‘The most democratic of color combinations’

Regular readers of the New York Times Home and Garden section probably zeroed in on Anne Raver’s feature on White Flower Farm and the accompanying slideshow.

I sure did. But another story and slideshow (that had nothing to do with plants or gardening) extolling the virtues of blue and white also caught my eye.

Why am I drawn to blue pots, cobalt blue bottles and other blue accessories in the garden? The bottles I can trace back to digging antique bottles out of old dumps I found in the woods. Otherwise, all I can say it it might be the dearth of blue flowers I can actually grow.

Blue bottle decorations
blue bottles

Blue and white container water garden.
blue container water garden

Blue cold frame against our blue house.
blue cold frame

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Water gardens, from puddles to pools.

This is my post for this month’s Garden Bloggers’ Design Workshop – Water in the Garden.

When I started thinking about this topic, it dawned on me that I’ve actually got four water gardens — seven if you count the stream, beaver pond and wetland that I had no hand in designing. (I’m not counting the birdbath either, which the birds usually have to share with some small pots of emergents I’m rooting.)

Starting from the smallest and going to the largest …

My buddy Robert gave me this old dairy cow waterer for my 50th birthday because he knows I love old stuff collecting dust in the barn. In fact, I think I still have stuff of my own in his barn, stored ‘temporarily’ for the last 10 years. I float blossoms from my bloom day scans in it, or here some cut tulips. The dogs like to drink out of it, too.

cow waterer

Next up, the container water garden. I picked up this ceramic container for about $5 new years ago. (Matches my blue bottles nicely.) This year, I just have some dwarf water lilies in it.

water garden stuff

One of the great things about water gardens — even a modest little one like this — is they draw in the wildlife.

water garden stuff

One more step up, the whiskey barrel water garden, which has room for some other plants and I suspect that there are a few fish in there that came up from the big water garden. I highly recommend this if you think you’d like to try water gardening but don’t want to go whole hog. You will probably decide that you really need two or three, or make the jump to an in-ground garden. But these make a nice addition to a container garden.

water garden stuff

And finally (no surprise because you see it every time you visit in the banner image) is the big water garden.

water garden stuff

You can see pictures and read more about it’s installation here. But long story short: I was certain that the perfectly rectangular raised area in our lawn near where springs popped up every spring, I was sure I would find the foundation of an old stone springhouse if I dug down deep enough. Instead, I found rocky fill and then came to a plastic drain pipe leading to the wetland.

One more shovel-full down from the drain I hit water, and it started rising. I cut holes in the liner as I installed it so I could extend the pipe into the water garden so I can drain it. And also to let the water in from the spring bubbling up underneath.

I’ll get to some of the plants, but the main reason for having a water garden is so you can have fish. I like shebunkins, koi and also usually buy some cheap small goldfish in spring.

water garden stuff

I’ve gotten some of the koi up over a foot in a season from 4-inch starts at the pet store in spring. But invariably in late summer when all the fish are starting to size up nicely, the water garden once again attracts wildlife.

heron

Fortunately, most years the heron leaves after a week or two of decimating the larger fish. Then a few weeks later after the remaining fish recover their wits, I’ll notice a few of the medium-sized fish that successfully hid under the lilies and also a dozen or so newborn fish with a different combination of markings that make shebunkins and koi so delightful. Enough to start the whole process over next season. (I’ve had no problems with overwintering. With relatively warm spring water flowing in, the pool stays open most of the winter.)

Plants? I usually stick some tropicals — elephant ears and cannas — in the moist bed on the lower side of the garden. (It leaks, so the downhill side of the garden is pretty boggy.) I’ve got pots of water lilies (easy to pick up at plant sales and exchanges as they multiply quickly) in the middle area, which is close to 4 feet deep. Then pots of emergents on the shallow shelves around the edges. Some favorites:

This yellow water lily …

water garden stuff

Pitcher plants …

water garden stuff

Pitcher plant flower …

water garden stuff

I’ve also got some equisetum, various irises, a variegated sedge, curly sedge and a pickerel weed that surprisingly hasn’t thrived.

And finally, a couple more full views, from fall of last year …

water garden stuff

And finally, the image I sliced for the banner:

water garden stuff

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Garden bloggers design workshop: Screening out the road

This is my post for the August edition of the Garden Bloggers’ Design Workshop – Trellises and Screens.

We seldom use our front door. But it — and our living room — sit about 35 feet from a busy rural ‘connector’ road. It’s the shortcut for commuters traveling from the east to Cornell University, which employs about 10,000 people, not counting the construction workers.

When we moved in here in 1999, there were three spruces (none taller than I am) between us and the traffic. We lost one in the midnight bowling ball accident of 2003. At that post, you can see the bare ‘before’ pictures from the year we moved in.

Since then, I’ve tried to put up a buffer of mixed shrubs and perennials in a bed along the road and next to the house to separate us visually from the road. Here’s what it looks like now:

Click on images for larger view.
screen from the road

Here’s what makes up the barrier (see numbered image below):

  1. Clematis growing on doorstep pole.
  2. Plume poppy growing in front of living room window.
  3. Bittersweet vine growing on pergola.
  4. Filipendula and burning bushes in front of pergola.
  5. Hybrid willows along road to the west.
  6. 8-foot tall Inula with 6-foot tall polygonum behind it.
  7. Shrubby willows.
  8. Monarda and Cornus alba transplanted from the woods.
  9. Tall willows.
  10. The little spruce, all growed up.

screen from the road

Here’s the view from the front door looking slightly left …

screen from the road

… and slightly right:

screen from the road

How does it work? Could be better. The deer have kept the Cornus alba (above) too short to fully block the road and the driveway beyond. Everything in these images is at full height and in full leaf now. But that’s not the case early in the season.

I don’t notice the traffic as much during winter when the house is shut up tight. But that’s probably a rationalization. I was afraid to plant evergreens due to the wet soil out front and the salt spray from the road during winter. But the remaining spruce have done fine. If I’d planted two or three more in ’99, we’d probably have a solid wall of evergreens out front. Oh well.

Along the stretch of the road to the east of our driveway, I planted a screen of Miscanthus floridulus, or at least that’s what I think it is. It does a nice job blocking the view of the road from our patio behind the house. The bamboo-like stems also make good pea brush and wattle-building material.

screen from the road

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Garden Bloggers’ Design Workshop – Garden Whimsy

whimsy
Blue bottle ‘flower’ (with boat augers and lamp fixture). Blue bottle tree in background.

A couple weeks after Nan announced this round of the Garden Bloggers’ Design Workshop, Steve Orr’s New York Times Q&A column in The New York Times (Picking Accessories for the Plants) offered good advice on garden ornamentation that applies equally to whimsy. His advice:

  • Don’t go overboard.
  • Use found objects.
  • Use surprise.
  • Make ornaments focal points, but don’t distract too much from the plants.

Even in a very lushly planted yard, a visitor’s eye usually will go straight to any nonplant feature. It’s best not to have several ornaments visible at a glance, competing with each other, since the most interesting landscapes have a little mystery. Place one object half-hidden in a leafy shrub and position another around a corner, so that its discovery is a surprise.

Did I mention don’t go overboard? If I have a problem with whimsy in the garden, it’s probably that my eye gets too accustomed to whimsical elements. Before you know it, my yard will be filled with crap. Hopefully I’ll notice before the neighbors.

For those of you who aren’t in the neigborhood, here’s what I’ve got scattered around. (The camera exercise once again reveals to me I’ve got way more than I thought.) I’ll also include some shots from other gardens at the end.

Floating bowling ball on bent rebar. Long story of the midnight bowling ball accident of 2003 from a previous design workshop post.
whimsy

Sugar and flower canisters make great pots. So do olive oil cans.
whimsy

How could I not buy a bottle of Chilean brandy when the bottle looks like an Easter Island statue? It was all I could do to drink the brandy. But I earned a container ornament for my efforts.
whimsy

Jade checks out the happy turtle. Not so visible in the pot is an ancient hand-made Chia head that I remember from childhood. It split a few years ago so now I have two profiles looking up at me from the pot.
whimsy

Someday I’ll make a pilgrimage to the local pink flamingo factory and get a real one. But for now I like the one I have with its spinning wings.
whimsy

Sloggers still work as hanging container for succulents. Back story and my infamous garden footwear review.
whimsy

Spilled trough with hypertufa balls.
whimsy

Glow-in-the-dark tree guy.
whimsy

My mini-water-garden probably counts more as ornamentation than it does as whimsy.
whimsy

I float blossoms in this old cattle waterer.
whimsy

My friend Marcia has a pretty whimsical garden. She does it with a lot more class than I do. More pictures of her garden here.
whimsy

Shirley G. has the best whimsical garden in these parts. Shirley is a member of our local Adirondack Chapter of the North American Rock Garden Society. The group toured her garden back in 2005, when I took these pictures.

A salvaged canopy bed that I picture now covered with vines.
whimsy

The family.
whimsy

Best shoe garden I’ve seen.
whimsy

Shirley also had a cool heart-shaped water garden tub, a Wizard of Oz garden and lots of other cools stuff punctuated by some great plants.

Have at it. Just don’t overdo it.

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