Keith Irvine, in chilly Zone 3 in Canada, shared his gorgeous vegetable garden with us last week (Keith’s Vegetable Garden), and today we’re visiting a different section of the garden.
03.08.2023 - 08:45 / finegardening.com / GPOD Contributor
We’re visiting with Lilli Hazard today in southern Indiana.
This past May we moved to a little cottage nestled in the hills of the Hoosier National Forest (Zone 6a). Our home is surrounded by huge native trees and is built into a slope where the driveway is higher than the house. The prior owner/builder landscaped with a rock garden leading to the north-facing front door to mitigate erosion. When we moved here it had several shrubs, ferns, hostas, and ornamental grasses, but very few flowers. I adore flowers, and it’s been my goal to incorporate more into my landscape. I started by bringing primroses (Primula hybrids, Zones 3–8), golden alexander (Zizia aurea, Zones 3–8), ‘Jacob Cline’ bee balm (Mondarda didyma ‘Jacob Cline’, Zones 4–9), and my cherished potted roses (mostly David Austin’s) from my last home. I have supplemented with some additional natives, including giant rubeckia (Rudbeckia maxima, Zones 5–9), Tennessee coneflower (Echinacea tennesseensis, Zones 5–9), purple prairie clover (Dalea purpurea, Zones 3–8), and prairie smoke flower (Geum triflorum, Zones 3–7). Nonnatives I added are beautiful daylilies (Hemerocallis hybrids, Zones 4–9) purchased from a local daylily nursery and Japanese forest grass (Hakonechloa macra, Zones 5–9) that still needs to be planted among the rocks. It’s a work in progress, but I’m enjoying the new challenge of rock gardening (digging holes among rocks can be an acrobatic skill) and adding more native and nonnative flowers.
As an aside, I have been letting certain areas of our yard go wild to see what native flowers are there. I have many beautiful ones that are worthy of their own entry. And I’ve been enjoying all the butterflies and dragonflies they’ve attracted.
A gorgeous
Keith Irvine, in chilly Zone 3 in Canada, shared his gorgeous vegetable garden with us last week (Keith’s Vegetable Garden), and today we’re visiting a different section of the garden.
Today we’re visiting Paula Brown’s beautiful garden in Ottawa, Ontario.
Want to know about the Most Common Succulent Growing Mistakes Every Beginner Makes? We have listed them accurately one by one, so check them out.
Well, we’ve been here a couple of weeks now, so it’s time I introduced you to the garden
We’re visiting with Keith Irvine today, who gardens in chilly Zone 3 in Oxdrift, Ontario. We visited Keith’s garden before (Keith’s Zone 3 Garden).
We’re visiting with Joseph today in his northern Indiana garden.
Alice Fleurkens is welcoming us into her Sweaburg, Ontario, garden today.
Today we’re visiting Yvette Pearson.
Today, frequent GPOD contributor Cherry Ong is taking us along on a garden tour she was able to go on in June. The tour was part of a four-day plant-study weekend organized by the Vancouver Hardy Plant Group, and the tour visited some beautiful gardens near Vancouver, Canada.
My name is Enrique Zuniga. My husband, Christian Altman, our three dogs, and I live in Forest Park, Illinois (Zone 5b), which is located just west of downtown Chicago. Both Christian and I have had a love of gardening since we were children, but we fully tapped into our inner gardener when we were presented with the opportunity to work with a yard full of turf grass when we moved to our current house in 2017. The vast majority of the yard gets full sun, so we decided to remove large patches of turf grass and plant sun-loving perennials that are mostly native to Illinois.
Mary Ann Van Berlo has been gardening on this 2.4-acre riverfront lot since fall 2012. The yard was still a construction site when she moved in, so all the gardens were installed after that.
A well maintained green sward with stripes from a lawnmower is the epitome of a British garden. It could be something to do with the amount of rain we get but it also depends on the type and care of the grass.