Think before you allow poppies to proliferate. Poppies rob a lot of goodness from your soil.
21.07.2023 - 23:01 / awaytogarden.com
IALL BUT FORGET THE SO-CALLED HAIRY CHERVIL, or at least I do until Garden Open Days in May or early June, when everyone asks what the pink thing is “over there,” pointing out front. Despite a dozen years of total neglect, Chaerophyllum hirsutum ‘Roseum’ always shows off for company; to pay it back for such loyalty I promised the sweet thing a portrait as a plant I’d order (if I didn’t already have it). Here we go:Truth be told, I cannot even usually recall its name at those moments, an embarrassing thing when you are hosting garden tours. Nor did I know that it had a “common” name, let along two (the other being pink cow parsnip, apparently).
I’d never gotten up close and personal enough with this lovely plant all these years to notice if it’s really apple-scented the way the references all say it is. (I just went out and took a whiff, and I say no. Smells to this nose like parsley, or something else green; no apples here.)
What this little umbellifer of about 2 feet tall in bloom does have is good ferny foliage (not unlike its namesake chervil, or Anthriscus cerefolium, but much bigger), and the fact that even in a semi-shaded spot it will make a great show of off-pink flowerheads that have the slightest touch of lavender. They coincide here with many perennial geraniums, like Geranium phaeum and G. macrorrhizum, and the doublefile viburnums, if that gives you a better idea of timing.
A sunny border would be a good home, too, and newly conscious of my forgotten treasure, I am now going to divide and relocate some.
C.h. ‘Roseum’ has been called a Great Plant Pick by the Elisabeth Carey Miller Botanical Garden (if you don’t know their archive of Great Plant Picks, it’s a helpful list whether you live out that way or not).
Think before you allow poppies to proliferate. Poppies rob a lot of goodness from your soil.
Are you looking at plants in your garden and wondering why they aren’t flowering?
Lovers of succulents and oddball plants in general grow bowiea with most of its showy, round green bulbs above the soil surface, and with its twining filigree of stem-like foliage trained up onto some kind of support. That’s how the plant in my dining room (shown) is growing right now. Probably neither is what happens in the wild, but no matter; let the foliage climb up something or let it dangle; bury the bulbs a lot or hardly at all.Order a baby at Logee’s, or better yet order three and cluster them in one pot for company. Each bulb can reach 8 inches in diameter over time, and as for the foliage—there seem to be no end to it (until it simply stops).What matters is that you give it bright light and gritty soil and respect bowiea’s desire to sleep all winter. Stop watering it when the tendrils start to turn yellow and dry up in fall, then water not at all or very rarely when it is sleeping. I usually give it a little drink perhaps once a month in winter out
There is also an Open Day in nearby Litchfield County, Connecticut that day and in Dutchess County, New York (the other adjacent area to me). Be sure to check for those listings, too, and make a day of it.Can’t make it? How about coming June 2, or August 18? (Or come back; always something different going on.) On the August date, Broken Arrow will be here again doing a sale in time for fall planting, and garden writer and old friend Ken Druse will deliver a morning lecture on plant combinations and do a smaller afternoon workshop on propagation.All the details on those other days, including links to follow for the Ken Druse events, are on my events page. Ken’s talk and workshop require prior
My longtime friend and fellow garden writer Ken of Ken Druse dot com is author of many books including “The New Shade Garden,” and “Making More Plants,” and “Natural Companions.” We tackled subjects ranging from propagating coleus from cuttings, to repotting a jade plant—and repotting in general—and even why a jade might be blooming now, after many years of ownership with no blooms. Ken shared ideas about some of his favorite unusual houseplants, too (that’s one of his Thai hybrid euphorbias, above), including several that bloom in the offseason.Read along as you listen to the Dec. 17, 2018 edition of my public-radio show and podcast using the player below. You can subscribe to all future editions on iTunes or Stitcher (and browse my archive of podcasts here).year-end q&a with ken druse
Marc Hachadourian, Director of Glasshouse Horticulture at the New York Botanical Garden and I answer “yes” to both of the above. And he joined me to talk houseplants, and which ones make the best longtime companions to grow and even share—and how to match them to your site and meet their needs. Spoiler alert: He wants us all to start growing African violets again, and some of their other Gesneriad cousins.Marc is also Senior Curator of Orchids at the New York Botanical Garden’s 55,000-square-foot Enid A. Haupt Conservatory, and author of the recent book “Orchid Modern,” so no surprise that some of his suggestions today are easy to grow orchids because, after all, he’s @orch
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