Down the garden path ...

Down the garden path ...
...and strolling through a garden of memories

~Grandmother Never Bought a Plant~

I suppose that is not literally true since in the beginning she bought vegetables and fruits for eating and then used their seeds to start plants.

Grandmother's garden was filled with many plants--I wish I could remember all of them--including Sweet Gum, Peach, Fig, Weeping Willow, and Magnolia trees; white and blue Hydrangeas, Azaleas, various Roses, Bleeding Hearts, Ferns, Periwinkle; Weigelia, Privet, and Barberry shrubs; succulents, and a vegetable garden.

Grandmother's garden was developed from "found" items, so to speak. My grandmother knew that plants could be started from the seeds they produced (no sterile hybrids for her). She also exchanged plants and cuttings with her neighbors. If she liked a plant, she made as many as she wanted from cuttings or seeds. Her neighborhood was filled with open fields (nowadays, almost gone for the rest of us), and these areas were great places to find plants.

Obviously, one of the things my grandmother brought to this garden and learned from it--was patience. In this era of instant gratification, we forget that good things are worth the wait, that patience really is a virtue, and that there is nothing wrong with frugality, either!

~Gertrude Jekyll, Jim Crockett, Grandmother, & I~

~Gertrude Jekyll, Jim Crockett, Grandmother, & I~

~Biographies~

*My grandmother started me down the garden path and Gertrude and Jim push me along. I do know that while all my mentors are deceased, I hear their voices loud and clear -- know the environment in which you want to garden, gardening is hard work, gardens take time to develop, start plants from cuttings, and that nature is not always on our side. In other words, be realistic, be frugal, and have patience.

*Gertrude Jekyll (1843 - 1932; photogragh from her book: Colour Schemes for the Flower Garden) has had the most pronounced influence on English and American gardening. She studied the landscape and designed flower borders, woodlands, and specimen tree and shrubery placement with regard to color, vista, soil, and year-round pleasure. Gertrude Jekyll approached the garden as a canvas. It has been said that Monet planted his gardens to paint them while Gertrude Jekyll's garden was the painting.

*James Underwood Crockett (1915 - 1979; photograph from his book: Crockett's Victory Garden) was the original host of PBS's The Victory Garden, then called Crockett's Victory Garden. I was fortunate to see his weekly shows. He showed that while gardening was work, it was also enjoyable with great rewards. While reading gardening books is informative, it was great to see and hear a gardener in action and see the results. It was good for morale! Jim made a statement on a show about asters that has become famous in my family because not only does it apply to gardening -- it applies to many things in life: Life is too short to stake asters.

*Painting of a child who reminds me of myself and grandmother in her garden: Monet - The Artist's Garden at Vetheuil.


~Gardening in Connecticut~

The Ice Age was not a good thing for gardeners in this area. On its march to Long Island and the sea, the glacier removed the soil down the bedrock and then when it melted, it dropped terminal moraine (rocks) in its wake -- except for southern Long Island where it was nice enough to deposit a glacial outwash plain (sand).

My family gardened on Long Island. When I moved to Connecticut and wanted to garden, I bought a shovel. What did I know? Quickly after that, my husband bought a pick axe.

Gardening here means "digging" out rocks and then going off to buy a truckload of topsoil--and while you are at it: sharp (not play or all-purpose) sand, and a ton of peat moss--to fill in the holes so that your plants may live long and prosper.

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Monday, September 3, 2012

How does my garden grow?


Bird's eye view of the "Cottage Garden"
The weather has been fairly nice lately so I have been in the garden doing a lot of weeding, but also planting a number of plants I have been buying from Home Depot, mostly sturdy “backbone” plants that I hope can take whatever the weather brings, mostly coreopsis, coneflower (Echinacea) in various colors, salvia, and veronica. Every time we plant we amend our horrible clay soil with purchased topsoil (local nursery) and  peat moss (Home Depot)—even amounts of shovel fulls.

I don’t do much in the way of using granular fertilizer. In the spring I put down 10-10-10 using the “feed-the-chickens” method. During the season, I do foliar feed my plants with Miracle-Gro at the rate of 1-1 ½ teaspoon/gallon in my sprayer. I spray weekly, more often if I see a plant in need. Miracle-Gro is amazing stuff—never go into the garden without it!
The weather here has spawned a million or so bugs. As a result, last week I had to put down a granular insecticide by Spectracide on the garden soil, lawn, and around the house, besides spraying the plants with Bayer Rose and Flower Insecticide. I use coffee grounds around my plants to keep slugs away. I read this on the internet—it doesn’t kill the slugs, just keeps them away. And it’s cheap since we do drink coffee. Evidently coffee is also a fertilizer so the grounds (and leftover liquid coffee) are beneficial in that way.

The weather has also created a lot of fungal problems. This season I am using an ordinary spray that must be resprayed every week and after a rain. Next year, I shall use a systemic as I am doing with the insecticide, see my post No Drought Here.
I am so glad we decided to fence the Cottage Garden. It looks beautiful! I am glad we decided on the plan to establish the garden and then, next year, we can finish our experiments with various Deer repellants. I did start doing something with two brands (see previous post), but stopped. I only have energy for one thing at a time! With the fence, I keep thinking of it as a “zoo for plants”!
The Cottage Garden needs almost its entire back row of perennials. I am going to try to get those plants in the fall and I may have to order them; or I could try to find them in local nurseries in the spring (bigger selection). I am also unhappy with my Hibiscus “Lady in Red”. It’s growing larger than expected and put out only three flowers! I may have to transplant it somewhere else. It is a nice bush with lots of lush foliage. This is what it is supposed to look like (photo compliments of Monrovia):

Lady in Red Hydrangea--what mine should look like!
I am pleased that my Lobelia cardinalis returned but I will have to move it to a different spot since without the flower spikes it is a “front of the mid border plant”. It took a long time to show up and with not too many stalks but the color is superb!
Lobelia cardinalis--hopefully next year mine will look like this!
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Well, more on this next time—I tend to babble on!

4 comments:

  1. I love your gardens! I have been reading through your posts. Interesting. I have plants that I want to put in my posts, but am having trouble posting pictures right now. :( So I am stock piling pictures. The most interesting one I have right now is the cup plant. (prairie plant). It is about 13 feet tall right now. It dies to the ground every year. Has daisey like flowers that the birds and butterflies love. Opposite leaves on the stems form a cup around the stem that fills with water when it rains. Real handy in the prairie. It is huge, but can't be moved as the tap root goes into the ground up to 10 feet. Same for our compass plant. Anyway when I am able I will put a picture in one of my posts. I do have pictures of my garden in one or so of my posts. All this to say that I love your gardens. Hugs from a fellow gardener.

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    1. Hi Teresa,
      I love that cup plant! I hope you can figure out how to post pictures--your garden sounds very interesting and different.

      Dig we must,
      Iris

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  2. Hi Iris! Your Garden is Lovely! I can sympathize with your attempts to keep the pests at bay! My garden at my current house is small and I am in a very Town-like built up area... but we still have woodchucks and skunks that will eat everything! I used to garden in Vermont and was fortunate to have a garden on a piece of silty land left Between the rocky parts! Lol! Here in Massachusetts I am in Beautiful River bottom Loam.... and my Roses THRIVE! Gardening is one of my Other passions!

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    1. I wish I had river bottom loam--we have all the rocks that the glacier left behind mixed with clay. Yuk! My little people have it easier. I love roses also but don't always do so well. The best results I have are from a couple of large bushes based on rugosa rose and they are very flowery and fragrant.

      Dig we must (and mini also),
      Iris

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