The Garden Worm blog Digging up the best dirt on gardening!

April 28, 2011

Spring is Sputtering

Filed under: Flowers,Our gardens,Spring — Judy @ 4:18 pm

Yesterday and today, we have actually been able to shed the extra layers of clothes and work in shirt sleeves! We have had sooooo much rain – the creeks are overflowing, the farmers have not been able to get into the fields to plow, and this is now the rainiest April on record for our area. The lawns are so soggy that it is difficult to find anywhere to walk to start cleaning up the gardens.

My daughter sent me this picture to let me know that they have had somewhat warmer weather than we have had!

Flowering cherries at Cornell

Fortunately, the flowering trees and shrubs around here are now bursting forth – the star and saucer magnolias, the flowering cherries and plums. The forsythia seems to be gorgeous this year and the quince is promising lots of color very soon.

Forsythia 'Lynwood Gold'

Forsythia 'Lynwood Gold'

The daffodils, grape hyacinths, tulips, and all the spring bulbs are now on stage too.

Poet's eye narcissus

Poet's eye narcissus

Purple Hyacinth

Generic purple hyacinth

And the perennials are starting to jump out of the ground. The polemonium I have mentioned before here is showing its fabulous early coloration.

Polemonium 'Stairway to Heaven'

Polemonium 'Stairway to Heaven'

The brunneras, that have similar flowers and coloration of the forget-me-nots, but don’t seed all over the place and look gray and ratty by midsummer, are blooming gloriously in the shade garden.

Brunnera 'Jack Frost'

Brunnera 'Jack Frost'

It almost seems like spring is going to be compressed into a very short season – everything is blooming at once! I certainly hope not because, now that I am able to get outside, breathe the fresh air, savor all the newness and glory of the season, it seems a shame to not have it hang around for a while. I was more than ready to let winter be gone, but I can’t say that I’m ready for summer to be here just yet. How about you?

March 21, 2011

Is it Spring?

Filed under: Flowers,Shows and Tours,Spring — Judy @ 10:45 pm

Today it is wet and dreary, but the calendar says it is supposed to be spring! Ok, yes, the bulbs are poking their leaves up and the snowdrops are blooming gloriously, but the weatherman says temperatures dropping to freezing with possible/probable snow showers through the rest of the week. Yuck! I am sooooo done with this weather.

We made our annual foray to Greater Rochester’s Flower and Garden Show, GardenScape 2011, this last weekend and it was so nice to see some spring flowers! Unfortunately, I didn’t take any pictures so bear with me as I try to describe a few of the sights. The big attraction this year was the combined presentation by Oriental Garden Supply and Twin Oaks Lawn and Landscaping. And it was gorgeous! The theme of the show was “Rock the Garden” and their display of massive rocks and spectacular plants with some sweet water features thrown in for good measure was breathtaking. Designed by Chris Law of Oriental, it took two and a half days to install with tons of sand and other infrastructure to build the “mountain.” I found this picture over at the Your News Now (YNN) site.

Picture taken by Your News Now (YNN)

The picture shows only part of their display, and certainly doesn’t do justice to it, but perhaps you can catch a glimpse of the breadth of the plantings. Then they had one day to tear it down – good opportunity for lots of man toys and noise! I found this picture of the tear-down at the Upstate Gardener’s Journal Facebook site.

Picture from Upstate Gardener's Journal Facebook site

The magnificent display combining bonsai and rocks by the International Bonsai Arboretum and the Bonsai Society of Upstate NY also captured my attention. I spent a bit of time watching my cousin, Mark Arpag, skillfully dissect a deformed juniper shrub into a windswept tree form of bonsai. The Japanese-style dry garden associated with their display showed off some of the most precious bonsai specimens and the to-die-for flowering wisteria so beautifully.

This year’s GardenScape was significantly different than in past years when the big landscaping companies designed displays that were so fantastic that, I think, a homeowner looking for ideas found few connections between their own piece of the earth and those laid out at the Dome Arena. In these hard economic times, I believe the show co-chairs did a great job in adjusting and the smaller companies featured at this show offered somewhat more practical solutions and ideas. Although I didn’t come away with any cool ideas (or photos!), I thought the show was rockin’ with something for everyone, lots of interesting seminars, and fun entertainment on the main stage.

On a last note, the tulips and daffodils tucked in and among all the displays were in terrific shape this year, even on the last day of the show. I don’t know who supplied them, but they held up well. Unfortunately, memories of those bright bits of color will have to suffice as the snow starts falling again . . . until spring finally arrives here!

February 22, 2011

The Dutch Connection 2011

Filed under: Flowers,Shows and Tours,Spring,Winter — Judy @ 12:13 pm

On Sunday, my sister, sister-in-law and I took a little excursion to the George Eastman House to catch a breath of spring.

George Eastman House
(*this photo from http://www.vanguardist.org/index.php?/archives/874-New-galleries-Washington-and-Rochester.html)

This National Historic Landmark built between 1902 and 1905 was featuring a winter/spring flower display called The Dutch Connection 2011 in the Conservatory with more than 2,000 colorful tulips, hyacinths, daffodils, freesias, amaryllis, and alliums. These bulbs are of the same species as Mr. Eastman had ordered to fill his conservatory back in the day.

Conservatory

The Dutch Connection Flowers in the Conservatory

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February 7, 2011

Genius loci pars duo

Filed under: Contests,Fall,Flowers,Grasses,Our gardens,Spring,Summer,Veggies,Winter — Judy @ 10:25 pm

I’ve been thinking more about the concept of ‘Genius loci’ and how it relates to my own personal gardens. Currently buried under a sea of white here in upstate New York, I thought that perhaps I could find some older pictures of my gardens to use to convey ‘the spirit of the place’ to others for the Picture This contest for February over at Gardening Gone Wild. I found nothing that I felt was suitable. Why was that? Had I ignored the ‘Genius loci’ when I was creating my own gardens or had the ‘Genius loci’ really left the area!

First of all, location, location, location. Andrea Jones’ photos showed us enticing and gorgeous vistas. I live in suburbia. Granted, we have almost an acre of land, but everywhere you look there is another house impinging on the “vista.” Losing seven mature trees in ice storms over the years does not help! I can’t grow trees tall enough in my lifetime to block out all those houses looming over us.

So what if I thought about the ‘borrowed’ vistas, a time-proven fundamental of landscape design? Hmm! I found this, this, and this.

Snowstorm

Fall sunset

Winter moon

Yes, but those are not of my gardens specifically and doesn’t everyone have lovely pictures of snowstorms and sunsets and moons? Well, what else could I find that would entice you in and make you want to visit, or at least to convey what makes my gardens special to me?

Summer Pool

Nice range of colors, nice sunshine, open gate, feels good to me, but that picture brings up the second major problem – I am not a very good photographer! There’s that pool skimmer and brush in the corner. If I crop that out, the picture just doesn’t have the same feeling. It becomes blasé – all because of a pool skimmer? Ok, so my photographic skills need to be improved on, but surely among all those hundreds, nay, thousands of photos I have taken over the years, there might be a few really good ones of my own gardens. Hah!

At this point in my thinking, I still don’t know whether I had ignored the ‘Genius loci’ or whether it had left when I wasn’t looking (if a ‘Genius loci’ can even do that!). It occurred to me that our little plot of land used to be a cornfield before it became suburbia. But what do they do when they build and build and build? Why, they scrape off all the good dirt and sell it down the river! Yikes! What if there never was a ‘Genius loci’ here?

No, no no! I mean, really, look at that pool picture again – there are some good things going on there! There are some pretty perennials, some great grasses, some shrubs growing into nice specimens, and lots of varied evergreens (both mine and borrowed).

All right, so maybe I need to think more about what I love or want in my gardens. In no particular order then –

Attracting birds, even predators like this juvenile Cooper’s hawk:

Juvenile Cooper's Hawk

A place for children and adults to play – in the pool, in the yard:

Kelsey playing Ultimate Frisbee

A place to grow lots of vegetables and fruit and flowers:

Pool and veggie garden

A place for herbs for my cooking adventures:

Herb garden

So, what about the ‘Genius loci’ in my own gardens? Perhaps we created a new one while bringing in new soil and composting and amending and planning and planting all these years, and maybe it is just waiting under the snow to emerge once again in the spring.

Pool in winter

Too bad I don’t have the photographic skills to convey the ‘Genius loci’ to you . . . yet!

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