Saturday, 1 November 2014
Thursday, 30 October 2014
Ajuga Reptans; A Fast Spreading Plant Can Grow in any Good Decent Garden
This fast spreading plant,
sometimes called “Bugle”, has much to recommend it. It can take more foot
traffic than most ground covers and is hardy to Zone 4. Once it is established,
the rosettes of foliage form mats on the ground that keep weeds to a minimum.
Ajuga is handsome the leaves are a rich dark green that turns to bronze in
fall, and they last long past frost.
You know, in Zones 8 to 10 the
plant is ever green. Some varieties such as “Bronze Beauty” are bronze all
season. Others are variegated, such as “Burgundy Glow” which is marked with
white, purple and pink. In late spring the plants send up attractive spikes of
flowers about eight inches tall. Normally they’re an intense blue, but you can
also find white, purple and red varieties.
For some reason Ajuga tends to
appear, and then disappear, in lawns according to a secret program all its own.
A related species A. Pyramidalis, is beautiful but doesn’t have the spreading
habits. So question is how to grow Ajuga Reptans. It is recommended to grow
plant in sun or shade in any good decent garden soil, but make sure it is
well-drained. The plants normally spread by surface runners and can be easily
divided in spring for propagation.
Labels:
Ajuga Reptans
Hummingbird’s Favourite Flower Trumpet Vine or Campsis Radicans
Trumpet vine is a perfect example
of a hummingbird plant. Its red orange two to three inch, trumpet shaped
flowers, which bloom in mid-July have evolved along with the long, slender bill
of the hummingbird, which pollinates them. Even the color, the hummingbird’s
favorite, is designed to attract this bird. The vine clings with aerial
rootlets and is very large and heavy. Although if you’ve a massive masonry chimney
for it to grow on, you might need to wire it for additional support, and make
sure the roots do not cling to the house if it is made of wood. An easier place
to grow it is on a free standing masonry wall or over a rock pile.
If you do not
have a suitable spot and want a good hummingbird vine, grow trumpet honeysuckle
instead. A hybrid, Campsis radicans x tagliabuana “Madam Galen” has even
showier flowers. Both are hardy to Zone four to five. Chinese trumpet vine (C.
Grandiflora) has large flowers but is hardy only to zones seven to eight. In
warm climates trumpet vines can be invasive, but they are useful if you want to
cover a lot of hare ground in a hurry.
How to Grow
Grow trumpet vine in full sun in
moderately fertile, moist, well-drained soil. Prune it on top in winter or
early spring as needed to lighten it and improve its appearance, especially if
it is very heavy on top; you don’t want the flowers and the hummingbirds to be
too high for you to see and top pruning will encourage new bottom growth.
Propagate by layering, by removing and replanting suckers, from stem cuttings
or from seed.
Friday, 24 October 2014
Tillandsia Purple Flower
Lawrance jacob, you have an adventuring spirit and a very kind heart. I
wanted to find something that'd remind you that even in times of worry
or doubt that you're never alone and that there's a bright light that
burns within you whenever you need it. I select for you the Tillandsia
Purple Flower which is an epiphytes (also called aerophytes or air
plants) i.e. they normally grow without soil while attached to other
plants. This flower reminds me of your sky diving, water diving free
spirit.
Labels:
Tillandsia Purple
Hocus Pocus
Hocus
Pocus is a rare rose. It is a floribunda, florists rose that was discovered by
W. Kordes & Sons in 2000 and is alike to Black Beauty thanks to its velvety
dark red blooms but at times features yellow stripes. The rose is not steady
meaning its blooms can come without stripes. Abracadabra rose discovered in
2002 is a sport of Hocus Pocus and features similar yellow streak coloration on
dark red petals. Memphis Music is a red blend mini-flora that grows in similar
zones is slightly alike to both Hocus Pocus and Abracadabra thanks to its dark
red petals and yellow streaks.
Labels:
Hocus Pocus
A hundred ruffled petals
Or indeed more, and
changing from palest, pearly pink-white to a deep rose hue at the
center. This ornate bloom balanced on a huge vine growing at the
entrance to my cousin's garden; the variety is named "James Galway"
after the great classical flautist. And the fragrance is sweet, rich;
the flowers fill all the air with their welcome.
Sunday, 19 October 2014
Filled with perfume and noonday glow and rich pink Rose
Filled with perfume and noonday glow and rich pink Rose. A
flamboyant rose stares at the sun. I think
this variety may be "Gertrude Jekyll"; such flowers are intensely
fragrant, the plants often produce lavish blooms like this one, on long,
arching stems - stems armed with fearsome thorns! I found this picture
in my archives, a memory from a walk on a bright day.
Monday, 6 October 2014
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