Hello Again

It’s been a while.  I apologize of course and there’s no one reason for the disappearing act, but lets just pretend it didn’t happen and there hasn’t been an unprecedented two month gap in posts… which has never happened in the last ten years of posting here…  I hope to turn things around, but if the last ten have taught me anything it’s that for as often as I try to mend my blogging ways, it never works out.  So let’s just take a look around the garden to hopefully prove I haven’t been completely lazy!

rock garden

Last summer’s addition to the yard was the rock garden.  It might be my favorite garden ever and I’m always checking for the tiniest change even if the huge weed on the left speaks more of neglect.

The plan is to keep this post short and just get it done, and that’s probably a good goal since I’m struggling to write anything of interest this morning.  What I want to do is go on and on about every little thing in the rock garden but that could be exhausting for both of us so I’ll do my best to keep things short.  Yeah, keep things short and get it done… but the silly little rock garden has so many cool things to bore you with, assuming  you can look past the huge weed -which is probably a weed but maybe it’s not and it’s something interesting- so perhaps just a few cool things have to be mentioned.

front garden

The rock garden sits in the center of the front yard.  A nice focal point, but stale bagels are out there too, and the birds and bunnies enjoy them just as much even if we don’t.

A fun fact about the rock garden is that there used to be a nearly identical bed here when we moved in, which I hated and called the ‘pimple’, since it was this round raised thing covered in red mulch which looked like an infected blot on the front yard.  It was removed, but it appears we’ve come full circle as now it’s back and just as round and raised as before,  just no red mulch.  I guess the antibiotics worked and the pimple is less angry.  The bed was put in last summer and in the 10 months since I’ve been filling it up.  Finally I have a place to stick all those little rock garden things which get lost and smothered in the other beds.

lewisia rock garden

A lewisia (raspberry something was the label) has been blooming all spring.  I love it.  If it survives longer than a year I may fill the entire bed with more and maybe start a lewisia farm.

Hopefully I’m not offending anyone by calling this bed a rock garden.  If there’s a rock garden police they might charge me with planting regular perennials like the blue fescue or trashy annuals like the ‘Profusion Double Hot Cherry’ in a garden which should have obscure erodiums or saxifrage but give me time.  Right now those things bore me a little because they don’t look like much unless grown well, and it’s that ‘grown well’ part which I struggle with.  Actually I kill them so that’s that.

circium acaule

Heh heh, I was probably inapropriately excited to find a dwarf thistle (Circium acaule) at a rock garden sale last spring but I love thistles.  This might be full bloom now and obviously it’s a short and poky thing.

Short and get it done is not happening.  Refocus.  Rabbits.  Besides me actively killing plants there’s also still a rabbit problem plaguing this garden.  A few months under a chicken-wire cover has saved a few of the remaining hens and chicks (Sempervivums) but the rabbits still love to nibble the fescue and graze on the dianthus.  They also love the clover plantings which the rock garden police would have told me shouldn’t be there in the first place but they are.

variegated white clover

There’s white clover growing lushly throughout the lawn, but the variegated white clover in the rock garden must be tastier.  I planted it in a crevice.  The rabbits struggle to get down in there, and crevice gardening is very on-trend in the rock garden world, more so for deeper root runs than rabbit protection but it sort of works.

I want to go on about other mucho-cool plants in there but maybe I can pull off a second post this month and not take another break until autumn or whenever, and talk about them then.  Ugh, why did I even mention autumn, it’s June for goodness sake and just about everything looks awesome.  I weeded and planted the potager.  Half of it has turned into a tropical garden with bananas, cannas and angel trumpets (Brugmansia) while the other half has been re-assigned to vegetable planting.  Obviously vegetables should have been out there all along, but flowers are nicer so maybe I strayed a little too far in that direction.

potager garden

Tomatoes, cabbages, chard and broccoli among other things.  I was quite serious about evicting a few too many other non-edible things which ended up in there.

Who knows what we’re going to do with fresh produce.  Tomatoes can at least go onto a pizza or something, but chard?  It’s so green and we’re more of a sugar and deep fryer kind of family but there’s always hope.  Fake it until you make it is the theory, and a vegetable garden filled with wholesome vegetables is far more impressive than raised beds filled with daylily seedlings and sunflowers even though that may still happen.  But not this month.  These are show vegetables, and they might be planted to make things look more respectable for an upcoming graduation party which will happen in a week in this same backyard for a certain daughter who has finished high school.

potager garden

Even the waste area is looking repectable.  Last summer and fall some extra topsoil and homeless daylilies meant losing the weeds, and this spring more topsoil and some zinnia seedlings cleared out the rest.  Cardboard and soil on top is so far keeping the weeds at bay.

Next to the waste area is the berm and that’s cleaning up as well.  The steps up to the top were a thing last year, and this year I’m dabbling in finally planting things which might do well on the slope.  Also all the scrap rocks from construction on the addition became little square plinths? which looked kind of unfinished until I found a few concrete pavers to top them off with.  Stone would have been ideal but $adly that couldn’t happen so the cheap concrete had to step in.  I’m quite pleased that I can finally put pots on top and have them sit somewhat level rather than look like a topsy-turvy collection of succulent pots… which will join the main planters once I clean them up a bit and decide who goes where.

stone pedestal

Finally a level place for pots!  It’s looking fancy back here in spite of the un-mown grass, and weedy berm.

Short and get it done… the deck is up.  I started filling pots but still need to pressure wash before it’s all put together.  I rebuilt the shade canopy, that was another day of work, but still have to fix a few parts of the deck before the party.  Don’t worry the deck repairs are for aesthetics not safety 😉

deck container plantings

Deck containers are off to a good but perhaps slow start.  A bunch of calibrachoa self-seeded from last year and all needed to be dug and potted up since I can’t possibly just let them go.

Once the deck is done all the houseplants can find their sumgo to waste.mer homes.  Many will go up there, many will go out to surround Begonia House.  I think it will be very nice if it indeed happens.

whimsical playhouse

Begonia House on the side of the yard.  Right now it’s derelict but I think this weekend will breathe some summertime life into it and I’ll evict the spiders and mugwort which are trying to ruin my vibe.

That’s where the various projects are at.  Things are moving forward on all fronts except for the bank account balance which keeps ticking in the negative direction despite everything I try, but I’m sure you know that story as well!  Have a great weekend.

A Day of Rock Gardening

Last weekend my friend Kathy of Cold Climate Gardening talked me into a plant sale.  No offense to her salesmanship, but it wasn’t the toughest sell considering I’ve been itching to get back to town ever since my first ‘Ithaca Spring Garden Fair and Plant Sale’ two years ago.  Covid you know… so I’ve been saying pass, but then Kathy told me about the spring plant sale of the Adirondack Chapter of the North American Rock Garden Society.  It’s a members only thing, just a few people donating, buying and selling, but it sounded perfect.  Big deal that I wasn’t a member(yet) and it’s an over two hour drive, plus it’s a whole Saturday away from a garden which I should be weeding… and I already had plenty of unplanted things… but you know as well as I do that once the gardening gauntlet is thrown down it must be accepted, so of course I said yes.

It was a beautiful morning and the drive was a perfect trip up the Susquehanna river valley and then across the rolling dairy hills East of Cayuga lake to the plant sale.  The sale was fun.  Members (which now included me) were given numbers and each person had a chance to visit the sale tables and pick up a favorite.  After a couple rounds of this the tables were opened to everyone, and one by one they emptied.  There was more of course.  While this was going on plant talk was every where, an auction was lined up, a free table was filled and cleaned out… members introduced their favorite plants which they thought ought to be selling better, and at one point someone just stood on a bench and invited everyone over to visit their garden afterwards 🙂 I like these people, and this also brings me to one of the big selling points for me doing the drive and joining the chapter.  Garden visits.  I had heard that a local rock gardener had offered to open their garden after the sale, for members to visit.  It’s a garden I had read about and seen pictures of, and I knew it was a must-see garden.  Wow, was that the truth!

ithaca rock garden

A hillside was being excavated to expose the bedrock

Some of the epic rock gardens of Europe are heaps of stone built up to create mini-Matterhorns out of flat cow pasture.  This garden is not that.  Here a pair of inspired gardeners found a plot of land where they knew they could carve the earth down to bedrock, and then build a rock garden up that follows the natural cut of the ravine.  It’s actually quite a crazy idea, but awesome to see.

ithaca rock garden

One of the newest additions, a bridge now spans the gap between rocky outcroppings.

Of course these pictures don’t do the scale of the garden justice.  Massive boulders were being moved and placed in a way which looked as if the glaciers did all the heavy lifting thousands of years back.  Unearthing the bedrock sounds easier with the help of heavy machinery, but then consider the care which has to be taken to not gouge the naturally weathered walls and boulders as they’re being uncovered.  All the fine uncovering had to be done with hand… and then moved by hand…

ithaca rock garden

The earthworks from even further back.  All of this was uncovered, and much of it moved into a more effective place or position, even the larger slabs of stone.  Behind where this photo was taken there’s even more excavation.

One of the chapter members mentioned that the owners were back and forth about opening the garden.  ‘It’s not a garden, it’s a construction site’ is more or less what I got as the reasoning, but only half of that is true.  It’s an awesome construction site, but it’s also an amazing garden, and I think it’s even more amazing when you can see what went in to all the plantings.

ithaca rock garden

Plantings tumble down the slope, this one built up with tufa stone, a porous rock light and airy enough to allow plant roots to penetrate.

This is the first real rock garden I’ve ever visited so I can’t say much about the plants other than they looked perfectly happy.

ithaca rock garden

Rocks overhanging a small pool.  Tufa stone allows for plants to be ‘set’ directly into drilled holes.  Eventually the plants spread out on their own as the roots find their own paths into the rock.

ithaca rock garden

Oh, and just a big crevice garden for all those things which love a deep root run between stones.  Yellow delosperma and a yellow leaved teucrium (which I just happened to pick up at the plant sale!)

ithaca rock garden

Some of the plantings were really amazing

ithaca rock garden

Even a hosta!  -but I really love the yellow leaved saxifrage (maybe saxifraga ‘Cloth of Gold’?)

As I worked my way down the paths through the rock gardens, and headed closer to the house, I reached the patio area.  Here the garden hosts had set up a dining area with snacks and beverages and plenty of wine.  From what I hear this generosity was all part of a master plan to “loosen lips” and get the honest impressions of their visitors with an eye towards improvements and new ideas.  Sadly, I believe the wine was just wasted on me 🙂

ithaca rock garden

Bonsai and trough gardens.

The trough gardens were particularly interesting, and not just because of the mini landscapes planted in them.  In the past these gardeners have hosted trough making workshops in the garden as well as publishing articles on the process, and I was excited to see that the troughs look excellent in person.  Excellent enough that I think I’ll give one a go this summer and see how it turns out!

ithaca rock garden

Some of the troughs were quite complex.

Wine and snacks have a way of gathering people, so at the patio I stopped and took in a few of the conversations.  Someone asked me how I liked the top part of the gardens and I said ‘Top?  There’s also a bottom?’ …and yes, there’s a whole other part to the garden.

ithaca rock garden

Below the rock garden a natural seep provides flowing water for the bottom part of the gardens.

As you come around a few more boulders you find yourself at the bottom of the ravine, where a mass of Primula japonica fill the low spots.  They were just starting their peak bloom, it was excellent.

ithaca rock garden

A path runs back and forth along the stream.

ithaca rock garden

Masses of Primula japonica

ithaca rock garden

The stream heads out to the lake.  You would never guess a downpour had this garden nearly flooded a few days prior to the opening.

There were more woodland plants, azaleas, rhododendrons, and tree peonies but of course I can’t show everything, so I’ll leave off with one last overview of the upper garden as viewed from the house.  As you can see ‘dwarf’ conifers are also an interest.

ithaca rock garden

A view from the other side.  You can see some of the deer fencing, obviously the hooved beasts have no respect for such a special place.

So this garden was amazing, but who would I be if I turned down another garden tour invite?  I headed a few miles further to the impromptu open garden which had been announced at the sale, and here I was able to enjoy huge beds filled with lush perennials all grown to perfection.  I’m afraid I derailed plenty of my host’s Saturday afternoon gardening plans since it was already kind of late, but she still gave me the full tour!

ithaca rock garden

Tree peonies were at their moment of perfection.

There were cool plants everywhere, and they were all so well grown that I tried to avoid all honesty about my own garden when asked.  My big regret though is that I didn’t take more pictures.  It’s almost criminal that there are no photos of the red horse chestnut (Aesculus x carnea ‘Ft. McNair’) which was in full flower over one of the back beds.

ithaca rock garden

Alliums, Aquilegia, and peony were at their peak but I could see that the show had started months ago with spring bulbs, and will continue for months more with all the other later perennials.

ithaca rock garden

Wow.

So I’m also not even mentioning the shade gardens, the small arboretum of special trees, the field of dahlia tubers I was preventing her from planting… It was another fascinating garden and I have to say that the best thing about this day was meeting person after person who were so crazy about plants that it made me feel entirely sane.  What a group!

I rushed out of this stop with a new friend (and even more plants in my hands) and headed for my last stop.  It was already about dinnertime when I rolled into my friend Leon’s driveway but he didn’t seem too annoyed with me.  He knew I’d be late and still led me around the grounds of Der Rosenmeister Nursery and tolerated question after question.  I didn’t have time for a single picture.  I bought three roses.  I’m going back in a few weeks to see the hundreds of roses in full bloom, and it is guaranteed to be another great trip and I’m sure you’ll hear all about it 🙂

Hope you enjoyed this adventure !