Showing posts with label Aster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aster. Show all posts

Thursday, October 16, 2014

Havenwood ~ GBBD October 2014

Native asters, Doellingeria umbellata, flowering away at our new garden this autumn.

Welcome to my new garden in Pennsylvania, zone 5 for the autumn!

I have been hard at work this year to put in many new garden area according to my garden master plan (see it here). Before getting to bulb planting yesterday, I took a walk around to capture some of the little fall flowers that are already blooming away here at Havenwood...

Thursday, October 3, 2013

View of the Driveway Garden this morning...

October in the Driveway Garden at Gilmore Gardens.
While we were getting ready for homeschool this morning, I galnced out of the kitchen window. This pretty scene was perfectly lit by the morning sun. I thought I would share it with you today as well! :)

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

The Driveway Garden at the end of September

Pink Sedum 'Autumn Joy', white flowered flat-topped aster (Doellingeria umbellata), double purple Aster hybrida 'Peter III', purple coneflower (Echinacea purpurea) and white striped grass Miscanthus sinensis 'Dixieland' in the Driveway Garden this week.

September is slipping away and October is arriving here in Pennsylvania.
Here is one pretty scene between our car and door in our Driveway garden this week...

Saturday, September 28, 2013

Shade Path Garden in September

Begonias, northern sea oats, Japanese forest grass and Sedum 'Frosty Morn' front our Shade Path this week... and native flat-topped asters are a white haze down its length.
See more of our Shade Path garden on our map.
Have a great weekend!
~Julie


Monday, October 15, 2012

Gardening in Pennsylvania ~ October GBBD 2012

Perennial mum Dendranthema 'Sheffield Pink' and double purple Aster hybrida 'Peter III'.
Perennial mum Dendranthema 'Sheffield Pink' and double purple Aster hybrida 'Peter III'.

Welcome to October at Gilmore Gardens in Pennsylvania! 

Everywhere in our area we are seeing the colors of autumn. The trees are in the middle of their foliage change - the earlier ones having dropped most of their leaves and the later ones still holding on to their green. The asters are out in full force, the milkweeds pods are just about ripe and the first nips of frost have just come this past weekend. Some of the annual flowers did not take kindly to the cold, but others have survived to bloom a bit longer. Hope you enjoy your look around our tiny town garden!

Asters and pumpkins add color to the sunny Driveway Garden this fall.
Asters and pumpkins add color to the sunny Driveway Garden this fall.

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

The Shade Path Garden in Early October

The Shade Path Garden in the first week of October.
October is here and has brought some chilly temperatures in Pennsylvania. It seemed to come on us all at once this year. It was quite warm and rainy, but not truly cold until this week which makes it feel a bit shocking, though we all knew it was coming. We have missed a true frost twice in the last couple evenings. Some tender leaves are browned around their edges, but most of the plants are still standing tall. Very soon the annuals will greet the morning as a puddle of mush and will need to be removed post-haste.

Monday, October 24, 2011

Glimpses of the Driveway Garden in October

Purple Aster 'Peter III' above our pumpkin and a nasturtium (Tropaeolum majus) blossom from the Front Woodland.
Foliage contrast with Lavendula 'Munstead', Sedum 'Acre', Fescue 'Elijah Blue', pixie lilies and a dwarf arbor vitae.
Aster 'Peter III', salmon hardy mum Dendranthema 'Sheffield Pink' and dwarf miscanthus grass (Miscanthus sinensis 'Dixieland').
Rose OSO Easy Paprika
Dahlia 'Peaches 'n Cream' reaching up to 6 foot by the sidewalk.
...note my little garden pixie peeping out the window.

Just some photos to savor more of fall at Gilmore Gardens.

Friday, October 7, 2011

Native Flat-Topped Aster, Doellingeria umbellata

Doellingeria umbellata under Northern Sea Oats (Chasmanthium latifolium).
I first pointed out our self-sown aster, Doellingeria umbellata in my GBBD September post. Here it is, pretending to be a cloud in my garden. Some seedlings sowed themselves two years ago by riding the wind from the railroad grade a couple of blocks from our home. They have been welcome intruders (well... it is more accurate to say it was one intruder, and that I have worked on sowing a few more around).

The Shade Path for the first week in October.
It's sprouts look much like the other asters I grow in my garden, which is how I came not to pull it out at first sight! I tried treating it like my other asters, shearing it down by half in June, and often again later in the season to make it good and bushy. It has worked well.

Close up of the flat-topped aster and sea oats
 It is positively covered in pollinators of all sorts, but especially honey bees and bumble bees. Highly recommended for sunny or part shade areas that are on the dry side. It does look better with something partly covering it from the knees down (like my impatiens). But beside having knobbly knees, it is perfectly lovely.

Friday, September 23, 2011

Fall Equinox

Happy first day of fall!

The first of the vibrant leaves lying on the Ajuga reptans

The back fence: mostly green with hints of autumn
The Shade Path: all aglow for the start of autumn with asters, foxgloves and begonias

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Garden Blogger's Bloom Day ~ September 2011

A finishing view from the end of our wrap-around garden walk.
Welcome to early fall at Gilmore Gardens!

For the month of September, I have decided to walk you through the path that I take each morning alone and many evenings with my hubby (read more in my autumn foxglove post). For us, the garden tour begins at the gate, which is rather a romantic/poetic start.

The Shade Path
The bloom in the shade garden is representative of the entire garden this month: like August but better! 
We still have all of the cool green, blue and white-edged foliage to look at and ribbons of annual color, but it also has some nice patches of perennial foxgloves (Digitalis grandiflora) and the toad lily (Tricyrtis 'Blue Wonder') is in bloom.
Left side of Shade Path
I am very happy with the hot pink impatients I chose for the Shade Path this year. It really packs more of a punch, especially at a distance or drive-by, than the pastel shades that I used last year (see Sept 2010).
 With so many natural disasters going on in the weather this month, I find myself more thankful than usual at we have made it into September without much incident... excepting the quarter sized hail that beat-up the hosta and cannas a few weeks ago. Our garden did not sustain as much damage as others in town, though I have removed armloads of broad leaves this month.
Toad lily (Tricyrtis 'Blue Wonder'). It's common name comes from the way each the flowers seem to sit on each leaf along the stem, like little frogs on their lily pads. Do toads ever sit on lily pads?
Layered plantings add mystery and depth
I acquired a sun-stressed baby oakleaf hydrangea (Hydrangea quercifolia) a month ago. Here on the outside edge of the Shade Path, it looks mesmerizing surrounded by the froth of native aster (Doellingeria unbellata).
I am totally in love with the white aster in the shade garden. Weak in the knees. 
It seeded itself here a few years ago, and noticing that it looked like an aster shoot, I decided to give it the Chelsea chop like my other asters and see what happened. It makes the most beautiful froth above the green mounds. Stay tuned for its full bloom this year.
(Note the hail damage in the lower right corner above. So sad. Like slugs on drugs.)

The Circle Lawn
When approaching the Circle Lawn, you might want to take a moment to notice the great color echo from the foxgloves on the Shade Path to the bright yellow grass, Hakonechloa macra 'Aureola', on the opposite side of the circle.
The colorful left side of the Circle Lawn.
Then notice that this same Japanese forest grass is planted on both "corners" where the path meets the circle, and also on a third corner to the right (below).
The green right side of the Circle Lawn.
This garden area is a cacophony of colors. I am rather uncomfortable with it at present, but there are a lot of plants waiting to mature; that alone will create more cohesion next year.
One combination I love, though it is rather pushing the variegated plant limit: Sedum 'Frosty Morn' and Japanese forest grass (Hakonechloa macra 'Aureola').
A look back at the Circle Lawn.
Cherry Corner
The inside of this corner garden has the tough job of being a transition point that should move us on to the next expanse, the Front Walk. I tried to keep the planting simple, yet provide for some succession (which I talked about in GBBD August).
Inside of Cherry Corner
Never too much Sedum 'Autumn Joy' for me. They are wonderful in their green state, and the blush tells me fall is here.
Transition to the Front Walk
The Front Walk
View down the length of the Front Walk from under the weeping cherry tree ("Do not mind me, neighbors").


This garden is much closer this year to what dream it could be. The pink Japanese anemones are gaining bulk, now two years old. Pink cosmos sneak in with their dissected foliage at the lower level. Dahlia 'Heat Wave' and Canna 'King Humbert' tower over the rest, giving it a focal point and some punch.
Dahlia 'Heat Wave'
Dahlia 'Heat Wave' and Canna 'King Humbert'
A peak down the the sidewalk complete with the lazy gardener's wheel barrow.
The Hill Garden
The less-often-seen inner edge of the Hill Garden. The garlic chive, Allium tuberosum, has been putting on quite a show. It adds some restful white the all of the lively red this season.
 Planting layers have been key to creating succession in our relatively small boarders. Here, the white allium falls over Sedum 'Autumn Joy', which leans on the curved hedge of purple barberry (Berberis thunbergii; a known invasive), which helps support the crown on flowers at the top.
The crown of the Hill: Echinacea purpurea and Sedum 'Autumn Joy'
Also: Canna 'King Humbert' and  Perovskia atriplicifolia 'Little Spire'
Here we begin rounding the corner... and a quick look back at the Front Walk.
Looping the Hill garden, we can make our way to see one of the best surprises of September...
Roses! I love them. Rosa 'The Fairy' keeps going until well into November.
Like June again. wonderful.

Front Woodland
 This is a good moment for a few glances at the front curb planting. It is mostly green this month, with a few shots of color.
Lily turf (Liriope muscari)
Liriope muscari, or lily turf, provides strappy foliage from late spring and grape hyacinth like spikes in the early fall. The bees like it too!
Liriope muscari 'Monroe White' in its first season.
At the far corner, I just added some artemesia to bring out the L. 'Monroe White'.
Liriope muscari 'Variegata'
Front Walk - lower view
View of the front steps and Front Walk
 The beauty of having a multi-sided garden is enjoying it! It is rather a challenge at moments to make it work together, but very worth the effort.
 I like this annual planting even more now that these self-seeded verbenas popped up from last years planting. The RHS plantfinder tells me this is probably Verbena 'Homestead Purple', a shorter cousin of Verbena bonariensis.
Verbena 'Homestead Purple'
The catmint, Nepeta 'Walker's Low', is blooming again after its summer haircut, giving a nice mounded front edge to this whole boarder.
More fruit of grueling, hot summer pruning: the rebloom of Spirea 'Goldflame'.
Dahlia, Canna, anemone and Spirea 'Goldflame'.  Verbena 'Homestead Purple' in the background.

Circle Lawn: lower view
More walking, less talking.

Cherry Corner - lower view
 The daylily foliage has filled in quite a lot in the past month. (Read more about pruning daylilies.)
View across Cherry Corner.
 More layers: Annuals tucked in amongst Heuchra 'Palace Purple', artemesia, daylilies (Hemerocallis hyb.) and white-edged variegated loosestrife.

Shade Path - lower view
And finally (whew!) we arrive at the other gate... almost. Take just a moment to look and enjoy the Shade Path again with a better view of the autumn blooming foxgloves (Digitalis grandiflora).
Asters waiting to pop.
That lovely aster again (Doellingeria umbellata).
 Notice the white color echo to the hosta across the path.  So nice.

That does it for the front yard! 
Thanks for joining us for a thorough walk around the place.
Time for some tea and cake. 

A big Thank You! to Carol at May Dreams for hosting GBBD!
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