence™

Follow Helen on Twitter @HelenYoest and her facebook friend’s page, Helen Yoest or Gardening With Confidence™ Face Book Fan Page.

Helen also serves on the board of advisors for the JC Raulston Arboretum

50 Ways to love your garden: Nineteen – contemporary gardens

Contemporary gardens can be many things, except stark.  If that’s what comes to mind when you think of contemporary gardens, than consider this.   Careful, thought-out composition of gardens, accents, and containers can be striking.  Its rings of  a less is more philosophy.

Contemporary designs provide elegant, peaceful havens, working particularly well in small spaces, creating the illusion of much more space than there actually is.

Every piece.  Every plant.  Every addition to the garden, is deliberate.  Add one thing more and its over done.  Careful selection is a must, as is the ability to practice self-control.

Contemporary gardens are also restful and calming.  If this is your style, make it striking, not stark.


Helen Yoest is a garden writer and coach through her business Gardening with Confidence™

Follow Helen on Twitter @HelenYoest and her facebook friend’s page, Helen Yoest or Gardening With Confidence™ Face Book Fan Page.

Helen also serves on the board of advisors for the JC Raulston Arboretum