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Showing posts with the label Northwind Perennial Farm

Planting 3 Stachys 'Summer Crush' In Pizza Oven Bed - June 2026

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#3 and #4 on my Summer to-do list for 2026 focused on adding plants to the Pizza Oven Bed that I created last year.  That meant finishing up a garden edit and adding some Hakonechloa Macra grasses to the front of the border.  And, adding some flowering perennials amongst the three existing Wichita Blue Spruce trees in the middle of the bed.  Here is the post showing the blue junipers without much planted around them (in Winter) .  And, here is a post showing the original inspiration for the blue juniper + stachys inspiration .   When I came across this sign for Stachys 'Summer Crush' at Roy Diblik's Northwind Perennial Farm, I thought these would work well in this spot: The description reads: 'Summer Crush' has a summer dispaly of wand-like inflorescenses with pink and white bi-color flowers that stand above dense, green foliage.   I ended up buying only three of these because I've been using up the space in front of the blue Junipers with dahlias...

Seven (More) Montana Sedges Planted Along Path - June 2026

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Back in the Summer of 2023, I began to discover (and plant) sedges.  One of them that has performed pretty well in the shade of our fence and Linden espalier has been Montana Sedge.  I planted three of them at first .  In the Fall of 2024, I divided some of them to add even more small groundcover plants along the fence .  On a recent trip to Northwind Perennial Farm, I came home with seven more plugs of Carex Montana: I planned on putting them in/around the existing colony of Carex Montana in the backyard. I previously planted 36 groundcover plants - all Ajuga.  These seven Montana Sedges gets me to 43 groundcover plants - a new high-planting mark.  Here, below, is a look at the area showing the small White Polka Dot annuals on the right.  In the middle, you can see the three existing Carex Montana right up against the flagstone path. These are small (right now), but they'll spread out a bit.  I opted to put one on the left side of the flagstone p...

Two Allium Cernuum (Nodding Onion) Planted in Pizza Oven Bed - June 2026

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I have Allium Summer Beauty and Allium Serendipity in the garden as clumping alliums.  I also have some random (now random) allium bulbs in Christophii and Gladiator, too.  So, when I saw a tray of plugs of a new (to me) Allium at Roy Diblik's Northwind Perennial Farm up in Wisconsin, I stopped and read the sign.   Here it is - below.  Allium cernuum.  "Nodding Onion". I grabbed two plugs and found a home for them in the pizza oven bed - tucked in between the Chartreuse on the Loose Nepeta and Lady's Mantle. Planting up the pizza oven bed was on my to-do list for this year and while these two allium are small, they're part of the puzzle.

Late April "Around the Beds" - A Snapshot of Garden Happenings Right Now - April 2026

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Spring is moving too quickly around here for individual entries into my garden diary, so I'm doing this little garden stroll/round-up of images and happenings in the garden. Starting out with a garden 'loss'.  The freaking rabbits killed one of my Canadian Hemlock trees.  I spotted this problem in January , but now the tree is officially DEAD.  Too bad.  This tree was nurtured for years from a small 8" tall tiny tree.  Below are two photos.  On the left is the de-needled carcass.  On the right is a photo of the trunk that has been gnaw'ed-at.  Jerks.  In happier-garden-news, the tulips up near the sidewalk IB2DWs bloomed mid-April and looked great.  You can see them below, along with a peek at the Sedum and the Purple Smokebush Tree on the far left of the photo: One of the deciduous shrubs that I've really fallen-for the past few years is Matcha Ball Fern-leaf Spirea.  I planted one in the front yard island bed last May , so this is...

Medusa Alliums Back For First Spring - Island Bed - March 2026

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I noticed some green peeking through the mulch up front, along the driveway in the Island Bed.  It seemed out of place and I immediately thought it might be a weed of some sort.  I've started to notice the Wild Onions starting to fire up  in the backyard and worried that somehow they had migrated up into the Island bed.   Then...I looked closer.  I saw this:  And, I saw a few more scattered around the same area: And, then I saw all five of them scattered along the driveway.  Two rows of two with one in front: And, I realized that these aren't weeds.  But, they're not wild onions.  But, they *are* onions. Last Summer, I planted five Medusa Alliums up there after buying them from Northwind Perennial Farm up in Wisconsin.   These didn't do exceptionally well last year and faded pretty early.  But, as a gardener, I'm learning that sometimes that happens in year one - when you plant a new perennial.  They don't thrive in ...

Giant Zinnia - Left On The Stem - October 2025

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Below is a photo showing one of the Zinnia blooms vs the ball dahlia Wizard of Oz (for comparison).  I think this might be a Zinnia Dreamland Coral from Northwind Perennial Farm, but I don't seem to have posted about it this year.  This Zinnia is tucked into the original IB2DWs bed and besides watering, I've mostly left it alone all season.   One of the things that I'm guilty of is cutting Zinnias 'too early'.  For these blooms, I opted to leave them on for longer (than I normally would) and this turned into a massive ball-shaped Zinnia bloom.

Lucky Charm Anemone - Late Bloomer - Late August 2025

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There is a season for every bloom and with our small drift of Lucky Charm Anemone, that season is "late Summer".  Here it is (below) in very late August when the first blooms are just coming on and opening up.  This will be an explosion of color for the next month - all the way right up until the first frost.  I'm not sure which I like more:  the open blooms or the closed, grey/purple-grey closed ball-like buds before they open up.   

Lavender Phenomenal Planted - By Sidewalk IB2DWs - June 2025

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I saw this sign at Roy Diblik's Northwind Perennial Farm on the benches for a Lavender that is named Lavandula x Intermedia 'Phenomenal'.  Or...Phenomenal Lavender.  The description says:  "This is what all of us have been waiting for.  This lavendar will live through our heat and humidity, our cold winters.  It can grow everywhere."  Sounded like it was worth a shot, right?  Lavender is hard-to-grow and (from what I've read) likes to grow in hard-to-grow conditions.  Full Sun.  Low organic material.  Good drainage.   I have just the place.  My 'hard to grow' area down by the sidewalk.  It gets full sun and has some gravel in the soil.  And, is right next to the sidewalk, so it gets hot.   I bought a quart that had a small Lavender plant in it and got busy planting it down IB2DWs, down by the sidewalk:

Three More Shredded Umbrella Plants - Backyard - June 2025

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In 2023, I planted two Shredded Umbrella Plants in amongst some epimedium in the understory garden on the north side .  They're foliage plants that have a pretty unique leaf to them and I've admired them ever since they went in the ground.  This is now their third growing season and for the first time...they flowered.  See below for the current state of these unique foliage plants: I figured that in service of 'repetition' in the garden, why not add a few more.  The last time I was up at Northwind Perennial Farm, I picked up three more Shredded Umbrella plants and decided to put them in opposite the current batch - along the southside.   Here, below, are the three nursery container plants pre-planting:  I opted to put them in amongst the Autumn Ferns, in-front-of the water bubbler in the wine barrel.  With a couple of carex in the back, this is becoming a Roy Diblik-inspired cluster of perennials.   These little pop of foliage are someth...

Five Allium Medusa Planted In Island Bed - June 2025

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We have a number of Allium Summer Beauty scattered around the garden.  They were the first clumping ornamental onion that I used in the garden and, I think one of the best.  They just grow.  Over the years, I've added others - like Serendipity Allium.   When I was up at Roy Diblik's Northwind Perennial Farm, I came across a new (to me) allium:  Medusa.  Here's the sign they have up below: Twisting leaves with all the purple blooms of other allium.  Sounds interesting.  Here, below, is a closer look at the foliage on the Medusa Allium.  I bought five of them in quart-sized containers: I decided to fill a part of the front yard Island bed - along the driveway - with a colony or drift of these five Medusa Allium.  You can see them set up in their spots below: We'll see how these perform compared to my (current) favorite allium:  Serendipity.  

Three Garden Ghost Artemisia Planted In Island Bed - June 2025

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As I wandered around the tables at Northwind Perennial Farm, I was stopped-in-my-tracks by this silver foliage plant.  It was new (to me) and named "Garden Ghost" Artimisa.   Here's how they look in their nursery pots below: Here's a closer look at the sign below that highlights it's short height (just a foot tall) and color (silver): I tucked the three plants into the back corner of the Island Bed - behind the Medusa Allium (more on them tomorrow).

Shredded Umbrella Plant Emerges in Spring - April 2025

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I have a couple Shredded Umbrella plants in our shade garden in the backyard. That's their trade name, but their scientific name is Synelesis aconitifolia and they're prized for their upright foliage that resembles - as you might have guessed - a 'shredded umbrella' in the garden. I bought them up at Northwind Perennial Farm in Wisconsin from Roy Diblik after fellow garden designer Austin Eischeid gave a talk at Northwind about his shade garden and included the Shredded Umbrella Plant. I tucked two of them in amongst some Epimedium.  That first season, they went dormant early.  I assumed they didn't make it.  But, they came back last year.  Same thing:  early dormancy.  I figured the worst. So, imagine my delight when I see this unique foliage (below) peeking out of the soil this Spring: I'll post an update after this leaf's out later this Spring.  I'll include it on my shopping list the next time I head to Northwind.  

A Garden Edit Miss - Hakonechloa Macra Grasses - December 2024

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I post a lot of my own gardening wins.  So, I should also post a few of my gardening losses - including this 'garden edit' that never was.  I moved a bunch of ferns out of this bed by the tree swing tree and planned to replace them with Hakonechloa Macra Japanese Forest Grasses - to join the four existing ones.   But...I never got around to buying them and planting them.  See below - the space to the left of the existing grasses all the way past the boxwood is supposed to be these grasses.  Right now...it is BARE. Something - for sure - to do in 2025.  

Mystery Blue Green Moor Grass - Transplanted And Divided IBDWs - October 2024

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Last year, I bought and planted a number of (what I thought at the time) were Sesleria Autumnalis - Autumn Moor Grasses - across the front of our front porch beds.  I say 'at the time' because I've learned in the time since that ONE of the plants is not like the other.  The Autumn Moor Grasses put on a show the past two Falls and have thin, yellow-ish blades come October.  The other grass is blue-green and doesn't have the fireworks explosion that the others have each Fall. See below for a look at this one mystery blue-green grass in between a volunteer Dusty Miller and an Autumn Moor Grass: The Autumn Moor Grasses are THRIVING, so I figured...why not transplant this mis-label'd 'mystery' grass and replace it with a divided Autumn Moor Grass.  That's what I did - I dug it up and moved it.  Not before dividing it into two good-sized clumps and one HOPEFUL strand.  I put them right against the sidewalk in the hard-to-grow area IB2Dws.  I filled the hole...

Carex Montana Thriving in Part Shade - Next To Garden Path - September 2024

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Here's a shot that shows off a couple of Carex Montana that I really like - below.  These three are tucked in against an informal flagstone path on the southside of our house - right at the feet of the Greenspire Lindens that have been espaliered.  I planted these three in July of 2023 - 14 months ago.  And they've matured by growing significantly .   These live up close to a tall fence/set of trees, so they get VERY LITTLE direct sunlight.   Ignore the clover and weeds and extension cord.  Just focus on the foliage on these three groundcover plants.  I should plant 12 more along the path. 

Hakonechloa Macra Hakone Grasses - Summer 2024 - June 2024

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Late Summer 2021, I planted the first three Hakonechloa Macra Grasses (the standard, green ones) from Northwind Perennial Farm in the border right around our tree swing tree.  I had some All Golds in the ground prior to 2021, but I read about the green ones online and when I saw them, I bought them as one-gallon nursery pots.  The All Gold variety have been slow growers (for me), so I wasn't sure what these would do when they matured.  I documented them in their first Spring ( May 2022 ) and then one year after planting ( August 2022 ) - when they had put on some growth. Last Summer, I added four more (behind the tree) and this Spring, I moved them (a garden edit) to sit next to the three original ones on the border.  Those four are two seasons behind and the move set them back with a little transplant stress.  But the three original?  They're starting to fill out the space and REALLY shine in the garden.   Below is a look at the three original ...

Shredded Umbrella Plant - Back for First Spring 2024

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Tucked into the little cluster of epimedium (Amber Queen and Spine Tingler) were a pair of Shredded Umbrella plants that I picked up at Northwind Perennial Farm last Summer .  I was influenced by a YouTube video and brought them home without much thought.  The scientific name of these Shredded Umbrella plants is Synelesis aconitifolia  and they're prized for their upright foliage that resembles - as you might have guessed - a 'shredded umbrella' in the garden.  You can see the pair of these interplanted in the photo below:  These didn't last long in their first season in the garden - going dormant well before anything else - so I'm somewhat surprised that they came back for their first Spring.   I figured that I didn't give them enough water and the summer heat took them before they could establish themselves.  Perhaps that's their foliage cycle?  Dying back by late Summer?  I'll be watching this year to see how they do - with hopes they...

Wider View of Epimedium Colony and Shredded Umbrella Plant - February 2024

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Yesterday, I posted an update about the trio of Spine Tingler Epimedium that are planted near the large Catalpa tree in our backyard .  Those three are planted amongst some of the other Epimedium (Amber Queen) that we have had planted for a number of years. At one time, I had five (5) Amber Queen Barrenwort/Epimedium - Here's a look in May 2021, when I planted two new ones to bring the total to five .   By the time I planted the Spine Tinglers last May (2023), there were just four Amber Queens left.   And that's what we're looking at today:  Four Amber Queen Epimedium and Three Spine Tingler Epimedium.   Below is a wider view of this colony showing all eight plants: I've amended some parts of the front and back beds with biosolids last Fall.  Looking at this section, I'm thinking that these could use a slow-release feeding via some biosolid topdressing and/or mulch. I didn't manage to post about these, but I also added a pair of Shredded Umbrella ...