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Showing posts with the label wichita blue juniper

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...

Wichita Blue Junipers - First Winter - December 2025

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In May, I added three upright Wichita Blue Junipers to the (newly expanded) pizza oven bed .  They were small - in two-gallon nursery containers and from the big box nursery.  But, they were priced right and I've been eyeing them for a while , so I took the chance.  I planted them in a staggered pattern forming a triangle. Four months later (early September), I p osted an update with new photos and talked about how they seemed to have handled the heat of Summer with minor browning-out.   Now, as we head into our first Winter, below is a photo showing them as of late December.   Here is the original inspiration photo showing Wichita Blue Junipers with some Stachys Hummelo planted in mass .    I didn't get around to planting anything around these, but that will be on my 2026 to-do list.  But, if I'm grading myself as a gardener, I'd say that I lived up to the statement that:  " Conifers Should Come First ".   Have these gro...

Wichita Blue Junipers - Four Months Later - September 2025

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I planted some small pot-grown Wichita Blue (upright) Junipers in our backyard in early May .  Today, four-months-later, all three of them seem to have handled the heat of the Summer and aren't in distress.  That's good.  I watered them pretty heavily this Summer and they're (partially) protected from the Sun - being planted under the tree swing Northern Red Oak.   They get shade in the morning and late afternoon.  But, are full Sun in the middle of the day.   That seems (*knock on wood*) to be working for them as there is little brown'ing-out happening with the needles.  See below for what these three look like after being planted for four months in our garden: To date, I haven't planted the rest of the bed around them, but this is my inspiration :  using Stachys Hummelo in a mass planting.   Maybe that'll be a #Fall2025 project.  Or, something for next year. 

Three Wichita Blue Junipers Planted - Pizza Oven Bed - May 2025

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For the past year-or-so, I've been thinking about this inspiration photo that shows a combination of blue-green, upright conifer trees flanked by Stachys Hummelo perennials in a mass planting .   I talked about using it in the front yard, but had not come across Wichita Blue Junipers in the wild, so the idea sort-of just hung on the shelf.   That was...until I went to the big box nursery recently and saw these blue-needle upright conifers in the parking lot amongst the big masses of arborvitae.  These looked interesting.  Upon closer inspection...it turns out...these are what I've been thinking about for the past year:  Wichita Blue Juniper trees.   The Missouri Botanical Garden describes Wichita Blue Junipers thusly: ‘Wichita Blue’ is a compact, conical, male form that grows slowly (6-12” per year) to 10-15’ tall, but may eventually reach 15-30’ tall. As the cultivar name suggests, it is noted for its blue or blue-gray foliage that retains ...