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Northern Catalpa in Blooms - White Flowers on Native Tree - July 2025

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A few weeks back (this post is going live on July 1st, but these photos are from mid/late June), a stretch of our backyard was covered in white flowers.  On the lawn.  On top of shrubs.  On our little, hidden picnic table.  A carpet of white flower heads.  It looks like this: That means it is Northern Catalpa season.  We have two mature Catalpa trees - native trees.  (We have a small one growing near our patio, but it is still a twig.). They both bloomed this year in a prolific manner.  In mid-to-late June these trees put on a show.  The flowers stay on the trees for a while, then fall.  The week the trees were in bloom, we experienced a couple of days of heavy rain.  I'm thinking that caused the blooms to fall-off faster than normal. I posted about these flowers in a similar way in June of 2023 .  In that post, I also included a shot of the tree.  Here's the current state of this large Catalpa tree in our yard: In looking...

Two More John Creech Sedums Planted - Pizza Oven Bed - June 2025

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Back in 2023, I planted a pair of John Creech Sedums as groundcover in the small, corner bed by our front walk .  I found them at the end-of-the-season sale at TGP and threw them in without thinking too much about them.   Today, both of those originals are doing well and providing that 'living mulch' layer in a really great way.   So, when I saw this same Sedum at the low price of $2 per small container, I grabbed a pair of them and figured I'd find a home for the groundcover.   The sellers of this plant bill these as 'trail blazers' - and something that can handle a little foot traffic. I'm not so sure about that, but that's what the label (see below) claims: With the new, large pizza oven bed in the back being MOSTLY bare, I decided to put these in along the thin border that abuts the timber retaining wall.  See below for the planting of two sedums: This area gets mid-day sun, so I'll keep an eye on it.  What I'd love to see is to have this...

A June Garden Odds-And-Ends Round-Up: June 2025

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With the month coming to an end, there are a number of things that happened this month that I didn't get around to posting about in my garden diary.  Here, below are a series of photos showing some of the things that are moving, growing, blooming and....showing-off in our garden. The dahlias that I planted earlier this month - and pinched back - are showing some good growth.  Below is one of the Pooh dahlias that is showing top-growth at the pinch-site: I applied a coat of Neem Oil to the Disneyland Roses.  Combination fungicide + pest control: These weird Allium are in bloom. It is called Sicilian Honey Garlic Allium. This Island Breeze hosta is doing just fine in the shade garden.  Planted in 2023 and mostly forgotten about.  It deserves a better, more-high-profile spot in the garden.  I should transplant it this Fall.   So, too, are the Forbidden Fruit Hostas that I planted in the Fall of 2022 .  They're stars, but buried under more comm...

State of the (Original) IB2DWs Bed - June 2025

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Having done a similar post last year and in 2022, I thought it was a good time to revisit the "State of the Original IB2DWs bed".  That's the original bed in between two driveways.  Here is the post and photos from 2022 .  And, here is the post and photos from last year .  Looking back at 2022 - three years ago - a lot has changed.  Everything was immature, but 'bones' were there.  The All Gold Hakonechloa grasses, the Karl Foerster Grasses in back and a couple of Serendipity Alliums.  All were present. But by 2024, they were joined by other things . Including the (gasp!) Creeping Jenny Groundcover. And other perennials including Cat's Pajamas Nepeta, some Elijah Blue Fescue clumps, a red sedums, a couple of Agastache Blue Fortune , a Prairie Dropseed, some Peonies, a couple of conifers, some boxwoods, a Cardoon and a couple of trees. The Cardoon ran for two years and hasn't come back. But, I've also added a few things.  Including a trio of L...

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:

Ten Royal Velvet Supertunias Planted In Island Bed - June 2025

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More bedding annuals.  This time, in the front of the Island Bed in our front yard.  Which...is no longer an island bed as it touches the sidewalk and driveway on two sides.  I have been planning on filling it up with some Seslaria and/or some other perennials.  But, those plans haven't come together.  So, I figured I should fill it with some annuals.  Get a little bit of pop of color up there. For part of the front of the bed, I saw these Supertunias in dark purple.  Called "Royal Velvet": Proven Winners says : "Supertunia petunias are vigorous with slightly mounded habits that function as both fillers and spillers in containers. They are also excellent landscape plants, best suited to be placed near the front of beds. They have medium to large sized flowers." That's exactly where I am putting them.  I ended up buying ten (10) pint-sized plants and spaced them out along the sidewalk: When I bought these ten, I thought they might cover the whol...

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...