Showing posts with label Edgeworthia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Edgeworthia. Show all posts

Saturday, July 25, 2015

BIG BOLD LEAVES ENHANCE THE SUMMER EXPERIENCE IN GARDENS IN WOODLANDS


Very much like the arrangement of succulents in this trough garden that I have on my deck table, the bold leaf elements in gardens in woodlands stand out and stop the eye in an otherwise jumble of the summer garden. 


It is important to give my visitors a place to rest their eyes and mind on a bold leaved plant as we walk along paths or into garden rooms. Dozens of plant combinations encountered in my gardens can be overwhelming to the psyche.  Even I become a bit claustrophobic at the end of summer when the jungle of summer growth seems to press in on me. 


To somewhat remedy this, I have interspersed plants with giant leaves at appropriate intervals.  So, this morning I took a stroll around the gardens starting at my side door and this is what I came across. 


Some of the plants, like the leaflets of this 3' tall Amorphophallus are tucked into a bed for a dramatic impact. 


When I find interesting pieces like this ornate metal chair I like to add summer Caladiums with colorful bold leaves as a foil for the fine textures of a dwarf Cryptomeria and Euphorbia 'Diamond Frost'. 


I like to grow Heuchera in pots and this bold H. 'Autumn Bride' leaf is a calming influence for the riotous colors of the Caladium patterns that always get all the attention. 


A 6' tall Edgeworthia chrysantha is a great background mass with Geranium machrorrhizum skirting it's feet. 


This year the native Callicarpa americana leaves have expanded to 8". You can get a sense of the scale as it closes the gap on the right side of a free standing gate. 


One of my favorite plants reminding me of a spray of water is the Japanese Roof Iris (Iris tectorum) with an almost horizontal leaf habit. Here seen along a gravel path this seedling found a happy and appropriate home. The white or purple blooms in spring are fleetingly beautiful. So, the other values of this plant, to me, are more important: it is drought and shade tolerant, likes more acidic soils (never lime this Iris); in mild winters it is evergreen; it reproduces by seed and rhizomes and is very easy to transplant out of an area where it might colonize without your permission. 


Fine Fern, medium Hosta and bold Begonia grandis textures complementarily arranged in a corner of my entry courtyard. 


I love this dramatic cascade of Hosta cultivars including H. 'Guacamole' at the top and white edged H. 'Patriot'. The waterfall effect of large leaves surrounded by medium and fine textures is a show stopper beside a set of rustic stairs. They are planted in large pots sunk into the ground to protect their roots from voles and to keep the roots happily bound. I fertilize the individual pots with Osmocote twice a season and give them an occasional sprinkle of water. 


Huge dramatic Canna Lilies add a lot to woodland gardens. I don't depend on many flowers forming on them because of shady conditions, but, the leaves add so much of a counterbalance to the vast feeling of a woodland canopy that I like to keep a couple of them going.  My favorite is the "Canna Banana" so called because of it's botanical name Cana musa (musa being the genus name of Banana and the shape, color and size of the 8' tall stalks of leaves.) 


Above, Canna Banana massed at the edge of the woodland


Oakleaf Hydrangea cultivars such as this Hydrangea quercifolia 'Snowflake' have spectacularly large leaves having shapes reminiscent of Oak tree leaves (genus Quercus). 


Above, Compare the shapes of H. q. 'Snowflake' on the left with H. q. 'Snow Queen' on the right. 


Helleborus x hybridus seed freely in my gardens and I expect they do so in yours. If they are enhancing their preferred new locations they survive my editing hands.  Here a number of mature seedlings soften the base of a stacked stone wall. The Arborvitae Fern, actually a selaginella, growing on the top of the wall is a great counterpoint of fine texture. 


A singular Helleborus leaf adds a sculptural statement while dangling over an Autumn Fern seedling. 


At the peril of the future of one of my paths I have planted two thugs seen on the left (above). Lamium maculatum (Deadnettle) and Tetrapanax papyirfer (Ricepaper Plant) hovering over the Deadnettle is an experiment  and could be one that I regret in coming years.  But, you know how it is when you fall in love with a plant, all sensibility is lost for awhile. On the right of this collage image is a much safer alternative to this bold presence in the garden ..... a beautiful cement impression of the actual Tetrapanax leaf. This sculpture was made by my friends Amelia Lane and Beth Jimenez at Lasting Impressions. 


Long spectacular wands of Tricyrtis leaves arch over a delicate arrangement of Japanese Painted Ferns and Oxalis in a mossy stone terrace that butts up to the house foundation. They, too, found their own home. I find the carefree effect, a charming one. 


Above, is another impressive arching leaved plant. The Giant Solomon's Seal stands almost 5' tall and placed at the edge of a path it is difficult to miss. My 105 lb. German Shepherd is only 10 feet away so, this image is not a trick of depth perception.  Below, Marcus is guarding Carolina Elephant's Foot (Elephantopus carolinianus). A bold native 'splat' of basal leaves with a stem of flowers about to bloom. It seeds freely in a path topped every year with Cedar chips. 


Any time of the year is a good time to no longer be timid about experimenting with large leaved plants for a textural punch in your summer gardens in woodlands. 

Sunday, March 1, 2015

"BOIL UP" SOME EGGS AND SOAK IN THE WARMTH OF POETRY



It's not Easter yet. We are only partially through Lent. But, outside, this March 1st, freezing rain over snow already ice encrusted with ice of week ago threatens broken tree limbs and power outages. 


When the second storm came through, flakes like feathers piled softly on some of the plants, furniture and sculpture I have in the places I've carved out as Gardens in my Woodland. 


Last summer's stems of Hydrangea "Annabelle" looking like frosted cupcakes. ( I have a fierce sweet tooth) Hinoki Cypress in the background just above the Wall Garden. 


Edgeworthia chrysantha buds still hanging on in the Wall Garden. 


A splash of Cephalotaxus harringtonia 'Drupacea' greets visitors to the Entrance Garden.


Ladders of Mahonia 'Charity' leaves are only a part of a trio of Mahonia 'Charity' seen in the distance hovering over a park bench in  one of many transition nodes on the paths.  Image Below


More sweets below. A Joel Haas butterfly sculpture has become a sugar cookie beside an entrance path. 



Cookies of metal furniture in the Lagerstroemia Glen. 


Cam McCamy's sentinel EYE sculpture guarding my tiny tool shed. And below, the wheel barrow made beautiful.



Cinnamon bark of Lagerstroemia faurei 
looking like giant Cinnamon sticks for warm apple cider.


Dogwood, ivy and a little girl pulling her cape around her against the cold in the Entrance Garden.  Should I invite her inside for an egg?


Mermaid flicking her tail at the snow in the Wall Garden. 
(I have sadly lost the name of the artist.)


An old stained glass panel from a conservatory roof vies for attention by the Victorian swing in the Cedar Spires Garden. 


An iron bed frame (made into a gate) as entrance into the Winter Interest Garden.  This could be made out of chocolate!!!!


I don't have live chickens but I love eggs!
So, just in case and still warm inside with the power on, I "boiled up" some eggs to have on hand for breakfast in the company of Mary Oliver's tender poems in "Volume Two" of "New And Selected Poems". 

She would warm any day or any heart or any soul or any power line.