Posts

Showing posts with the label better containers

Silver Dollar Eucalyptus Accent Plant - Container Gardening - July 2025

Image
Back earlier this Summer, I planted a small quart-sized plug of Eucalyptus Pulverulenta (Silver Dollar Eucalyptus...or "Florist Eucalyptus" as an accent plant in one of the containers on our back patio.  I found it at the orange Big Box store nursery amongst the other 'accent plants' like Sweet Potato Vine, Spikes and Asparagus Ferns.    Below is a photo from May when I stuck it in the container along with the Crazytunia (purple one) from The Growing Place: Here, below, is the container that it came in - from Vigoro (which...I think is Home Depot's 'house brand', right?). I don't seem to have posted about this when I planted it, but I think that's because I wasn't sure how this would do.  That container chewed through a few things - killing off some spillers/fillers like this Icicles plant .  Perhaps it was a soil or water problem, but whatever it was...this Eucalyptus has overcome them.  So, too, has the green Medusa Sweet Potato vine ...

Flame Thrower Coleus In Container Update - July 2025

Image
A little over a month ago, I planted a pair of small quart-sized containers of a dark-red coleus named Flame Thrower in a patio container .  I had not grown this variety previously, but I liked the the shape of the foliage and having planted some Inferno coleus in the corner patio bed, I thought this would help with a little bit of 'garden legibility' via repetition.  Of colors and plants.   This container sits on our back stoop and gets full afternoon sun.  Being close to the house, it isn't until about mid-day when the sun arrives, but it sticks around here for just about as long as anywhere else in our backyard.   How is the coleus doing?  Very well, I'd say.  Below is a photo showing the current state of the pot.  A lesson learned for me:  coleus as a monoculture works well in a container like this. See that bright green next to the coleus?  I'll post about that tomorrow. 

Flame Thrower Habanero Coleus As Monoculture - Container Gardening - June 2025

Image
  I've used coleus in a few spots in the garden as bedding annuals.  And, over the years, I've planted coleus as part of a mixed container.  But, this year, I'm trying something new (to me):  Using Coleus as a monoculture in a container on our back stoop.   I found this Flame Thrower Habanero Coleus at Menards and bought two quart-sized containers.   I've grown to really like the Inferno Coleus and have used it for a few years in a row.  This Flame Thrower Habanero coleus has a different leaf-shape, but is close in color.  From Ball Seed : Compact-to-medium coleus is perfect for quarts and mixed containers. Bold foliage colors in a compact habit make this striking coleus ideal for small pots and mixed containers. Its uniquely colored and shaped leaves add texture in the garden and containers. Features fiery orange leaves with a touch of purple at the center and edges. Container is where these are headed.  Below is a look at the...

Helichrysum thianschanicum - Icicles from Proven Winners - Container Accent Plant - June 2025

Image
I can't come across a silver foliage plant and not fall in love.  That's what happened at the orange Big Box store recently when I saw a rack of these things on the table: They look like a silver-colored rosemary plant.  But, when I looked at the label....it sure isn't rosemary.  Rather, it is something called an Icicles accent plant from Proven Winners - where they label it as a "licorice" plant .   I only bought one, but I should have bought even more.  So, this first one (for now), is headed into the large patio container along with the CrazyTunia.  See below for the early start to the container: I can see these as a bedding plant - in a lot of places.    Ground cover via annuals.

Superbells Double Orange - Patio Container - June 2025

Image
Number 22 on my annual to-do list was to " do better containers ".  That largely meant the back patio containers that I've filled with various annuals over the years.  Most of the time, I've done it on a budget and without taking chances.   This year, I wanted to do them 'better'.   Over the years, I've watched dozens of videos talking about new hybrid annuals like Superbells and such that require no dead-heading and provide big pops of colors, but I've never used them.  Until now.   Last week, I posted a photo showing container that is planted as a mono-culture of Superbells Coral Sun - from Proven Winner s.  And, recently, I posted about the Cosmic Violet Crazytunias that I planted in two different containers on the patio .  They're dark/dark/dark purple.  I came across another new (to me) Superbell - Double Orange.  I'm a sucker for orange blooms, so this one naturally came home to find a spot in one of the patio contai...

Scaevola Bombay Dark Blue, Red Wave Petunias and Creeping Jenny in Containers - July 2024

Image
Moving on from the pair of stoop containers (small ones) , we now look at the pair of larger, back patio containers.  #7 on my 2024 to-do list was to 'do better containers' - and these two are the largest of the bunch and that means can have the biggest impact.  Are these perfect?  Nope.  Not by a lot.  Are they better than last year?  I think so.   Here, below, is a look at both of them side-by-side.  There's Creeping Jenny cascading down in both.  Red Wave Petunias are dotted in both.  The corner container has Orange Zinnias.  And the round one has the (new to me) Scaevola 'Bombay Dark Blue flower that has spread out and added some nice color.   Below is a closer look at the Scaevola 'Bombay Dark Blue - from The Growing Place.   Here's a look at all three working together - with the Wave Petunias in bloom (last week). The Creeping Jenny was a hold-over from last year and overwintered in teh container...

Back Stoop Containers - Euphorbia, Persian Shield, Sweet Caroline Medusa Green Ipomoea, Orange Zinnias - July 2024

Image
#7 on my 2024 to-do list was to 'do better containers' this year .  That meant doing DIFFERENT containers than I've done in the past.  This goes back to that whole 'get out of your comfort zone' thing that I confronted with flowers in the beds last Fall.  I told myself to resist early Spring and resist the Big Box store.  But, also...lean-in to what I liked about last year.  That 'what I liked' in our containers last year started and stopped with Euphorbia.   Last year, I bought one Euphorbia plant and tucked it in with some Zinnias from Northwind Perennial Farm .  Loved it.  I also saw that the Morton Arboretum used Euphoriba in one of their beds in the Fragrance Garden.  Lovely .  (That's also where I spotted Cardoon, too.) We have two large rectangular containers - one on back patio, one in the shade on our front porch.  Then, we have a large round planter on the patio and a couple smaller companion planters that sit on the ...