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Showing posts with the label deadheading

More (Late Season) Disneyland Rose Blooms - Peach, Salmon, Pink Floribunda Roses - October 2025

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While I haven't stopped 'deadheading' the dahlias, I *have* stopped cutting any blooms off the Disneyland Roses in the sideyard.  I'm hoping that they'll handle the frost and Winter, despite the late-season growth.   Like the dahlias, they're POP'ING OFF right now.  Here, below are some photos showing the blooms (in various stages) of our Disneyland Roses (Floribunda Roses) on a few plants.  I last cut some of these about 10 days ago and put in a vase ( post here ).  Since then, I've left all the rose hips on the ends of the stems in an attempt to allow this plant to run its full growing cycle before the frost arrives. 

Chelsea Chop (Deadheading) Cat's Pajamas Nepeta - July 2025

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One of the perennials in our front yard IB2DWs bed that performs well AND behaves well is Cat's Pajamas Nepeta.  There are three of them tucked into that long, linear bed.  And they put on a nice early Summer blue-flower show.  They're also NOT bullies in the garden.  They don't take over and push others around. That early Summer bloom cycle means that the spent flower heads are here all Summer long.  What to do about it?  Deadhead them.  Or, give them the 'Chelsea Chop'. I grabbed my snips and pruned off all the long stems with flower heads.  There's quite a mass of material after pruning all three: I should have taken a 'before' picture.  Because...all I have is the 'after'.  You can see them below.  Nicely pruned back to little orbs.  The third one is tucked in behind the blue Fescue grasses.

Chartreuse On The Loose Nepeta - Summertime Re-Bloomer - July 2025

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Earlier this year, I planted three small quart-sized nursery containers of a new (to me) nepeta named 'Chartreuse on The Loose' .  It is an interesting variety that has a unique color foliage (lime green), habit (trailing) and maintenance needs (it doesn't require deadheading to re-bloom).  Right away, one of the plants was eaten-up by the (dang!) rabbits.  But the other two seemed to do just fine.   Look back at this planting post in early May when the three small plants were just that:  small .  Lots of mulch showing between them.   Today?  They've made a drift with no gaps in between them at all.   See below for the current state of these trailing/spreading catmint perennials: I've mentioned that I need to continue to remind myself to add more of WHAT IS WORKING instead of adding net-new stuff.  But, these are both a reminder that sometimes new things can be great.  But, now that I see them working, I have put them...

Orange Zinnias As Bedding Plants - IB2DWs - June 2024

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 For Mother's Day, the kids and I bought a couple of flats of ordinary orange zinnias from the big box store that we planted in some pots for the Moms (and God Mothers) in our/their lives.  I ended up having a few extra and put some in our back patio containers (more on those later), and decided to plant four as bedding plants near the driveway in the original IB2DWs bed.  I picked orange because I like orange and it is the Illini color (of course).   Yesterday, I posted about the one Uproar Rose Zinnia IB2DWs - and that one is much larger/bushier than these.    Below the first photo shows what these orange zinnias look like after a week or so in the ground: I have limited experience with flowers (as I've said in the past), but what I've read and watched online, you can pinch off blooms to (try to) get bushier plants.  So, naturally...I decided to sacrifice these early orange flowers.  I cut them all off - you can see the result below. ...