Monday, April 28, 2008
March Bloom Times (Cascadia Garden)
03-03-08 Narcissus ‘Itzim’
03-03-08 Narcissus ‘King Alfred’
03-03-08 Narcissus minor conspicuous
03-06-08 Tulipa turkestanica
03-09-08 Chionodoxa luciliae
03-09-08 Erythronium dens-canis
03-09-08 Hacquetia epipactis
03-09-08 Ribes sanguineum
03-09-08 Trillium ovatum
03-13-08 Clematis armandii
03-13-08 Mahonia aquifolium
03-13-08 Narcissus jonquilla
03-13-08 Narcissus ‘Princeps’
03-16-08 Narcissus ‘Beersheba’
03-16-08 Narcissus pseudonarcissus
03-16-08 Tulipa kolpakowskiana
03-17-08 Erythronium tuolumnense
03-18-08 Corydalis cava
03-21-08 Arctostaphylos densiflora ‘Howard McMinn’
03-21-08 Forsythia ‘Fiesta’
03-21-08 Magnolia stellata ‘Centennial’
03-21-08 Muscari latifolium
03-27-08 Arctostaphylos bakeri ‘Louis Edmunds’
03-27-08 Arctostaphylos columbiana
03-27-08 Cerinthe major ‘Purpurascens’
03-27-08 Erythronium oregonum
03-27-08 Iris bucharica
03-27-08 Mahonia nervosa
03-27-08 Narcissus ‘Actaea’
03-27-08 Narcissus bulbocodium
03-27-08 Narcissus ‘Ice Wings’
03-30-08 Arctostaphylos x media
03-30-08 Arctostaphylos uva-ursi ‘Vancouver Jade’
03-30-08 Epimedium pinnatum colchicum
03-30-08 Jeffersonia diphylla
03-30-08 Tulipa praestans
03-30-08 Veronica pectinata
Labels:
bloom times
February Bloom Times (Cascadia Garden)
02-02-08 Crocus biflorus ‘Purity’
02-02-08 Erica australis ‘Holehird’
02-02-08 Erica x darleyensis ‘Mary Ellen’
02-10-08 Helleborus argutifolius
02-10-08 Iris histrioides ‘Katherine Hodgkin’
02-20-08 Corylus avellana ‘Contorta’
02-20-08 Crocus sieberi ‘Firefly’
02-20-08 Crocus tommasinianus
02-20-08 Helleborus lividus
02-20-08 Helleborus x sternii
02-22-08 Narcissus ‘Small Talk’
02-22-08 Ribes sanguineum ‘White Icicle’
02-28-08 Crocus vernus
02-28-08 Hepatica americana
02-28-08 Mahonia repens
02-28-08 Narcissus ‘Tete-a-Tete’
02-28-08 Narcissus ‘W P Milner’
Labels:
bloom times
January Bloom Times (Cascadia Garden)
01-01-08 Cyclamen coum
01-01-08 Primula vulgaris
01-19-08 Euphorbia rigida
01-21-08 Lewisia cotyledon (yellow)
01-26-08 Helleborus x hybridus
01-28-08 Hebe ‘Amy’
01-29-08 Mahonia mairei
Labels:
bloom times
Sunday, April 27, 2008
Essential Perennials for Shade
I believe that almost anyone would be happy with a perennial garden which included all the plants listed below. These plants are reliable, easy & beautiful. They provide a range of color, height & texture. Bloom starts early in Spring & lasts until Summer. You will need to keep snails & slugs from disfiguring the large leaves of Hosta & Ligularia. Put them in a plastic bag & throw it in the trash. Do not allow shady perennials to dry out completely in summer. These all tolerate some dryness.
Aconitum (Monkshood)
Ajuga reptans (Carpet Bugle)
Anemone x hybrida (Japanese Anemone)
Aruncus (Goatsbeard)
Asarum (Wild Ginger)
Astilbe (Ostrich Plume)
Cimicifuga (Bugbane)
Corydalis
Dicentra (Bleeding Heart)
Epimedium (Bishop’s Hat)
Erythronium oregonum (Fawn Lily)
Fragaria vesca (Woodland Strawberry)
Gaultheria procumbens (Wintergreen)
Helleborus x hybridus (Lenten Rose)
Hepatica americana (Liverwort)
Heuchera americana
Hosta (Plantain Lily)
Lamium maculatum
Ligularia
Polygonatum (Solomon’s Seal)
Primula vulgaris (Primrose)
Sedum forsterianum
Tellima grandiflora (Fringecup)
Trillium ovatum (Wakerobin)
Aconitum (Monkshood)
Ajuga reptans (Carpet Bugle)
Anemone x hybrida (Japanese Anemone)
Aruncus (Goatsbeard)
Asarum (Wild Ginger)
Astilbe (Ostrich Plume)
Cimicifuga (Bugbane)
Corydalis
Dicentra (Bleeding Heart)
Epimedium (Bishop’s Hat)
Erythronium oregonum (Fawn Lily)
Fragaria vesca (Woodland Strawberry)
Gaultheria procumbens (Wintergreen)
Helleborus x hybridus (Lenten Rose)
Hepatica americana (Liverwort)
Heuchera americana
Hosta (Plantain Lily)
Lamium maculatum
Ligularia
Polygonatum (Solomon’s Seal)
Primula vulgaris (Primrose)
Sedum forsterianum
Tellima grandiflora (Fringecup)
Trillium ovatum (Wakerobin)
Labels:
perennials,
plant lists,
shade
Saturday, April 26, 2008
Peony Shade Garden (Cascadia Garden)
This most-pleasing garden began with a pink single Tree Peony in 1997. Enchanted by the large delicate flowers, I added 4 between 2001 & 2006. By the spring of 2007 there was enough shade to plant a variety of woodland perennials. After a colorful display of red & orange Fall foliage, evergreen & early-blooming perennials are clearly visible until late Spring.
Shrubs
Paeonia suffruticosa: pink single
Paeonia suffruticosa: pink double
Paeonia suffruticosa ‘Taiyo’
Paeonia suffruticosa ‘Yoshinogawa’
Paeonia suffruticosa ‘Zi Er Giao’
Perennials
Aruncus aesthusifolius (Dwarf Goat’s Beard)
Astilbe simplicifolia ‘Sprite’ (Ostrich Plume)
Athyrium niponicum ‘Pictum’ (Japanese Painted Fern)
Blechnum spicant (Deer Fern)
Cimicifuga racemosa ‘Hillside Black Beauty’ (Bugbane)
Corydalis cava
Dicentra formosa (Bleeding Heart)
Epimedium pinnatum colchicum
Euphorbia amygdaloides ‘Purpurea’ (Purple Wood Spurge)
Geranium ‘Johnson’s Blue’ (Cranesbill)
Geranium phaeum (Mourning Widow)
Hacquetia epipactis
Hakonechloa macra ‘Albo Striata’ (Japanese Forest Grass)
Helleborus lividus (Hellebore)
Hepatica americana (Liverwort)
Heuchera americana ‘Dale’s Strain’
Heuchera americana ‘Bronze Beacon’
Heuchera americana ‘Green Spice’
Heuchera americana ‘Plum Pudding’
Heuchera americana ‘Velvet Night’
Hosta sieboldiana ‘Kabitan’
Polygonatum odoratum ‘Variegatum’ (Solomon’s Seal)
Polystichum munitum (Sword Fern)
Primula x juliana ‘Wanda’ (Primrose)
Tellima grandiflora (Fringecup)
Tradescantia virginiana ‘Blue and Gold’ (Spiderwort)
Trillium chloropetalum (Giant Trillium)
Trillium cuneatum (Bloody Butcher)
Trillium luteum (Yellow Toadshade)
Trillium sessile (Toadshade)
Groundcovers
Asarum caudatum (Wild Ginger)
Fragaria vesca (Woodland Strawberry)
Maianthemum dilatatum (False Lily of the Valley)
Oxalis oregana (Redwood Sorrel)
Labels:
cascadia garden,
perennials,
plant lists,
shade
The Cascadia Garden
The Cascadia Garden began in 1920. Betula pendula, Camellia japonica, Erica carnea, Pieris japonica, Hybrid Tea Roses, Weigela coraeensis, Aucuba japonica, Rhododendron ‘Pink Pearl’ & Skimmia japonica were planted during the 1st few years.
From 1961 the Cascadia Garden was developed by the Jackson family. Native plants were transferred from family property on Phantom Lake, City of Bellevue. Chief among these were Acer circinatum, Arctostaphylos uva-ursi, Gaultheria shallon, Mahonia aquifolium & nervosa, Polystichum munitum & forest perennials Achlys triphylla, Dicentra formosa, Maianthemum dilatatum & Oxalis oregana.
In 1970 Corylus avellana ‘Contorta’ was planted. By 2008 it was 15 feet high & wide. Too many hybrid Rhododendron were added during the 1980s, an era of excess. Many of the original plants were removed with the notable exceptions of the large & gnarled Pieris japonica & the ever-vigorous Weigela coraeensis. Rhododendron 'Pink Pearl' was relocated. Several more Pieris japonica & 2 Weigela florida were planted after 1993.
In 1993 development of the garden increased dramatically. A wide array of plants were added. Many smaller gardens were made. A perennial border was begun in 1993 which gradually became a mixed border of blue & yellow. In 1994 the lawn was replaced with a small vegetable garden, a large perennial garden, a rock garden & a xeric garden.
A slender & pendulous form of Chamaecyparis lawsoniana seeded in from nearby gardens. Some were transplanted to better sites. A bosque was created in the southwest corner of the garden using 4 Chamaecyparis & 1 Thuja plicata. By 2008 they had grown large.
In 2004 the xeric garden became the Stony Slope. The area was retained with low stone walls. Large & small stones were scattered throughout. The ground & path were covered in gravel. Plants from dry, mountainous & stony sites in western North America, western & central Asia were planted.
Between 2003 & 2007 the rock garden was transformed into a 7-foot-wide privacy screen along the northern property line. 2 small gardens were made in front: the Eucomis Circle & the West Coast Perennials Garden.
From 1961 the Cascadia Garden was developed by the Jackson family. Native plants were transferred from family property on Phantom Lake, City of Bellevue. Chief among these were Acer circinatum, Arctostaphylos uva-ursi, Gaultheria shallon, Mahonia aquifolium & nervosa, Polystichum munitum & forest perennials Achlys triphylla, Dicentra formosa, Maianthemum dilatatum & Oxalis oregana.
In 1970 Corylus avellana ‘Contorta’ was planted. By 2008 it was 15 feet high & wide. Too many hybrid Rhododendron were added during the 1980s, an era of excess. Many of the original plants were removed with the notable exceptions of the large & gnarled Pieris japonica & the ever-vigorous Weigela coraeensis. Rhododendron 'Pink Pearl' was relocated. Several more Pieris japonica & 2 Weigela florida were planted after 1993.
In 1993 development of the garden increased dramatically. A wide array of plants were added. Many smaller gardens were made. A perennial border was begun in 1993 which gradually became a mixed border of blue & yellow. In 1994 the lawn was replaced with a small vegetable garden, a large perennial garden, a rock garden & a xeric garden.
5 Paeonia suffruticosa were planted in the perennial garden. Within 5 years they had spread enough to shelter a garden of woodland perennials beneath. The Peony Shade Garden underplanting was begun in 2003.
A slender & pendulous form of Chamaecyparis lawsoniana seeded in from nearby gardens. Some were transplanted to better sites. A bosque was created in the southwest corner of the garden using 4 Chamaecyparis & 1 Thuja plicata. By 2008 they had grown large.
In 2004 the xeric garden became the Stony Slope. The area was retained with low stone walls. Large & small stones were scattered throughout. The ground & path were covered in gravel. Plants from dry, mountainous & stony sites in western North America, western & central Asia were planted.
Between 2003 & 2007 the rock garden was transformed into a 7-foot-wide privacy screen along the northern property line. 2 small gardens were made in front: the Eucomis Circle & the West Coast Perennials Garden.
Labels:
cascadia garden
Why I Write
I am a garden designer, gardener, writer, lover of plants & nature. After my professional website was completed, my web designer encouraged me to write a blog. As I wrote, I realized that I had a body of knowledge about plants, gardening & garden design that I wanted to share. I wrote articles for many months until I felt I had explored the territory, if not the limits of my knowledge. This is my 1st post.Jordan Jackson
Metropolitan Gardens
Gardening in Cascadia
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