Friday, March 12, 2021

A fresh start!

Things are looking brighter.  This week brought rain!  In all, it amounted to about eight-tenths of an inch but, given the sorry state of our rainy season this year, I consider that a lot.  In addition to giving my garden a deep, uniform soak, something no irrigation system can accomplish, the rain topped off all my water collection tanks.  Then, yesterday, my husband and I got our second vaccine shots and President Biden recommended opening the vaccination process to all adults in the US by May 1st.  Progress!

While waiting out the next two weeks until I'm considered full immunized, I continue to focus on my garden.  I've installed some new plants, most received by mail order or through friends, and completed a variety of maintenance projects.  But I'll start with a happy discovery I made this week.

This tiny plant appeared in one of the small pots I used to sow Majorcan peony (Paeonia cambessedesii) seeds last July.  Was this really a peony seedling, or some stray that had simply planted itself? 

I had to cut back grasses and other plants to uncover my Majorcan peony in the back garden.  The leaves on the seedling and those on the plants looked similar and both have reddish stems.

The photo on the left shows the plant in flower and the one on the right shows the seeds I planted last year

This is another of the pots into which I sowed peony seeds.  As I recall, I planted 3 or 4 seeds in each small pot.  Three seedlings are showing in this one with the middle seedling looking like a smaller version of the one in my first photo.  A number of the other pots are showing infant leaves like the other two seedlings shown here.  I think I actually have Majorcan peony seedlings!


It'll be awhile before I plant out any peony seedlings - that probably won't even happen this year - but there were other plants I was able to get into the ground now.  I direct sowed more seeds, Cosmos, Nigella and Phacelia, in advance of the most recent rainstorm and popped the first dahlia tuber I received by mail into a temporary pot.  I also planted a package of tulips that had been chilling in my refrigerator for the past three months.

In November, one mail order supplier sent me a package of 'Judith Leyster' tulips in lieu of the more climate-appropriate bulbs I'd ordered.  They spent three months in the refrigerator before I planted them in late February.  One plant poked up above ground this week.

Two boxes of mail order plants I received late last week were promptly planted to take advantage of the promised rain.

I received my order from Annie's Annuals and Perennials right on time last Friday afternoon.  Clockwise from the upper left, the order included: Aeonium escobarii, Lavatera trimetris, Sideritis cypria (3), Plectranthus ecklonii and Gilla tricolor (5), and Teucrium betonicum (2).  The upturned flats in the bottom photo are there to protect the Gilla seedlings and seeds I sowed around them.

High Country Gardens sent me a dwarf Lavandula 'Thumbelina Leigh' and Monarda 'Peter's Purple' (3)

I spruced up the two window boxes attached to my lath (shade) house using a few pony packs picked up at my local garden center when I swung by there two weeks ago for planting mix and compost.

I left some of the original plants in place, most notably the small Coprosmas in both boxes, but replaced scruffier plants with dwarf Antirrhinum majus, Leucanthemum paludosum, and Lobularia maritima

Gift plants from blogger friends found homes.

The Billbergia nutans (left, sitting on ground) was sent to me by Anna (Flutter & Hum) after I erroneously identified the Billbergia windii (guarded by the dragon) as B. nutans on Instagram.  The gift plant is already sporting a bud.  Anna included Iris confusa (on the right), which I have great hopes for even though I managed to kill one earlier.  She also sent me a hitchhiking earthworm, which I suspect is much happier in SoCal than it was in then snow-covered Portland, Oregon.

I offered Denise (A Growing Obsession) a few Renga lilies and got a lot more in return, including Aeonium 'Copper Penny', which I split and planted in several locations, several Aloe elgonica cuttings, and 4 strawflower (Xerochyrsum bracteatum) seedlings

I transplanted a couple of succulents too.

I discovered this Agave literally squished between 2 large Agaves in my south side garden.  I'm not sure what it is, although my records suggest it could be the non-variegated form of Agave potatorum.  In any case, it was damaged as a result of rubbing against its larger neighbors.  Here, on the north end of my garden, it has room to breathe and, hopefully, recover.

Back in December, my local docent/Instagrammer friend Kay (@kaeru.niwa) gave me a large Mangave 'Silver Fox' pup when I was bemoaning the bloom stalk on mine.  After months in a pot, it graduated to a bed alongside several of my other Mangaves.

In addition to planting, I finally tackled a variety of pruning and cleanup projects that I'd managed to avoid until now.

Both of my large Leucadendron "Wilson's Wonder' shrubs got a good pruning, losing more than a third of their height 

Senna bicapsularis lost more than half its height.  If it doesn't survive the experience, I'll be sad because it's a host plant for cloudless sulphur butterflies but its placement along the narrow pathway down the back slope was a mistake on my part. 

Both the 'Fuyu' and 'Hachiya' persimmon trees were twiggy messes before I cleaned them up

Nine more of my Pennisetums got haircuts (6 shown here).  I foolishly failed to don gloves before starting on the large 'Rubrum' (left) and cut up the skin on my hands rather badly in the process.

Unhappy with the blue Freesias I received by mistake as part of the "tropical sunset" mix I ordered for an area of my south side garden, I moved all of them (I think) to my back border.  Freesias are easier to move during their first year in the ground before the bulbs proliferate.

I'm ready to welcome spring with open arms now!  I hope you're seeing improvements to the weather, slow as these may be in colder parts of the Northern Hemisphere, and that the promise of spring is calling you.  Best wishes for a wonderful weekend.


All material © 2012-2021 by Kris Peterson for Late to the Garden Party


29 comments:

  1. So exciting about your peony seedlings. A real achievement. So great you are vaccinated too. Even though we are still supposed to continue as we have been at least you will feel a little safer heading to the garden centers now.

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    1. Yes, there won't be a dramatic change in what we do anytime soon but being fully vaccinated will make me less paranoid and, hopefully, a little more comfortable about extending my world to, at a minimum, include delayed medical and dental appointments, as well as visiting more than my neighborhood garden center.

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  2. Such an upbeat post! And wow, the peony seedlings are a triumph. Is the peony an Olivier Filippi recommendation? I've got the Renga lilies settled in too, thank you! I've grown that Teucrium betonicum but feel I can do a better job with it and wanted to try it again. It's a wonderful plant. Congrats on the second shot!

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    1. My original Majorcan peony came from Annie's, Denise. They usually offer the plants once a year and they disappear fast. It took me a couple years to get hold of one and a couple more years before it settled in and bloomed. It usually only produces a couple of blooms each year but I imagine it would be better if it were planted in a spot that got more sun, where other plants didn't routinely engulf it. I haven't been willing to move it, fearing I'd just set it back again, but, if/when I get some good-sized plants, I'll try it in a few different areas. I also hope enough of the seedlings will be viable that I'll be able to pass a few along once they bulk up. Right now, even the largest one is still teeny tiny.

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  3. Wow, congrats on the peony seedlings! Awesome! Congrats too on the 2nd vaccination. Lots of cool new plants. Some rain. Things are looking better in all sorts of ways, after that nationwide angry autumn and dark winter.

    I got my original 'Thumbalina Lee' lavender 20 years(!) ago. Its stems will root away from the center of the plant, so I've still got it--or at least parts of it. The foliage has a wonderful fragrance.

    Best wishes back atcha for a wonderful weekend. Cool and sunny--good gardening weather.

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    1. That's good to hear about 'Thumbelina Leigh', HB. The plug plant looked pretty unimpressive when it arrived but I'm hoping it'll be happy growing in front of my Echium handiense.

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  4. You have been quite busy, Kris! Spring is a busy time indeed. Looking at your lath house boxes all spruced up and seeing all your new plants has got me excited for the coming season, too. Though I still have 2 months to go before we are frost-free, the snowdrops have started to bloom, so I'm happy about that. The warmth this week has melted a lot of snow and the river is now ice free and I can hear the waterfall and stream again. Yay!

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    1. I'd enjoying hearing - and seeing - a waterfall and a stream, Eliza. The whoosh of the greywater pipe feeding from our laundry room isn't nearly the same thing!

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  5. WOW! Peonies from seed. That seems quite miraculous. It will feel so good to have one of these beauties blooming in a few years time. I am glad you finally got a bit a rain. Hopefully you will get more before rain time is up.
    I bet that little agave is thrilled to have its own space. Have a great weekend.

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    1. I read that Annie's (the retail/mail order nursery in Northern California) grew its Majorcan peonies from seed and what I read online elsewhere about growing them made it sound straightforward but, as my luck with seeds is spotty at best, I had little confidence going into the exercise. It didn't help that I saw zero evidence of anything for over 6 months. I seriously considered dumping the contents of the pots into my compost bin on several occasions but I'm glad that a stubbornly held on to a ray of hope, Lisa.

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  6. Impressed with your Majorcan peony seedling, Kris! You are such an accomplished gardener. Everything you've shown here looks great.

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    1. ...congratulations on the vaccination. My husband and I are much relieved after our second doses too.

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    2. Thanks Susie. The floppy Freesia are bugging me right now, especially as the spent flowers have turned mushy after the rain. More cleanup needed!

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  7. Your Mangave 'Silver Fox' is very handsome and well placed. Surrounded by a lot of green, it will shine beautifully.

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    1. There are quite a few Mangaves in that particular corner of the garden. I just cut the bloom spike off the older 'Silver Fox', which currently looks sad. I may dig it up to detach and replant the pups below it.

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  8. That Anna, sending earthworms on vacation...

    Congrats on the peony seedlings and the vaccination, yay!

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    1. Seeing the earthworm was a pleasant surprise. I hope he likes the compost bin I moved him into.

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  9. You do sound so full of the joys of spring and quite rightly. A real result with Paeonia cambessedesii, one of my favourites. I bought one for a ridiculous amount of money at a rare plant fair a couple of years ago and (thankfully!) it survived. New shoots again this year and hopefully blooms but so far no seeds.
    We have to wait 11 weeks for our second shots over here. A decision by our government that will have to wait for history to evaluate. My first shot is later on today. Then another three months of waiting for the best level of immunity. Hey ho. It's spring. What better excuse for gardening do I need?

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    1. We has a one month wait between the 2 shots and that seemed long so I can sympathize, Jessica. Congratulations on the first shot, though - you're one step closer to some semblance of normality. Re my Majorcan peony, as I recal it took 2-3 years to produce its first bloom.

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  10. How exciting having peony seedlings, mine usually take 2 years to produce a shoot, the first year they put down a little root.
    Lucky you having your second shot, I can't wait to go out into the world a bit. But it's also lovely to be outside in the garden and busy.

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    1. The garden has been my saving grace, Chloris, so I know how you feel. I've stayed very close to home, particularly since December, and, although 2 shots won't dramatically change the overall situation, I'll at least feel better about visiting more garden centers.

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  11. Wonderful new beginnings! I'm just waiting for some spring sunshine now :)

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  12. Great news you had your second jab! It’s gives great confidence to know that you’ll have the extra layer of protection.

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  13. Congrats on getting your second shot! Never would have thought that this statement would come out of my mouth, lol. And from the looks of it, I think you definitely have a peony seedling in hand - how very exciting!!

    The promise of spring is definitely call around here. I can't wait to get into the garden and do some cleanup/cutting back - It's so incredibly satisfyingly.

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    1. I was glad to see your recent blog post, Margaret. I hope your weather continues to improve (rather than going in the opposite direction as seems to be the case in some areas).

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  14. Beautiful post Kris , I really admire your hard work and passion for gardening.
    Thanks for joining in Garden Affair.

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