Ooops. Looks like they already have!
The iris is over for the most part and needs a good deadheading. Not to mention thinning out. I enjoyed a great display this Spring but now I need to find a second iris bed...maybe in Dave's Memorial Garden, (DMG) where I will also transplant the zillions of volunteer phlox.
This bed is the Pond Garden for lack of a better name and it has reached a degree of maturity, which came sooner than expected.
I tucked in some small plants which have now become too big for the spot. I am not complaining, but some decisions about who stays and who goes will have to be made.
The azaleas need this space, if they are to get as big as I hope.
The hosta here are definitely on the way to DMG to join a bunch of their relatives.
Now we are talking about getting a glider or swing for that spot, proving once again that we have become our own grandparents.
Shasta Daisies and Autumn Glory Sedum are huge and vying for supremacy. Altho it is not visible, there is a struggling hydrangea underneath these two. Poor darling.
I know I can save it, if I can get underneath these two monsters.
The foxglove has me so excited! One plant has twelve spires on it and has begun to bloom. I put this biennial in last year, in a different too dry and hot location and moved it in the fall. It seems to have found the perfect spot. So I bought two more plants and hope to make this a foxglove haven. Love them! Super tall plants like the larkspur are companion plants. They reseeded all over the yard, with a little help. I just took the seed pods and sprinkled them around the place. Wherever they show up is OK with me.
Swoon!
Dave is painting again. He decided to take off the previous six layers and was sanding and scraping all day Friday and Saturday. Now the new paint will go onto smoother surfaces. He has Winter, Spring and Summer paint clothes.
I went shopping for a new water feature pot and found the green bucket with handles, just like my red ones which I turned into planters. It is exactly what I wanted and was under $5. The hyacinth bean vines have begun to curl around the trellis support, all by themselves. Woowoo. This is just what I had hoped. If you look carefully through the trellis and down below, a white hydrangea, Blushing Bride, has big fat blooms on it already.
More rain is expected for the next several days, HURRAY! The house needs my attention, desperately.
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Just a warning - you are going to have a riot on your hands pretty soon in your garden - of Color! that is!! Absolutely lovely, Melody.
ReplyDeleteMore garden love. Thanks for sharing. I have never had luck with Foxglove. Yours are a beautiful color.
ReplyDeleteGorgeous! Do you no longer have the fish?
ReplyDeleteI do envy your green thumb. what color would I call that leaf? "wait and see"....
ReplyDeleteIt is all just glorious. Yes, an explosion of color. BTW, do you lite your Christmas lights in the evenings?
ReplyDeleteI love your "jungle". I eagerly await each new edition of the garden news.
ReplyDeleteWow, and our trees are still pretty bare here. We're just getting started.
ReplyDeleteAnd yes, what happened to your fish?
Your place is truly wonderful! There's lots to sit and savor in that swing.
You live in a dream! What an abundance of beautiful plants and flowers and the promise of much more of this kind of delight!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing your jungle with us - I love it.
Kind regards, Pauline
More garden love. Thanks for sharing. I have never had luck with Foxglove. Yours are a beautiful color.
ReplyDelete