Seed pods galore! And so much more!

Oh goodness!!! What have I done? The Coral Majority x Cedar Waxwing one-time cross experiment succeeded. So, since I have to add on to the “inn” (seedling planter) next spring anyway, I added two more of those today. And then, what the hey! Since we have a 1970s colors theme going on, I crossed Pink Tirza with the red and yellow daylily. Seriously, there are few options now that I haven’t tried, unless I want to totally confuse myself. I have a few more planned crosses if the stars align, but then it is probably done for the season. I am hoping Tender Love blooms while Pink Tirza and Naomi Ruth are still blooming, but that will be tight. I REALLY want a cross between Pink Tirza and Tender Love, so fingers crossed. Bloom wrap up is like bloom start up, kind of hopscotch, skip a day, miss each other. And peak daylily season here is definitely wrapping up.
But, seriously, if every cross that has gone to seed pod makes viable seed, get ready for an “inn” expansion next spring. Our boys bought the last kit for me for a milestone birthday and then put it together and made the bunny and rabbit proof cover. I can ask for a repeat.

The Marque Moon x Just Plum Happy experiment was a 100% success. I have already mentioned the Purple D’Oro x Naomi Ruth success – multiple seed pods there. Pink Tirzah x Naomi Ruth has also been successful. And I thought the two seed pods from Purple D’Oro x Pink Tirzah were failing but so far, although I have seen those fail in previous years, so good. The Marque Moon x South Seas has good success as well. And I already spilled the beans about Coral Majority x Cedar Waxwing succeeding. Good grief!!! That will be a crazy combo! The doggonedest thing about Coral Majority is I really like the exterior color of the bloom, but the interior color and pattern is a bit much for that garden area. We shall see.
The red daylilies have some self seeding, as well as the Purple D’Oro and the large Just Plum Happy. So lots of seed pods. No idea where I will put them all if the seeds go to seedling, but we will cross that bridge when we come to it.
Yes, I did mention I placed an order for more (new to me varieties) daylilies that will be shipped for fall planting. Yes, about a year ago I said we do not have a cabin up north (just a camper). Sooo, a 1 year later update, we bought an Amish shed and my husband is building it out into a cabin. Yes, I am very concerned about what I will do when I retire. Maybe we need to get a well put in up at the cabin and clear space for a greenhouse and fence in a daylily growing area. I don’t know …. We have done weirder things. I suppose we will take things as they unfold lol
So back to the present haha — true to late July here, the fully spent scapes are starting to grow in number, and the remaining buds yet to bloom are less and less. Today I trimmed all the spent scapes that don’t have seed pods and I did some cleaning up of spent blooms in the rock. The larger Pink Tirza and the largest Just Plum Happy have had so many blooms each day the past couple weeks that they were overlapping. It was pure abundant wonderfulness! But then spent blooms need some cleaning up or everything starts to look like a sink full of dirty dishes lol

While I was cleaning up I noticed the beautiful new yellow self seed seedling is getting squirrel attention ugghhh.

Below: the evidence (bunnies don’t crawl up on the covered seedling planter)

And the hostas that throw short scapes are starting to gain bunny attention. (I have sat and watched them do this in previous years, and taken pics, so I know it is them.) Oh well, their fair share. They are very entertaining. And the scapes were pretty for a day before they got them.

I am surprised they haven’t gone after these yet.

We came home from grocery shopping two days ago to see Bunimous (giant bunny) happily eating away on the front garden. Brazen Bunimous!!! It hops off a bit and just keeps eating.
And at the historic cemetery, LOVE!!! The mulch is sooooo good! I can micro weed one whole side in a little over an hour. Huge difference in the look too! I like to go over for a couple hours, and that gives me time to trim and do some clean-up, so things are not overgrown and going to seed.
Last year there was a LOT of donating going on – things just showing up, planted, in the refurbished garden. This second year those things are much bigger and fuller and soooo pretty, and keeping them well trimmed has helped the overall look quite a bit.
Still to be done there – there is that large overgrown garden that I have been transplanting into the fence garden, but we are approaching “plan full” for the fence garden, and there is talk about selling the surplus from the overgrown garden at some point. TBD. No one has the energy to keep that big garden weeded and in shape, and it is overcrowded and in the wrong sun exposure with the big oak trees providing so much shade. It is just a matter of time until it is fully removed.


Here’s some more pics to enjoy.

Above: Stella D’Oro Haha, I see I missed a couple self seed pods. Next time …

Above: This expanse is planned for daylilies and tall (Autumn Joy) sedum. To be planted in September.

Above: These were donated last year. I came to work on the garden one day and there they were! These are Sedum, but the kind that spread out, not get tall. I have some at the townhouse too. I wish they did not “part” like that in the second half of the season, but they are pretty. I have my thinking cap on for what could be done for the donut hole, of sorts. Like I said, same issue with the ones at the townhouse.

Above: This open area could be for some more iris transplants from the overgrown garden that is being disassembled. Irises need to be divided every 3-5 years, so optimal planting is at ground level, which I have done with the new iris bed on the other side, but this might work for a little iris patch.

Above: The hostas are doing mostly well. Some are sunburning, but for the most part they are doing well. And there are 4 yarrow plants on that side as well. They are mostly done blooming and I am starting to deadhead them.

And then it goes into a Black-eyed Susan’s and hostas and ground cover.

It is really looking so nice, and the other side as well. Just need to transplant a bit more from the overgrown garden, plant a bit more and it will be nice and full, with Spring-Fall color and variety. So fun, and quite a pleasure!!!

So that is my download. Lots going on but all pretty fun. The afternoon is going to be indoors. Too hot!!!

Refinement

I have figured out what is “throwing” me about Coral Majority. It is in the “pastel” garden area. That area has vanillas and light pink, and even South Seas sometimes goes toward salmon. Coral Majority is bold, and almost looks frayed not ruffled and seersuckerish and approaching marbled in color. Today three bloomed together and they were nice.

It has a lot of pollen, but I really don’t have anything I want to cross it with. I did a “one time” test today with Cedar Waxwing, as I haven’t crossed anything else with Cedar Waxwing this year and it is not self seeding so it will be super easy to track. If that one-time test fails I will not try again, but I am half expecting it to work lol. Something about light pink and bright coral makes me think I won’t like the cross, but maybe …

Sadly the Naomi Ruth x Pink Tirza cross to the last bloom of the smaller Pink Tirza failed only two days after the cross. Quick answer, and not unexpected.

I have taken to notes on my phone notepad to keep quick info, and that is helping. Today I accidentally made a Pink Tirza to Naomi Ruth cross on the wrong scape – one that already has two seed pods from Purple D’Oro, but I made a note and took a bunch of pics so I have it documented if it does form a seed pod, but I am guessing no. Because of that I disciplined myself to stop for the day, a good thing.

I am really, really, really hoping for good weather on Saturday morning. I have week one of “the plan” – transplanting three South Seas self seed seedlings to the historic cemetery garden. They are from 2021 seed, 2022 seedlings, and are starting to get big enough that they are blocking the path to the hummingbird feeder. I will not replant seedlings there. I also need to do weeding over at the historic cemetery, although I will say the mulch is doing a fantastic job keeping weeds down.
And now today’s highlights:

I am getting the Blue Mouse Ears scapes trimmed, always an incremental job. The large Just Plum Happy is in the Grand Finale stage. The hosta in the far back needs to be disposed. I have tried a number of things, including moving it, but it is failing. It happens. I think it is about 18 years old. It has lived a good full life.


Time for hosta haircuts, daylily peak season

Yesterday we had 22 daylilies bloom in the gardens. Today I did my first walkabout and there are even more today than yesterday. Even with the heat and humidity, even recovering from a summer cold, the joy and beauty and magnitude of what is approaching peak bloom season for the daylilies does not escape me. It is awe inspiring!
Early morning on these warm days is the most enjoyable, and I love to capture the early morning beauty before the day heats up, when the garden’s potential is just starting to shine.

Yesterday the Naomi Ruth bloomed for the first time this year.

Today Pink China Doll bloomed for the first time.

And Just Plum Happy is incredible right now.
I love how this scape this morning shows yesterday, this morning, and (probably) tomorrow.

And even though they are the backdrop right now, the hostas also are an absolute delight. Their waves of bloom are gradually giving way to seed production so it was haircut time. I want them to save their strength for next year’s beauty.

And then there is Tirza way in the back of one of the areas. It was a slow start for her here, for multiple reasons, but now she is coming in to her own these past couple years.

In a week or so I will start trimming the Blue Mouse Ears. That is quite a job, so I do a few at a time. And I see they burned a bit in the heat of the past few days. They need dividing this fall, and some may get a new, more shade filled location, and a bit of distance from the daylilies that are starting to cover them up.

They really shouldn’t be covered up. They are far too beautiful to be covered up 🥰

Happy 4th of July!

It is a rainy, chill out sort of 4th of July (American Independence Day) here. Here’s some red, white, and “blue” from our garden.

And a hint of which daylily looks like it is right on the verge of being the first to bloom in the garden this year. It will also be the first time it has bloomed in our garden. Full disclosure, I did not mark it, so until it blooms I will not be able to say for sure, but I believe it is Delicate Design.

Flowers, Flowers, and More Flowers

A fantastic 24 hours indeed!
Tuesday I had volunteer time through work to start using up, so I scheduled 2 hours at the start of the day. Hey, calendars determine part of these decisions 😉 Tuesday was predicted sunny a few days before, but it dawned with rain. By 7:30 am it was to a drizzle and I could not stand the wait any longer. I needed my historic cemetery fence gardening fix. Off I went. And as blessings would have it, the drizzle fizzled by the time I pulled up to the cemetery, and stopped within a minute of getting out of the car and starting to work.
This was the first project of the day I wanted to complete – a removable border to keep the mulch in on the new iris bed.

It has to be removable come late fall because the snow plow/blower will suck up even pavers set on end.
Now maybe the perfectionist in some will say, “Why not right on the edge?” Well, at first I had the mulch mounded, and it was going over the top of the border if I placed it right at the edge. But as projects go, I just had to see if I could make it work right on the edge. I smoothed out the mulch, repositioned the border, and called my friend the site manager, who said “Hello crazy lady!” Hahaha! I asked her if she and her husband were coming over because pics weren’t sending and I needed a second set of eyes. You know what she said? “No, because it’s raining.” Now, first of all, in case you think that was not nice, she is my friend, so she was just having fun, but I tell you, the drive is short from our part of town, and it was not even drizzling at the cemetery when I called her. So I was being blessed for sure!!! Here is the pic I was trying to send her.

I made the decision, I liked the border farther back for now. Maybe I will plant ground cover in front. You just never know what I might do in a garden when I set my mind a-going. I might plant more irises in that bed and move the border forward yet this year even. You just never know with me 🙂

So I got done with the border, poured in my last bag of mulch to chock-a-block full top it off, micro-weeded the right side of the garden, took a few more quick pics, and went back home, to my office, and logged in, 7 minutes late. No worries. It was all good. Work knows what a crazy lady I am too, and that they will see me work way more than 7 minutes late cuz, well, you know, I am one of those weird people that like what I do for a paycheck. We are out there, right? 😉

At the end of my work day the dog got extra lovins because I was going to leave him yet again, but only for an hour or so, to go to the historical society meeting at a historic factory turned hotel, condos, pub, and event venue. So fun!!!

Here are pics of the setting. It was an absolutely beautiful night! No rain there!

Still, I couldn’t stop there. I had spotted the first daylily of my gardening season in bloom at the cemetery in the morning. But my phone was in the glove box, all the way at the other end of the fence garden, and you know, I was running late dadeedadeeda …

So I had to, I just had to, get a pic of that first daylily blooming. Yes, it is the overused Stella D’Oro, but … it is the first daylily of the year in the gardens I love and work in.

I returned home a very happy crazy lady! And our dog celebrated with the zoomies.

This morning, I was treated to a fully opened peach Asian lily and the first opened hosta blooms.

I tell ya, it was a wunderbar 24 hours!

And I think the baby bunny must have had fun too.

Dang it! Now I have to start using that cordial glass again!

What’s blooming?

Back from some PTO from work, it it time to catch up.

First, very exciting, I have 11 intentional daylily crosses growing into plants. Crosses that made seed, stratified, sprouted, and are now looking like baby daylilies (because they are lol). Blooms are a few years out, but that is very exciting.

Up north, some grapevine hyacinth that were from a watch ‘em grow garden (forced) a few years ago are blooming away. Very encouraging that the deer are not eating them. I had hoped they would escape being munchies.

Yes, hidden in the woodland foliage, but that is fine for now. I am adding to that area. I just planted some forced daffodils, and they, too, should be deer resistant when they come up next and subsequent years.

At the townhouse, the bluebells clematis wrapped up a couple weeks ago.

They now have their puffs

The tulips, of course, are done blooming. We only had a few this year.

At the historic cemetery the daffodils did well year one.

And the transplanted irises did very well and are continuing to bloom.

Right now at the townhouse the wiegelia is in full bloom.

The first hosta scape is about to bloom.

And the forget-me-nots are starting to bloom.

Lastly, one of the ninebarks is also blooming.

At the historic cemetery, the transplanted daylily won the race to show the first scapes and buds.

More transplanting there to be done this year, for sure – daylilies and irises. The iris bed is coming along nicely. A lot more work to be done there, but little by little. Today it was a bit of border, to keep the mulch from washing out. One more box of 12 sections and that should do it. And then clean up what is on the sidewalk. But more on that later.

Finally did it!

Happy Spring, and Happy Gardening Season!

Things here have been going along at quite a clip! The gardens are back in full swing. Time to start the blog back up and share the garden activity again.
One of our first projects once we saw what had survived the winter was to do a bit of transplanting. The daylily seedling mini-bed that went from brainchild to reality to “oops that is kind of ugly and a bit shy on sun exposure” to “nah, nixing that idea” was pretty much decommissioned last year. It did, however, provide a home for some pollinator created seedlings to mature a a bit. This spring it was time to take a big, potentially risky transplant step, part of which I have been contemplating for years. The idea – swap locations for two beautiful mature Ivory Queen hostas and two daylily seedlings. The Ivory Queen hostas needed to be moved out of their sun overexposure location, and the daylily seedlings needed more sun. Further supporting the decision, one of the two hostas was fairy ringing. They had been in that location a while. It was definitely time for a swap. But would we like the look?

My husband was the digger, and I was the planter. Digging out the hostas was as tough as I thought, and nerve wracking. But the hostas as well as the 2-3 year old daylily seedlings all not only survived, they are thriving. The hostas now have more shade, and the daylilies now have the sun they need.

Good choice.