Posts

Showing posts with the label Ivory Prince Hellebores

Both Merlin Hellebores Died - August 2023

Image
This Spring, I planted a pair of new (to me) Merlin Hellebores that I bought from the Morton Arboretum plant sale and stuck them in the bed near the rest of the Lenten Roses/Hellebores.  They didn't take to transplanting very well and I've now lost both of them.  See below for the photo showing the remaining four: There's always 'next year' and that's how I feel about Hellebores and the Morton Arobretum plant sale.  Will I go to the sale?  Yes.  Will I buy Hellebores?  Yes.  

HGC Melin Hellebores - Pair - Planted - May 2023

Image
Over the years, we have SLOWLY added to our Hellebores collection.  This year, at the Morton Arboretum Sale, I found a new (to me) variety and brought home two nursery pots and decided to add them to the small cluster of Hellebores that already exist in our backyard.  My journey with Lenten Roses or Hellebores starts with our plan that was developed in 2017.    I first started planning for these evergreen(ish) early bloomers in 2020 with this post showing that the plan calls for 10 Hellebores .   I bought our first one - Sally's Shell - in 2020 during a drive-thru visit (curing COVID) to The Growing Place .   Then, last year at the 2022 Morton Sale, we bought three more - Ivory Prince .  Those four all came back this Spring.  When I was at the sale this year, I saw these flowers (below) and read the sign that these were outward-facing blooms.  Lovely, right? They're named MERLIN Hellebores.  Here below, is the tag that came with these:  HGC Merlin - COSEH 810.   That "HGC&

Hellebores Appearing Early - February 2023

Image
In what feels like a 'too early' emergence, our set of four Hellebores (or Lenten Roses) are all showing a little bit of new growth peeking out of the mulch.  And...it is just mid-February.  Now, I have a limited history with Hellebores as I've only had them for a few years.  Well, actually three of them were planted late last Spring .  And one of them has been in the ground since May of 2020 (Sally's Shell) .  That means that this Spring is the FIRST Spring for the three Ivory Prince Hellebores from the Morton Arboretum sale and thus, I have no date-benchmark for emergence.  But..now I suppose that I do. Now, what are the historical dates in the garden diary for Hellebores? 2021:  Sally Shell:  March 9th .  2022:  Sally's Shell: March 18th . This year?  Have a look at the Ivory Prince showing the tip along with last year's foliage: And the Sally's Shell: That means: 2023:  Both Sally's Shell and Ivory Prince:  February 15th . That's three-plus week

Early January Hellebores Check-In - January 2023

Image
A quick check-in on our small grouping of Hellebores - Lenten Roses - in the backyard here in the garden diary.  These are planted in a small colony of four.  The last time I showed these was early December when all four were still green and leafy .  As I've mentioned in a few other recent posts, we had a VERY cold period of weather right around Christmas where we saw sub-zero temperatures with no snow cover for insulation.  That moved just about everything in the garden along to their final dormancy stage.   When I was out this past weekend looking at the Hellebores (one Sally's Shell, three Ivory Prince ), I noticed that there was a change that you can see in the photo below:  The Sally's Shell Hellebore has taken on mostly brown and dead foliage while the three more-recently-planted Ivory Prince Hellebores are all still winter green: These are some of my EARLIEST bloomers and typically have the first growth that requires protection from late Winter/early Spring kid tram

Early Winter Hellebores Check-in - December 2022

Image
One of the most unique evergreens (or mostly-evergreen) perennials that we have in the garden are the Hellebores - or Lenten Roses - that are planted in our backyard on the northside in the front of the border.  What started with just one, is now four.  We added three new Ivory Prince Hellebores at the Morton Arboretum sale this past season .  Here, below are the four Hellebores - one Sally's Shell, three Ivory Prince:  The three newly planted (in 2022) Ivory Prince Hellebores are planted in the triangle shape *around* the Sally's Shell.  Size-wise, it seems that at least one of the new ones has caught up to the Sally's Shell.   What's really striking about these is that the foliage persists well past the frosts.  What typically happens that by late Winter, this year's foliage will die back and one of the first things we'll see is the new plant emerge from the soil.  Here's a photo of the original Sally's Shell emerging from the mulch in early March of l

Ivory Prince Hellebores - One Month In - June 2022

Image
This is a one-month-later checkin post.  I planted three new Ivory Prince Hellebores in our backyard in a colony right next to the one existing Sally's Shell sport that was underneath a large Catalpa tree.  How have they done?  Pretty well.  They seem to have not struggled once planted and are (currently) still in bloom.  You can see these four (in total) Hellebores in the photo below.  The existing Sally's Shell Hellebore is in the middle with the Ivory Prince cultivars spread out around them in a triangle.  This area calls for ten of these plants , so I'm now 40% of the way there.  This might be something I look to add in 2023.  Too early for that, right?

Three New Ivory Prince Hellebores Planted - May 2022

Image
I brought home three Ivory Prince Hellebores from the Morton Arboretum Plant Sale and was able to get them into the ground in the border that held our lone ( previously purchased ) Hellebore.  You can see them in the photo below:   the three Ivory Prince Lenten Roses / Hellebores are now planted in a triangular shape *around* the existing Sally's Shell (now planted in the middle).  This area is bordered by a large/mature Catalpa tree (you can see a peek at the trunk on the far left of this photo below). In the coming days/weeks, I'll mulch these in and have the edge of the bed cleaned up.  With four (now) in this spot, I'm hoping for some self-sowing (according to the Web...that's a thing.  But, it hasn't happened for me just yet) and spreading.  This area calls for ten total Hellebores , so we're getting close to half-way there.  

Ivory Prince Hellebores - Morton Arboretum Sale - May 2022

Image
Day three of running through what I brought home from the annual Morton Arboretum Arbor Day Plant Sale last weekend.  Started with talking about how I prioritized shrubs and came home (first) with three Little Honey Oakleaf Hydrangeas and two Ruby Slippers Oakleaf Hydrangeas . #2 on my 2022 to-do list was to try to add perennials that had four-season appeal and I mentioned, specifically that I needed to buy more Hellebores .  Thanks to drafting a plan and bringing it to the sale, I'm really glad that I was able to prioritize both flowering shrubs and....able to fit in three Hellebores into the budget.   Our plan calls for twenty (20) Hellebores (Lenten Roses) in two different colonies .  Listen...I really LOVE Hellebores.  But, they're ALWAYS so expensive.  I'm talking $20+ for each one.  And, the big box nurseries never carry them.  But, I needed to - as I said - 'bite the bullet' and buy some.   We have just ONE Hellebores - Sally's Shell - that we bought in