Life has been quite busy, which has kept me out of the garden much of the time.
Of course, the with the hot temperatures of summer, I probably wouldn’t be spending a lot of time outdoors, regardless of how busy I have been.
I did spend some time weeding my vegetable garden last week and checking on how large my white pumpkin is growing. However, that will probably be that last time that I do any work there for at least a week.
When I look back at the past 5 weeks, I realize how little I have been in my garden, which makes me grateful that I have a landscape filled with beautiful, fuss-free plants.
My second-oldest daughter, Rachele, surprised her brother by coming home for his birthday in late May.
Rachele is in the Navy and is stationed in California. She enjoys what she does there, but I don’t get to see her near enough.
Enjoying Mackinac Island
The beginning of June, I embarked upon a road trip through the upper midwest with my mother (our fourth road trip).
A week after returning from our road trip, I hit the road again with my family on our annual sojourn to the cool pines of Williams, Arizona. A bonus was that my daughter Rachele was able to come back out and come with us!
My sister, me and my granddaughter, Lily.
Along with my sisters, brother and their families, we all have a great time staying in several small cabins nestled into the woods.
I had a great time with my kids, sisters and my granddaughter, Lily.
My son, Kai
My daughter, Gracie
We spent time strolling along Route 66 and enjoying ice-cream at our favorite restaurant, Twisters in Williams. Nights were filled with board games including a particularly competitive game of Scrabble between me and my son-in-law – he won 🙁
Today, I confess to feeling a bit glum. Rachele left today after spending 2 wonderful weeks at home.
Monsoon Season – Kai with his niece, Lily.
Tomorrow, my son Kai goes in for another surgery. This will be his 8th or 9th (I’ve lost count) surgery overall.
However, unlike most of his previous surgeries, this one won’t be for his hip – it will be done on his left hand. The doctor will be fusing his thumb joint and performing a tendon replacement.
We are hoping that the recovery from this surgery won’t be as difficult as those experienced after hip surgeries that leave him wheel-chair bound for weeks.
Kai will have to wear a cast for several weeks though. But, he is a tough kid and it is likely that this surgery will be a piece of cake compared to most of his previous surgeries.
You can read more about Kai and his remarkable story, here, if you like.
My garden should do just fine without me for a while. It has been enjoying the arrival of our monsoon season and the increased humidity.
I hope you are enjoying your summer. I’d love to hear about what you have been doing!
https://www.azplantlady.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/10336642_4114979690022_8795869259498589235_n.jpg793663arizonaplantlady@gmail.comhttp://www.azplantlady.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/favicon.pngarizonaplantlady@gmail.com2014-07-07 13:30:002021-01-11 10:57:40Stepping Out of the Garden
I admit to sometimes neglecting my garden when the temperatures go above the century mark. My aversion to gardening in a furnace is one of the reasons that I like to use desert-adapted plants that don’t need much attention.
One of my favorite fuss-free plants is chuparosa (Justicia californica).
It has beautiful red, tubular flowers that decorate the garden in late winter into spring and sporadically throughout the year. Hummingbirds can’t resist it AND it is drought-tolerant and low-maintenance.
Want to learn more? Here is my latest plant profile for Houzz:
I am always on the lookout for new ways to display annual flowers. I’ll do anything from transforming old, antiques into planters to using brightly-colored containers.
On a recent visit to the Green Bay Botanical Gardens in Wisconsin, I saw this creative use of an old, decaying tree trunk…
What a great example of a sustainable flower ‘pot’.
The depression within the tree trunk held just enough potting soil for the flowers to grow in.
Seeing this made me wonder what other items that we find in nature that we can use as planters.
Any ideas?
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Landscapes throughout the desert southwest come alive in spring and early summer as the coral-colored blooms of red yucca burst forth.
There are a few reasons that this succulent is a popular plant.
For one, its grass-like foliage add texture to the garden, even when not in flower.
Second, it needs little maintenance – simply prune off the flowers when they fade.
The flowers are quite beautiful.
While the most common flower color for this fuss-free plant is coral, there are two other colors that I would like to introduce you to.
While not a new color, there is a yellow variety of “Hesperaloe parviflora” available.
It is the same as regular red yucca, except for the color.
Imagine the creamy yellow flowers against a dark-painted wall such as brown, green or purple?
Gorgeous!
Here is a color of “Hesperaloe parviflora” that is relatively new…
This is a new variety of red yucca called ‘Brakelights’. Its flowers are a darker red than the normal coral flowers.
I am always interested in different colored varieties of my favorite plants. It is easy to add interest to your garden when people see a different color than they expect.
What color of “Hesperaloe parviflora” is your favorite?
https://www.azplantlady.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Red-Yucca-Hesperaloe-parvifolia-2.jpg8231024arizonaplantlady@gmail.comhttp://www.azplantlady.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/favicon.pngarizonaplantlady@gmail.com2014-06-23 15:00:002022-11-09 20:15:11Southwestern Plants: An Old Favorite in New Colors…
Do you have a list of favorite plants for your Southwestern garden?
I do.
Today, I’d like to share with you about one of my favorite shrubs, desert ruellia (Ruellia peninsularis).
It has beautiful, light-green foliage and purple flowers that appear off an on throughout the year, with the heaviest bloom occurring in spring.
Unlike its cousin (Ruellia brittoniana), desert ruellia does not take over the garden space.
It needs little maintenance, and looks great with a variety of other flowering plants.
For more information on where this lovely shrub grows, how to plant it and how to use it in the landscape, check out my latest plant profile for Houzz.com
Do you have friends with whom you share a common interest?
I do.
My friend and fellow blogger, Amy Andrychowicz of Get Busy Gardening loves gardening as much as I do. Amy and I have spent time together in Arizona and later in Florida.
Last week, while on a road trip through the Midwest, I made sure to make a stop in Minneapolis to visit with Amy and see her garden in person.
You may be wondering what a gardener from a hot, dry climate would have in common with one from a cold, temperate climate?
My winter temps can get down to 20 – 25 degrees in my desert garden while Amy’s goes all the way down to -30 to -25 degrees. That is up to a 50 degree difference!
But, believe it or not, there are a large number of plants that can grow in both climates.
Entering Amy’s back garden, my attention was immediately drawn to her large beds filled with colorful perennials.
I love iris!
I am always taking pictures of iris throughout my travels. While they can grow very well in Arizona, I have never grown them myself.
The major difference between growing irises in the Southwest and the Midwest is the time that they bloom. Iris will bloom earlier in the spring while their bloom won’t start until late spring in cooler regions.
After seeing Amy’s in full bloom, I may need to rethink planting these beautiful plants in my own garden.
Succulents aren’t just for the warmer regions. I have encountered prickly pear cacti in some unexpected places including upstate New York.
Here, Amy has a prickly pear enjoying the sun flanked by two variegated sedum ‘Autumn Joy’ that produces reddish flowers in late summer to early autumn.
This plant also can grow in desert gardens, but does best in the upper desert regions or in the low desert in fertile soil and filtered shade.
You might not expect to see water harvesting practiced outside of arid regions. But you can see examples of water harvesting throughout the United States.
This is Amy’s rain garden. The middle of the garden is sloped into a swale that channels and retains rainwater allowing it to soak into the soil. Plants are planted along the sides of the swale who benefit from the extra water.
A water feature was surrounded by low-growing plants including one that caught my eye.
This ground cover had attractive, gray foliage covered with lovely, white flowers. I wasn’t familiar with this plant and asked Amy what it was.
I love the name of this plant, ‘Snow in Summer’ (Cerastium tomentosum). While it thrives in hot, dry conditions, it does not grow in warmer zones 8 – 11.
Enjoying the shade from the ground cover was a frog.
I always enjoy seeing plants that aren’t commonly grown where I live. I have always liked the tiny flowers of coral bells (Heuchera species). It blooms throughout the summer in cooler climates.
Do you like blue flowers? I do. I first saw Brunnera macrophylla ‘Jack Frost’ growing on a visit to the Lurie Gardens in Chicago.
This lovely perennial won’t grow in my desert garden, so I’m always excited to see it during my travels.
Amy had two beautiful clematis vines just beginning to bloom.
I must admit to being slightly envious of her being able to grow these lovely, flowering vines. Years ago after moving to Arizona, I tried growing clematis. While it did grow, it never flowered. Clematis aren’t meant to be grown in hot, dry climates.
Aren’t these single, deep pink peonies gorgeous?
While I am usually content with the large amount of plants that I can grow in my desert garden, peonies are top on my list of plants that I wish would grow in warmer climates such as mine.
Amy’s garden was filled with beautiful, flowering peonies of varying colors.
I took A LOT of pictures of her peonies.
There was even a lovely bouquet of peonies decorating the dining room table.
Amy’s back garden is divided up into individual beds and one entire side of the garden is filled with her impressive vegetable garden.
You may be surprised to find that growing vegetables is largely the same no matter where you live. The main difference is the gardening calendar. For example, I plant Swiss chard in October and enjoy eating it through March. In Amy’s garden, Swiss chard isn’t planted until late spring.
Swiss chard
The raised vegetable beds were painted in bright colors, which contrasted beautifully with the vegetables growing inside. Even when the beds stand empty, they still add color to the landscape.
Green Beans
Kale
Young pepper plants took advantage of a hot, sunny location in which they will thrive.
One thing that is different in vegetable gardening is the practice of ‘winter sowing’. When Amy first told me about this method of sowing and germinating seeds, I was fascinated.
Basically, seeds are planted in containers with holes poked on the bottom for drainage. The containers are then covered with plastic tops also covered with holes.
In mid-winter, the containers are set outside. Snow and later, rain water the plants inside the containers and the seeds germinate once temperatures start to warm up.
Amy has a great blog post about winter sowing that I highly recommend.
As we got ready to leave, we walked through the side garden, which had a wooden bridge.
Different varieties of thyme were planted amount the pavers for a lovely effect.
Thyme can make a great ground cover in areas that receive little foot traffic.
In the front garden, I noticed the characteristic flowers of columbine growing underneath the shade tree.
I don’t often see red columbine. Amy’s reseeds readily, so she always has columbine coming up.
This is a sweet, pink columbine that has smaller, but more plentiful flowers.
I had visited Amy’s garden through her blog, Get Busy Gardening for a long time and it was so wonderful to be able to see it in person. It is beautiful!
I encourage you to visit Amy’s blog, which is filled with a lot of helpful advice – even for those of us who live in the Southwest.
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It’s a beautiful summer day outside, yet my mind is on fall and Halloween?
Why?
Because, this is what I discovered growing in my vegetable garden this morning…
Okay, maybe you cannot see it yet, but once you part the leaves…
You can see a white pumpkin happily growing.
I’m so excited to have a pumpkin growing in my garden again.
You might be scratching your head at this point and wonder why I have a pumpkin growing in the middle of summer.
Look at any vegetable planting calendar for zone 9a deserts and you will see that pumpkin seeds should be planted in mid-June if you want pumpkins ready for Halloween.
Pumpkin vines are fairly easy to grow and they will spread out a lot! We found that out the hard way when we grew our first pumpkin vine a few years ago.
Even though pumpkin vines grow well, they rarely form pumpkin fruit (yes, pumpkins are technically a fruit) when planted in the middle June as recommended.
Our first pumpkin in 2010
BUT, pumpkins will often form if you plant the seeds a couple of months early. I’ve grown pumpkins from seeds sown in spring before (click here). Unfortunately, I have had no luck having pumpkins from from seeds sown in June (as recommended).
So my plan is to allow my pumpkin to continue growing and then pick it when it is ripe in late July or early August.
I’ll then store it in a cool, dry place where it should (hopefully) keep until I put out fall decorations in September. I’m hoping it will last through October, but we will see.
*Incidentally, my mother has a white, heirloom pumpkin that she purchased last October that is still doing well and shows no signs of rot.
I planted some heirloom pumpkin seeds from a pumpkin that I bought last fall, and the vine is growing well. I hope to see a pumpkin forming on that vine soon.
From what I have observed, heirloom pumpkins with hard outer skin/shell seem to last a long time.
I’ll keep you updated as to how my pumpkin patch is doing and when my new pumpkin is ready to pick!
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It’s hard to believe that our road trip has come to a close.
Our last day was filled with some memorable adventures.
We woke up to an overcast morning at our bed & breakfast.
You know what the best part of staying at a B&B is? The breakfasts!
We started out with strawberries and bananas on a bed of sweetened cream followed by french toast, sausage and eggs.
Do you remember my telling you how popular rhubarb is in this area, in my last post?
Well, during breakfast, we also had a slice of rhubarb pie. Can I tell you a secret? I don’t like rhubarb.
Speaking of rhubarb – it was growing out in the garden.
Speaking of gardens, theirs was beautiful. This lovely fountain surrounded by petunias was the focal view from the dining room.
A circular bed, edged in stones held flowering violas and chives.
White daisies filled the other perennial beds.
I think that daisies can brighten up almost anyone’s day, don’t you?
Along the side of the 100 year old Victorian home, was a side garden with a curved stone pathway that led to a covered arbor.
Purple ‘Wave’ petunias surrounded by bacopa took center stage from this window.
I always get a kick out of the fact that we grow many of the same annuals in the desert – just at a different time of year.
The bed & breakfast was located in Amish country. As we ate breakfast, I noticed an Amish girl working in the garden.
She was busy using hand pruners to prune away old, woody growth from some shrubs.
*Amish people do not like pictures of their faces to be taken, which is why I am only showing her from behind.
After breakfast, we got into our car and headed toward Minneapolis, which was to be our last destination.
Our flight wasn’t scheduled to take off until 7:40 pm, so we had the entire day to fill.
We decided to spend some time at the Mill City Museum.
Did you know that Minneapolis used to be the flour capitol of the world? It’s true.
As someone who loves carbs with a passion and would rather eat bread then sweets, I knew that I had to check out this museum.
The museum is housed in the old Gold Medal Flour factory, which used to be the world’s largest flour mill.
It is 8-stories high and much of it was destroyed by a fire in the 90’s.
You can see the girders and where the floors used to be in the ruins.
The interior had some great exhibits about the history of the early flour industry and how the city of Minneapolis used the power of the Mississippi River to power the mill.
One very cool part of the museum was the Flour Tower tour.
I apologize for the bad photo, but wanted you to see the large freight elevator that visitors went on.
As you sit, a guide takes you along a journey up and down 8 floors of the mill. Each floor opens up to a display that recreates the history of the mill.
At the top of the mill, we were allowed to get up and walk to the top of the building.
You could see the old sign, which stood tall above us.
From the rooftop, you could see the Mississippi River flowing by.
I wonder if I will ever tire of seeing the Mississippi River. I hope not.
Across the river, you could see the old Pillsbury Flour Mill.
After leaving the mill, we head a little time left before we had to turn in our rental car and head to the airport. So, we decided to go and see Minnehaha Falls.
The falls are located in the middle of the city and flows from the Minnehaha River before joining the Mississippi.
As you stand along the viewing area, you are sprayed by the water, which is really quite refreshing.
The falls are 53 feet tall.
During this entire road trip, my mother has been enjoying taking pictures with her new iPhone.
Many of her photos are of me taking pictures of my camera, like this one at the falls.
It was time to wrap up our visit to Minneapolis and start toward the airport.
Our time at the airport was much longer then we had planned for. Our 7:40 pm flight was delayed for 4 hours until 11:30 pm.
Thankfully, I had my laptop and some knitting to keep me busy while we waited.
Sunset in Minneapolis. I was really wishing that I had been on a plane by now. I missed my husband and kids.
The airline brought out a cart filled with snacks and drinks for all of us who had to wait.
I ate my fill of shortbread cookies and Ritz cheese crackers.
Our flight finally arrived and we soon left for home.
We had a wonderful time on our road trip and I appreciate your comments so much.
BUT, my road trip posts aren’t over yet.
I’ve saved the visit to my friend and fellow garden blogger, Amy’s garden for my last post.
I can’t wait to show you what’s growing in her garden – so come back soon!
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Today was spent driving from Wisconsin, over the Mississippi River into southeastern Minnesota.
Bridge over the Mississippi River toward Minnesota. *Cell phone + dirty windshield = grainy photo.
You know how people who haven’t lived near the ocean, find it fascinating when they get the chance to visit?
I think it is somewhat the same for me in regards to seeing the Mississippi River. The immense size of the river is amazing.
This is the third time that I have seen the Mississippi River and it is still something that I always look forward to.
We arrived into the town of Winona, Minnesota – we drove up to Garvin Heights, where a path leads from the parking lot to a viewing point located over 500 ft. above the river and the city.
Isn’t it beautiful?
Off in the distance, you can see the bridge that we drove over, which connects Wisconsin to Minnesota.
My mother has been enjoying her first smartphone. During our trip, she had taken multiple pictures of me taking photos of plants and/or scenery.
It makes me feel happy and special at the same time 🙂
During the first part of our day, we spent some time shopping for antiques.
My mother loves antiques and I like to find old pieces that I can use as planters in my garden. In the Midwest and Eastern regions of the US, antiques are a lot less expensive then in the west – so we like to take advantage of nice antique stores when we can.
I found a large, old coffee pot (the kind they would use in a chuck wagon for a lot of people) that I plan on using for a flower planter in my smaller vegetable garden.
You may be wondering how I am going to get my coffee pot home. Well, that leads to a tradition that my mother and I started during our first road trip 3 years ago. We wait until the last day of our trip and then go to a local UPS store and send our souvenirs home. It makes our life much simpler and we have less to carry in our suitcases.
Another grainy cell phone photo taken through the windshield.
As we headed toward the southeastern corner of Minnesota, we found ourselves alone on country highways for long lengths of time.
Not that I’m complaining about the absence of vehicles. I’m sure that after spending a day or two at home that I’ll be wishing for fewer cars on the road.
The weather during our trip has been very nice. There was some rain, which fell during the night, so it did not affect our activities.
Our day’s journey ended in Lanesboro, Minnesota, which has been the recipient of the Great American Main Street Award. Lanesboro, is located close to Amish communities and we have seen some Amish folk during our travels today.
The main street is lined with historic buildings that have been transformed into trendy shops and eateries.
Unlike many Amish communities that I’ve visited in the past, Lanesboro has upscale, trendy shops, which I really enjoyed visiting, instead of shops stocked full of Amish souvenirs.
A few of the shops had a combination of both new and old things, like this old antique that was transformed into a planter.
This shop had an interesting planter with a galvanized pipe with flowers sitting in a dish planted with real grass.
A variety of succulents were displayed with old, wooden boxes.
This alleyway was filled with plants and antiques, which I love.
One interesting observation about our travels this day is the popularity of rhubarb.
It was planted along the main street.
Rhubarb ice cream was also available in many of the shops.
I bet you didn’t know that rhubarb was so popular did you?
I admit that I didn’t try the rhubarb ice cream flavor. I went for salted caramel crunch – yum!
Remember the cheese curds that I tried on day 5 of our road trip? They are everywhere. I usually see them offered fried.
As our trip draws towards its end, here are a few observations in contrast to living in California and Arizona (places that I’ve lived).
– In almost every restaurant, Coke products aren’t offered – Pepsi is the drink of choice.
– In all of our driving, we have only seen one highway patrol car (in CA and AZ you often see one every few minutes).
– Starbucks is a huge favorite of my mother and during our road trips, we usually make at least one stop there each day. On this trip, we have hardly seen any Starbucks stores. But, there have been quite a few other coffee shops, including independent ones.
Tomorrow, we will fly home in the evening from Minneapolis. My husband has been wonderful taking care of the kids and house while I’ve been gone.
But, I’m not sure about what he has been feeding the kids…
My 12-year-old son posted this picture of his dinner the other night, which consists of french fries, cheddar cheese and bacon.
I protested the lack of vegetables, which my husband responded to by saying, “We each had 4 mini-carrots to round our dinner.” He then went on further to say, “And we had vegetables on our pizza for lunch.”
I told my kids that I have quite a few dinners planned when I get home that will have lots of ‘greens’ in them.
*Tomorrow, we will spend the day in Minneapolis and I’m looking forward to visiting my friend and fellow garden blogger, Amy of Get Busy Gardening. I can’t wait to see her and her garden. I’ll be sure to share my visit with you!
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As we left our hotel, we were faced by roads under construction.
Summer is the time for all road construction throughout the midwest because cold, wintery conditions are not conducive to construction.
Once we arrived at the gardens, we were greeted by the sight of containers filled with a combination of edible and ornamental plants.
I love how the blue of the lobelia contrasts with the bright green of the parsley and ‘Red Sail’ lettuce.
Cabbage is one of my favorite edible plants to add to containers.
All of these edible plants can be grown in pots in my southwestern garden, but are planted in fall, not spring like in Wisconsin.
During this trip, we have visited three botanical gardens and have not spent one dime on admission fees.
Why?
Most major botanical gardens have a reciprocal admissions if you belong as long as you are a member of your local botanical garden and they are part of the reciprocal program.
At first glance, the gardens were beautiful and I couldn’t wait to start exploring.
The gardens have bee hives located in out of the way areas, which are filled with Italian bees that are said to be rather docile.
The bees play an important part in pollinating the flowering plants throughout the gardens. The honey that is sometimes sold in the garden gift store.
The individual gardens are spaced around ‘The Great Lawn’ which is a large circular grass area where concerts are held.
The first garden I explored was the ‘Meadow Garden’. This garden is sustainable and very low-maintenance.
It is filled with drought-tolerant grasses along with wildflowers and flowering bulbs. What I really liked about the garden is that it does not need supplemental water or fertilizer.
Maintenance is limited to mowing twice a year.
What I didn’t like about the garden, was the mosquitos. But, I came prepared and they mostly left me alone.
Walking on, I wanted to explore the herb garden because they play a huge part in my own garden.
The entry to the herb garden is quite formal. Boxwood hedges border the center garden area.
Edible plants combine with ornamentals for beautiful container plantings.
I love flowering chives and how they used them as a border.
Varieties of mint and thyme were nicely displayed and the herb garden also had herbs used for dyes.
*The brown plants in the background are recovering from the severe winter with new green growth slowly coming back.
This bed of flowering annuals was completed edged in flowering chives.
A Thai pavilion dominated the center of the Thai garden, which brought back memories for my mother who spent a few months in Thailand as a young woman.
While tropical plants cannot survive a midwest winter – the plants used in this area had a tropical appearance with large leaves while also being cold-hardy.
The bridge that connects the Thai Garden to the rest of the garden, crosses over Starkweather Creek, which bisects the garden.
People can canoe or kayak up 5 miles from this side of the bridge.
Boats can dock on the other side of the bridge and the creek leads out to Lake Monona.
This area is called the Sunken Garden, which is gently sloped so that rainwater flows toward the lake.
The formal water feature was flanked by two container plantings, which were quite contemporary in style.
The pond had beautiful yellow and purple flowering Japanese iris.
Vines were used in different ways throughout the garden.
A tree provided needed support for a clematis vine with its maroon flowers.
Years ago, I tried growing clematis in our first home. It did grow, but never flowered. I learned later that it gets too hot in the desert for clematis.
Another clematis was flowering next to a beautiful host underneath a tree.
I love pink flowers, don’t you?
Wisteria was growing up on arbors and I never tire of viewing their lovely flowers and inhaling their heavenly fragrance.
The vision of a rose climbing upward always makes me want to go home and grow one up the side of my house.
Have you ever heard of ‘Paper Birch’ trees?
Their bark peels off in perfect sheets that is sometimes used to wrap around decorative candles.
I have always had a special place in my heart for birch trees. Growing up in a Los Angeles suburb, we had three growing in our front yard. I have always loved their white bark and bright-green leaves.
Underneath these birch trees was an interesting ornamental grass called dormitor quaking sedge (Carex brizoides). I like how it lays down making it look like green waves underneath the trees.
Walking near the Perennial Garden, I spotted a blue-flowering plant that looked rather familiar.
It turned out to be a blue-flowering variety of autumn sage (Salvia greggii), ‘Blue Note’.
Can you imagine how patriotic a planting of red, white and blue autumn sage plants would look?
Here is another lovely edible, ornamental container that caught my eye, using kale.
Don’t you just want to sit down and relax in this area?
Pale-pink bee balm (Monarda species)was the only flower in this area of the garden, but it was more then enough alongside the ornamental grasses.
Sometimes less is more.
Walking on a paved area, I saw a planting of perennials right in the middle.
Interestingly, there was no border or any clearly delineated space. Just an opening without pavers where plants seemingly come up in the middle of a sea of pavers.
I kind of like this idea. How about you?
If you have been reading my road trip posts, then you have probably noticed my obsession with peonies, which don’t grow in the desert.
Wherever we go, I see shrubs covered with gorgeous blooms.
Well, Olbrich Gardens were no exception.
I must have taken over 100 photos of all the different blooming peony varieties that they had.
From a distance, peonies resemble bushes filled with roses.
However, once you get closer, you notice the the leaves have a different shape and so do the unopened blossoms, which are shaped into balls.
Their petals tend to be more ruffled then roses.
And, their blossoms are huge!
We spent a lovely morning in the gardens, but it was time to hit the road for our next destination.
On my way out, I noticed an outdoor eating area with centerpieces made from plants that I was quite familiar with…
(Agave americana var. medio picta) was the center point of numerous succulent containers.
It wasn’t unusual to see succulent plants in many of the gardens we visited. While they do fine in the summer months, they need to be brought indoors and protected during the cold months of the year.
After taking 334 pictures of the gardens (seriously), it was time to hit the road.
Whenever possible, we try to stay off of main highways and focus on using smaller highways that run through small towns and countryside.
The Wisconsin countryside is green. I mean really green!
Dairy farms dotted the landscape along with beautiful scenery. We thoroughly enjoyed our journey.
Tomorrow, we spend time along the towns by the Mississippi River before heading toward Minnesota Amish country.
**I wanted to thank those of you who have left such wonderful comments. I appreciate them so much!
https://www.azplantlady.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Wisconsin_853-001-2.jpg1024781arizonaplantlady@gmail.comhttp://www.azplantlady.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/favicon.pngarizonaplantlady@gmail.com2014-06-09 04:08:002022-11-09 22:58:56Road Trip Day 6: Edible Containers, Vines and Perennials
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Stepping Out of the Garden
azplantlady, UncategorizedLife has been quite busy, which has kept me out of the garden much of the time.
Of course, the with the hot temperatures of summer, I probably wouldn’t be spending a lot of time outdoors, regardless of how busy I have been.
I did spend some time weeding my vegetable garden last week and checking on how large my white pumpkin is growing. However, that will probably be that last time that I do any work there for at least a week.
When I look back at the past 5 weeks, I realize how little I have been in my garden, which makes me grateful that I have a landscape filled with beautiful, fuss-free plants.
My second-oldest daughter, Rachele, surprised her brother by coming home for his birthday in late May.
Rachele is in the Navy and is stationed in California. She enjoys what she does there, but I don’t get to see her near enough.
Enjoying Mackinac Island
The beginning of June, I embarked upon a road trip through the upper midwest with my mother (our fourth road trip).
A week after returning from our road trip, I hit the road again with my family on our annual sojourn to the cool pines of Williams, Arizona. A bonus was that my daughter Rachele was able to come back out and come with us!
My sister, me and my granddaughter, Lily.
Along with my sisters, brother and their families, we all have a great time staying in several small cabins nestled into the woods.
I had a great time with my kids, sisters and my granddaughter, Lily.
My son, Kai
My daughter, Gracie
We spent time strolling along Route 66 and enjoying ice-cream at our favorite restaurant, Twisters in Williams. Nights were filled with board games including a particularly competitive game of Scrabble between me and my son-in-law – he won 🙁
Today, I confess to feeling a bit glum. Rachele left today after spending 2 wonderful weeks at home.
Monsoon Season – Kai with his niece, Lily.
Tomorrow, my son Kai goes in for another surgery. This will be his 8th or 9th (I’ve lost count) surgery overall.
However, unlike most of his previous surgeries, this one won’t be for his hip – it will be done on his left hand. The doctor will be fusing his thumb joint and performing a tendon replacement.
We are hoping that the recovery from this surgery won’t be as difficult as those experienced after hip surgeries that leave him wheel-chair bound for weeks.
Kai will have to wear a cast for several weeks though. But, he is a tough kid and it is likely that this surgery will be a piece of cake compared to most of his previous surgeries.
You can read more about Kai and his remarkable story, here, if you like.
My garden should do just fine without me for a while. It has been enjoying the arrival of our monsoon season and the increased humidity.
I hope you are enjoying your summer. I’d love to hear about what you have been doing!
Fuss-Free Plant: Chuparosa
Fuss Free Plant, UncategorizedDo you enjoy going out into the garden in summer?
I don’t!
I admit to sometimes neglecting my garden when the temperatures go above the century mark. My aversion to gardening in a furnace is one of the reasons that I like to use desert-adapted plants that don’t need much attention.
One of my favorite fuss-free plants is chuparosa (Justicia californica).
It has beautiful red, tubular flowers that decorate the garden in late winter into spring and sporadically throughout the year. Hummingbirds can’t resist it AND it is drought-tolerant and low-maintenance.
Want to learn more? Here is my latest plant profile for Houzz:
Growing Annuals: An Unusual Flower Container
Containers, Flowering Annuals, UncategorizedI am always on the lookout for new ways to display annual flowers. I’ll do anything from transforming old, antiques into planters to using brightly-colored containers.
On a recent visit to the Green Bay Botanical Gardens in Wisconsin, I saw this creative use of an old, decaying tree trunk…
What a great example of a sustainable flower ‘pot’.
The depression within the tree trunk held just enough potting soil for the flowers to grow in.
Seeing this made me wonder what other items that we find in nature that we can use as planters.
Any ideas?
Southwestern Plants: An Old Favorite in New Colors…
Southwest garden, Uncategorized, WildflowersDo you like red yucca (Hesperaloe parvifolia)?
Landscapes throughout the desert southwest come alive in spring and early summer as the coral-colored blooms of red yucca burst forth.
There are a few reasons that this succulent is a popular plant.
For one, its grass-like foliage add texture to the garden, even when not in flower.
Second, it needs little maintenance – simply prune off the flowers when they fade.
The flowers are quite beautiful.
While the most common flower color for this fuss-free plant is coral, there are two other colors that I would like to introduce you to.
While not a new color, there is a yellow variety of “Hesperaloe parviflora” available.
It is the same as regular red yucca, except for the color.
Imagine the creamy yellow flowers against a dark-painted wall such as brown, green or purple?
Gorgeous!
Here is a color of “Hesperaloe parviflora” that is relatively new…
This is a new variety of red yucca called ‘Brakelights’. Its flowers are a darker red than the normal coral flowers.
I am always interested in different colored varieties of my favorite plants. It is easy to add interest to your garden when people see a different color than they expect.
What color of “Hesperaloe parviflora” is your favorite?
Shared Love for Gardening….
Purple Flowering, Beautiful, Fuss-Free Shrub
desert, UncategorizedDo you have a list of favorite plants for your Southwestern garden?
I do.
Today, I’d like to share with you about one of my favorite shrubs, desert ruellia (Ruellia peninsularis).
It has beautiful, light-green foliage and purple flowers that appear off an on throughout the year, with the heaviest bloom occurring in spring.
Unlike its cousin (Ruellia brittoniana), desert ruellia does not take over the garden space.
It needs little maintenance, and looks great with a variety of other flowering plants.
For more information on where this lovely shrub grows, how to plant it and how to use it in the landscape, check out my latest plant profile for Houzz.com
To see my other plant profiles for Houzz, click here.
Colorful Midwestern Garden of Amy, Get Busy Gardening
AZ Plant Lady, UncategorizedDo you have friends with whom you share a common interest?
I do.
My friend and fellow blogger, Amy Andrychowicz of Get Busy Gardening loves gardening as much as I do. Amy and I have spent time together in Arizona and later in Florida.
Last week, while on a road trip through the Midwest, I made sure to make a stop in Minneapolis to visit with Amy and see her garden in person.
You may be wondering what a gardener from a hot, dry climate would have in common with one from a cold, temperate climate?
My winter temps can get down to 20 – 25 degrees in my desert garden while Amy’s goes all the way down to -30 to -25 degrees. That is up to a 50 degree difference!
But, believe it or not, there are a large number of plants that can grow in both climates.
Entering Amy’s back garden, my attention was immediately drawn to her large beds filled with colorful perennials.
I love iris!
I am always taking pictures of iris throughout my travels. While they can grow very well in Arizona, I have never grown them myself.
The major difference between growing irises in the Southwest and the Midwest is the time that they bloom. Iris will bloom earlier in the spring while their bloom won’t start until late spring in cooler regions.
After seeing Amy’s in full bloom, I may need to rethink planting these beautiful plants in my own garden.
Succulents aren’t just for the warmer regions. I have encountered prickly pear cacti in some unexpected places including upstate New York.
Here, Amy has a prickly pear enjoying the sun flanked by two variegated sedum ‘Autumn Joy’ that produces reddish flowers in late summer to early autumn.
This plant also can grow in desert gardens, but does best in the upper desert regions or in the low desert in fertile soil and filtered shade.
You might not expect to see water harvesting practiced outside of arid regions. But you can see examples of water harvesting throughout the United States.
This is Amy’s rain garden. The middle of the garden is sloped into a swale that channels and retains rainwater allowing it to soak into the soil. Plants are planted along the sides of the swale who benefit from the extra water.
A water feature was surrounded by low-growing plants including one that caught my eye.
This ground cover had attractive, gray foliage covered with lovely, white flowers. I wasn’t familiar with this plant and asked Amy what it was.
I love the name of this plant, ‘Snow in Summer’ (Cerastium tomentosum). While it thrives in hot, dry conditions, it does not grow in warmer zones 8 – 11.
Enjoying the shade from the ground cover was a frog.
I always enjoy seeing plants that aren’t commonly grown where I live. I have always liked the tiny flowers of coral bells (Heuchera species). It blooms throughout the summer in cooler climates.
Do you like blue flowers? I do. I first saw Brunnera macrophylla ‘Jack Frost’ growing on a visit to the Lurie Gardens in Chicago.
This lovely perennial won’t grow in my desert garden, so I’m always excited to see it during my travels.
Amy had two beautiful clematis vines just beginning to bloom.
I must admit to being slightly envious of her being able to grow these lovely, flowering vines. Years ago after moving to Arizona, I tried growing clematis. While it did grow, it never flowered. Clematis aren’t meant to be grown in hot, dry climates.
Aren’t these single, deep pink peonies gorgeous?
While I am usually content with the large amount of plants that I can grow in my desert garden, peonies are top on my list of plants that I wish would grow in warmer climates such as mine.
Amy’s garden was filled with beautiful, flowering peonies of varying colors.
I took A LOT of pictures of her peonies.
There was even a lovely bouquet of peonies decorating the dining room table.
Amy’s back garden is divided up into individual beds and one entire side of the garden is filled with her impressive vegetable garden.
You may be surprised to find that growing vegetables is largely the same no matter where you live. The main difference is the gardening calendar. For example, I plant Swiss chard in October and enjoy eating it through March. In Amy’s garden, Swiss chard isn’t planted until late spring.
Swiss chard
The raised vegetable beds were painted in bright colors, which contrasted beautifully with the vegetables growing inside. Even when the beds stand empty, they still add color to the landscape.
Green Beans
Kale
Young pepper plants took advantage of a hot, sunny location in which they will thrive.
One thing that is different in vegetable gardening is the practice of ‘winter sowing’. When Amy first told me about this method of sowing and germinating seeds, I was fascinated.
Basically, seeds are planted in containers with holes poked on the bottom for drainage. The containers are then covered with plastic tops also covered with holes.
In mid-winter, the containers are set outside. Snow and later, rain water the plants inside the containers and the seeds germinate once temperatures start to warm up.
Amy has a great blog post about winter sowing that I highly recommend.
As we got ready to leave, we walked through the side garden, which had a wooden bridge.
Different varieties of thyme were planted amount the pavers for a lovely effect.
Thyme can make a great ground cover in areas that receive little foot traffic.
In the front garden, I noticed the characteristic flowers of columbine growing underneath the shade tree.
I don’t often see red columbine. Amy’s reseeds readily, so she always has columbine coming up.
This is a sweet, pink columbine that has smaller, but more plentiful flowers.
I had visited Amy’s garden through her blog, Get Busy Gardening for a long time and it was so wonderful to be able to see it in person. It is beautiful!
I encourage you to visit Amy’s blog, which is filled with a lot of helpful advice – even for those of us who live in the Southwest.
Desert Vegetable Garden: Getting Ready for Halloween???
desert gardening, Uncategorized, Vegetable GardeningIt’s a beautiful summer day outside, yet my mind is on fall and Halloween?
Why?
Because, this is what I discovered growing in my vegetable garden this morning…
Okay, maybe you cannot see it yet, but once you part the leaves…
You can see a white pumpkin happily growing.
I’m so excited to have a pumpkin growing in my garden again.
You might be scratching your head at this point and wonder why I have a pumpkin growing in the middle of summer.
Look at any vegetable planting calendar for zone 9a deserts and you will see that pumpkin seeds should be planted in mid-June if you want pumpkins ready for Halloween.
Pumpkin vines are fairly easy to grow and they will spread out a lot! We found that out the hard way when we grew our first pumpkin vine a few years ago.
Even though pumpkin vines grow well, they rarely form pumpkin fruit (yes, pumpkins are technically a fruit) when planted in the middle June as recommended.
Our first pumpkin in 2010
BUT, pumpkins will often form if you plant the seeds a couple of months early. I’ve grown pumpkins from seeds sown in spring before (click here). Unfortunately, I have had no luck having pumpkins from from seeds sown in June (as recommended).
So my plan is to allow my pumpkin to continue growing and then pick it when it is ripe in late July or early August.
I’ll then store it in a cool, dry place where it should (hopefully) keep until I put out fall decorations in September. I’m hoping it will last through October, but we will see.
*Incidentally, my mother has a white, heirloom pumpkin that she purchased last October that is still doing well and shows no signs of rot.
I planted some heirloom pumpkin seeds from a pumpkin that I bought last fall, and the vine is growing well. I hope to see a pumpkin forming on that vine soon.
From what I have observed, heirloom pumpkins with hard outer skin/shell seem to last a long time.
I’ll keep you updated as to how my pumpkin patch is doing and when my new pumpkin is ready to pick!
Road Trip Day 8: An Amish Gardener, Carbs and a Late Flight Home
Road Trip, UncategorizedIt’s hard to believe that our road trip has come to a close.
Our last day was filled with some memorable adventures.
We woke up to an overcast morning at our bed & breakfast.
You know what the best part of staying at a B&B is? The breakfasts!
We started out with strawberries and bananas on a bed of sweetened cream followed by french toast, sausage and eggs.
Do you remember my telling you how popular rhubarb is in this area, in my last post?
Well, during breakfast, we also had a slice of rhubarb pie. Can I tell you a secret? I don’t like rhubarb.
Speaking of rhubarb – it was growing out in the garden.
Speaking of gardens, theirs was beautiful. This lovely fountain surrounded by petunias was the focal view from the dining room.
A circular bed, edged in stones held flowering violas and chives.
White daisies filled the other perennial beds.
I think that daisies can brighten up almost anyone’s day, don’t you?
Along the side of the 100 year old Victorian home, was a side garden with a curved stone pathway that led to a covered arbor.
Purple ‘Wave’ petunias surrounded by bacopa took center stage from this window.
I always get a kick out of the fact that we grow many of the same annuals in the desert – just at a different time of year.
The bed & breakfast was located in Amish country. As we ate breakfast, I noticed an Amish girl working in the garden.
She was busy using hand pruners to prune away old, woody growth from some shrubs.
*Amish people do not like pictures of their faces to be taken, which is why I am only showing her from behind.
After breakfast, we got into our car and headed toward Minneapolis, which was to be our last destination.
Our flight wasn’t scheduled to take off until 7:40 pm, so we had the entire day to fill.
We decided to spend some time at the Mill City Museum.
Did you know that Minneapolis used to be the flour capitol of the world? It’s true.
As someone who loves carbs with a passion and would rather eat bread then sweets, I knew that I had to check out this museum.
The museum is housed in the old Gold Medal Flour factory, which used to be the world’s largest flour mill.
It is 8-stories high and much of it was destroyed by a fire in the 90’s.
You can see the girders and where the floors used to be in the ruins.
The interior had some great exhibits about the history of the early flour industry and how the city of Minneapolis used the power of the Mississippi River to power the mill.
One very cool part of the museum was the Flour Tower tour.
I apologize for the bad photo, but wanted you to see the large freight elevator that visitors went on.
As you sit, a guide takes you along a journey up and down 8 floors of the mill. Each floor opens up to a display that recreates the history of the mill.
At the top of the mill, we were allowed to get up and walk to the top of the building.
You could see the old sign, which stood tall above us.
From the rooftop, you could see the Mississippi River flowing by.
I wonder if I will ever tire of seeing the Mississippi River. I hope not.
Across the river, you could see the old Pillsbury Flour Mill.
After leaving the mill, we head a little time left before we had to turn in our rental car and head to the airport. So, we decided to go and see Minnehaha Falls.
The falls are located in the middle of the city and flows from the Minnehaha River before joining the Mississippi.
As you stand along the viewing area, you are sprayed by the water, which is really quite refreshing.
The falls are 53 feet tall.
During this entire road trip, my mother has been enjoying taking pictures with her new iPhone.
Many of her photos are of me taking pictures of my camera, like this one at the falls.
It was time to wrap up our visit to Minneapolis and start toward the airport.
Our time at the airport was much longer then we had planned for. Our 7:40 pm flight was delayed for 4 hours until 11:30 pm.
Thankfully, I had my laptop and some knitting to keep me busy while we waited.
Sunset in Minneapolis. I was really wishing that I had been on a plane by now. I missed my husband and kids.
The airline brought out a cart filled with snacks and drinks for all of us who had to wait.
I ate my fill of shortbread cookies and Ritz cheese crackers.
Our flight finally arrived and we soon left for home.
We had a wonderful time on our road trip and I appreciate your comments so much.
BUT, my road trip posts aren’t over yet.
I’ve saved the visit to my friend and fellow garden blogger, Amy’s garden for my last post.
I can’t wait to show you what’s growing in her garden – so come back soon!
Road Trip Day 7: Rhubarb, Pepsi and Lonely Roads
UncategorizedToday was spent driving from Wisconsin, over the Mississippi River into southeastern Minnesota.
Bridge over the Mississippi River toward Minnesota. *Cell phone + dirty windshield = grainy photo.
You know how people who haven’t lived near the ocean, find it fascinating when they get the chance to visit?
I think it is somewhat the same for me in regards to seeing the Mississippi River. The immense size of the river is amazing.
This is the third time that I have seen the Mississippi River and it is still something that I always look forward to.
We arrived into the town of Winona, Minnesota – we drove up to Garvin Heights, where a path leads from the parking lot to a viewing point located over 500 ft. above the river and the city.
Isn’t it beautiful?
Off in the distance, you can see the bridge that we drove over, which connects Wisconsin to Minnesota.
My mother has been enjoying her first smartphone. During our trip, she had taken multiple pictures of me taking photos of plants and/or scenery.
It makes me feel happy and special at the same time 🙂
During the first part of our day, we spent some time shopping for antiques.
My mother loves antiques and I like to find old pieces that I can use as planters in my garden. In the Midwest and Eastern regions of the US, antiques are a lot less expensive then in the west – so we like to take advantage of nice antique stores when we can.
I found a large, old coffee pot (the kind they would use in a chuck wagon for a lot of people) that I plan on using for a flower planter in my smaller vegetable garden.
You may be wondering how I am going to get my coffee pot home. Well, that leads to a tradition that my mother and I started during our first road trip 3 years ago. We wait until the last day of our trip and then go to a local UPS store and send our souvenirs home. It makes our life much simpler and we have less to carry in our suitcases.
Another grainy cell phone photo taken through the windshield.
As we headed toward the southeastern corner of Minnesota, we found ourselves alone on country highways for long lengths of time.
Not that I’m complaining about the absence of vehicles. I’m sure that after spending a day or two at home that I’ll be wishing for fewer cars on the road.
The weather during our trip has been very nice. There was some rain, which fell during the night, so it did not affect our activities.
Our day’s journey ended in Lanesboro, Minnesota, which has been the recipient of the Great American Main Street Award. Lanesboro, is located close to Amish communities and we have seen some Amish folk during our travels today.
The main street is lined with historic buildings that have been transformed into trendy shops and eateries.
Unlike many Amish communities that I’ve visited in the past, Lanesboro has upscale, trendy shops, which I really enjoyed visiting, instead of shops stocked full of Amish souvenirs.
A few of the shops had a combination of both new and old things, like this old antique that was transformed into a planter.
This shop had an interesting planter with a galvanized pipe with flowers sitting in a dish planted with real grass.
A variety of succulents were displayed with old, wooden boxes.
This alleyway was filled with plants and antiques, which I love.
One interesting observation about our travels this day is the popularity of rhubarb.
It was planted along the main street.
Rhubarb ice cream was also available in many of the shops.
I bet you didn’t know that rhubarb was so popular did you?
I admit that I didn’t try the rhubarb ice cream flavor. I went for salted caramel crunch – yum!
Remember the cheese curds that I tried on day 5 of our road trip? They are everywhere. I usually see them offered fried.
As our trip draws towards its end, here are a few observations in contrast to living in California and Arizona (places that I’ve lived).
– In almost every restaurant, Coke products aren’t offered – Pepsi is the drink of choice.
– In all of our driving, we have only seen one highway patrol car (in CA and AZ you often see one every few minutes).
– Starbucks is a huge favorite of my mother and during our road trips, we usually make at least one stop there each day. On this trip, we have hardly seen any Starbucks stores. But, there have been quite a few other coffee shops, including independent ones.
Tomorrow, we will fly home in the evening from Minneapolis. My husband has been wonderful taking care of the kids and house while I’ve been gone.
But, I’m not sure about what he has been feeding the kids…
My 12-year-old son posted this picture of his dinner the other night, which consists of french fries, cheddar cheese and bacon.
I protested the lack of vegetables, which my husband responded to by saying, “We each had 4 mini-carrots to round our dinner.” He then went on further to say, “And we had vegetables on our pizza for lunch.”
I told my kids that I have quite a few dinners planned when I get home that will have lots of ‘greens’ in them.
*Tomorrow, we will spend the day in Minneapolis and I’m looking forward to visiting my friend and fellow garden blogger, Amy of Get Busy Gardening. I can’t wait to see her and her garden. I’ll be sure to share my visit with you!
Road Trip Day 6: Edible Containers, Vines and Perennials
azplantlady, UncategorizedDay 6 of our road trip began with gray, dreary skies and a chilly breeze.
We decided to spend our time in Madison, Wisconsin by seeing the Olbrich Botanical Gardens, which were rated as the #1 attraction by Trip Advisor.
As we left our hotel, we were faced by roads under construction.
Summer is the time for all road construction throughout the midwest because cold, wintery conditions are not conducive to construction.
Once we arrived at the gardens, we were greeted by the sight of containers filled with a combination of edible and ornamental plants.
I love how the blue of the lobelia contrasts with the bright green of the parsley and ‘Red Sail’ lettuce.
Cabbage is one of my favorite edible plants to add to containers.
All of these edible plants can be grown in pots in my southwestern garden, but are planted in fall, not spring like in Wisconsin.
During this trip, we have visited three botanical gardens and have not spent one dime on admission fees.
Why?
Most major botanical gardens have a reciprocal admissions if you belong as long as you are a member of your local botanical garden and they are part of the reciprocal program.
At first glance, the gardens were beautiful and I couldn’t wait to start exploring.
The gardens have bee hives located in out of the way areas, which are filled with Italian bees that are said to be rather docile.
The bees play an important part in pollinating the flowering plants throughout the gardens. The honey that is sometimes sold in the garden gift store.
The individual gardens are spaced around ‘The Great Lawn’ which is a large circular grass area where concerts are held.
The first garden I explored was the ‘Meadow Garden’. This garden is sustainable and very low-maintenance.
It is filled with drought-tolerant grasses along with wildflowers and flowering bulbs. What I really liked about the garden is that it does not need supplemental water or fertilizer.
Maintenance is limited to mowing twice a year.
What I didn’t like about the garden, was the mosquitos. But, I came prepared and they mostly left me alone.
Walking on, I wanted to explore the herb garden because they play a huge part in my own garden.
The entry to the herb garden is quite formal. Boxwood hedges border the center garden area.
Edible plants combine with ornamentals for beautiful container plantings.
I love flowering chives and how they used them as a border.
Varieties of mint and thyme were nicely displayed and the herb garden also had herbs used for dyes.
*The brown plants in the background are recovering from the severe winter with new green growth slowly coming back.
This bed of flowering annuals was completed edged in flowering chives.
A Thai pavilion dominated the center of the Thai garden, which brought back memories for my mother who spent a few months in Thailand as a young woman.
While tropical plants cannot survive a midwest winter – the plants used in this area had a tropical appearance with large leaves while also being cold-hardy.
The bridge that connects the Thai Garden to the rest of the garden, crosses over Starkweather Creek, which bisects the garden.
People can canoe or kayak up 5 miles from this side of the bridge.
Boats can dock on the other side of the bridge and the creek leads out to Lake Monona.
This area is called the Sunken Garden, which is gently sloped so that rainwater flows toward the lake.
The formal water feature was flanked by two container plantings, which were quite contemporary in style.
The pond had beautiful yellow and purple flowering Japanese iris.
Vines were used in different ways throughout the garden.
A tree provided needed support for a clematis vine with its maroon flowers.
Years ago, I tried growing clematis in our first home. It did grow, but never flowered. I learned later that it gets too hot in the desert for clematis.
Another clematis was flowering next to a beautiful host underneath a tree.
I love pink flowers, don’t you?
Wisteria was growing up on arbors and I never tire of viewing their lovely flowers and inhaling their heavenly fragrance.
The vision of a rose climbing upward always makes me want to go home and grow one up the side of my house.
Have you ever heard of ‘Paper Birch’ trees?
Their bark peels off in perfect sheets that is sometimes used to wrap around decorative candles.
I have always had a special place in my heart for birch trees. Growing up in a Los Angeles suburb, we had three growing in our front yard. I have always loved their white bark and bright-green leaves.
Underneath these birch trees was an interesting ornamental grass called dormitor quaking sedge (Carex brizoides). I like how it lays down making it look like green waves underneath the trees.
Walking near the Perennial Garden, I spotted a blue-flowering plant that looked rather familiar.
It turned out to be a blue-flowering variety of autumn sage (Salvia greggii), ‘Blue Note’.
Can you imagine how patriotic a planting of red, white and blue autumn sage plants would look?
Here is another lovely edible, ornamental container that caught my eye, using kale.
Don’t you just want to sit down and relax in this area?
Pale-pink bee balm (Monarda species)was the only flower in this area of the garden, but it was more then enough alongside the ornamental grasses.
Sometimes less is more.
Walking on a paved area, I saw a planting of perennials right in the middle.
Interestingly, there was no border or any clearly delineated space. Just an opening without pavers where plants seemingly come up in the middle of a sea of pavers.
I kind of like this idea. How about you?
If you have been reading my road trip posts, then you have probably noticed my obsession with peonies, which don’t grow in the desert.
Wherever we go, I see shrubs covered with gorgeous blooms.
Well, Olbrich Gardens were no exception.
I must have taken over 100 photos of all the different blooming peony varieties that they had.
From a distance, peonies resemble bushes filled with roses.
However, once you get closer, you notice the the leaves have a different shape and so do the unopened blossoms, which are shaped into balls.
Their petals tend to be more ruffled then roses.
And, their blossoms are huge!
We spent a lovely morning in the gardens, but it was time to hit the road for our next destination.
On my way out, I noticed an outdoor eating area with centerpieces made from plants that I was quite familiar with…
(Agave americana var. medio picta) was the center point of numerous succulent containers.
It wasn’t unusual to see succulent plants in many of the gardens we visited. While they do fine in the summer months, they need to be brought indoors and protected during the cold months of the year.
After taking 334 pictures of the gardens (seriously), it was time to hit the road.
Whenever possible, we try to stay off of main highways and focus on using smaller highways that run through small towns and countryside.
The Wisconsin countryside is green. I mean really green!
Dairy farms dotted the landscape along with beautiful scenery. We thoroughly enjoyed our journey.
Tomorrow, we spend time along the towns by the Mississippi River before heading toward Minnesota Amish country.
**I wanted to thank those of you who have left such wonderful comments. I appreciate them so much!