One of the many benefits of getting away from home for six days? The changes in the garden jump out! It's as though the plants have exploded in volume and color. Upon our return, even #1 Son commented on its beauty and the multitude of butterflies. I am thrilled to give you a peek into my oasis!
My fellow gardeners will not be the least bit surprised to read that the bee balm is the most significant butterfly magnet in my garden.
Of course, some species seem to prefer other plants, such as the coreopsis (upper left) or yellow penstemon (bottom).
Today, I was surprised to find a host of tiny grasshoppers hanging out on the prairie coneflower. They weren't the least bit fazed when I leaned in for the close-up.
Speaking of critters, my commitment to let nature run its course with my native plants is a strategy that seems to be paying off. The caterpillars that nibbled on the goldenrod do not seem to have had a lasting impact; if anything, the munching caused the plant to branch out and produce even more flower heads. The aphid infestation on the asters has not destroyed any part of the plant. And I wonder if, by allowing the aphids to linger on the asters and other plants, it kept them from flocking to the non-natives such as the burning bushes; the last two summers, those bushes had tell-tale leaf curl from aphids -- but not this summer.
In general, I am delighted that the garden has started to "fill in". As faithful readers will recall, we started with minimal plantings three summers ago. Through natural seeding, as well as my own strategic sowing of seeds collected from the garden, several beds have begun to take on the full, higgledy-piggledy prairie look that is my goal.
The "big picture" views excite me, and close-ups are also a source of joy.
The fence baskets and deck pots are also coming along nicely.
The rock garden near the front of the driveway is still a work in progress, and that makes sense given it has only been in place two years.
I may regret planting this lamium, a perennial from last year's baskets; they are not native and can quickly take over a bed. But for now, they provide color and interest while the rest of the plants get up and running. Just another part of my garden journey!
Welcome to Mosaic Monday, a weekly meme
where we get together to share our photo mosaics and collages.
Please include at least one photo mosaic/collage in your post.
The link will be open from 1 p.m. Sunday until 11 p.m. Tuesday (U.S. Mountain
time).
Remember to add the link to your Mosaic Monday post and not the one to your
blog.
Please link back to this post so that your readers will be able to visit and
enjoy more wonderful mosaics; taking the MM blog button from my sidebar is an
easy way to link back.
As host I will visit every participant and leave a comment so that you know I
stopped by.
Please try and visit as many other blogs as you can, especially those that join
in later, so that everyone's creativity can be appreciated fully.
Thank you for joining in today and sharing your mosaics with us.
Labor Day in the U.S. conjures memories of warm sunshine and family barbecues, the last hurrah before summer ends. Labor Day 2020 in Northwest Montana brought high winds, small hail and a night-time frost. And just like that, our already abbreviated growing season came to an abrupt halt for much of my garden. As it is impractical to cover an entire landscape as protection from frost, I woke Tuesday morning and approached the garden with one eye open, expecting widespread damage. Of course, I have been known to imagine the worst, so maybe I should not have been surprised to discover that more than half of the plants were unaffected. I believe this is another benefit of native species, especially those in Montana. Like our hardy residents, they don't shrink and wither the first time the temperature gauge dips below 32!
But even so, I got Mother Nature's message, and decided I should show you my garden before it truly goes to sleep for the winter. Join me for a prance through my prairie!
I discovered Rocky Mountain Bee Plant last year, growing naturally. Seeds I sowed in the fall sprouted, and the most successful plant loomed to five feet before the frost brought it down. Aptly named, it is a magnet for bees, butterflies and hummingbirds; you could hear the incessant drone of buzzing from quite a distance. Overnight, the pollinators have vanished from this plant. I have already collected seed pods, and will continue to do so as more mature - I can't count on this plant to return since Bee Plant is an annual. I look forward to continuing my experimentation with this gorgeous member of the caper family.
By mid-August, my driveway baskets were past their prime, so I augmented them with Lamium, Anemone, and Angelface Summer Snapdragon. Despite covering them the night of the frost, the most delicate plants succumbed. Sigh. On the porch, the cold devastated the black susan vines that looked so pretty twining around the railings. I don't plan to use them again, since their connection to the railing prevents me from moving them in the case of hail (or frost)!
Aster showed no impact from the frost, and since it is a late bloomer providing welcome splashes of color in the garden right now, I am pleased. My aster plants (I think the initial landscaping plan had four or five) have spawned innumerable volunteers, and it appears to be a favorite of the deer since many of the seedlings are nibbled before they produce flowers. I am still occasionally surprised where I find the plants - the seeds are so small, I can only attribute it to the vagaries of the wind. When I locate one in a particularly desirable location of the garden, I make sure to protect it!
Speaking of welcome surprises, I have been thrilled to find paintbrush volunteers in at least five places. Why is this significant? Paintbrush is a hemiparasitic plant - it seeks out roots of host plants, usually grasses, and taps into them for nutrition. So, I had concluded that it was just unlikely that my mama paintbrush would reproduce! As it turns out, the volunteers are growing close to or underneath other plants, but none of them are grasses. It has emboldened me to attempt planting some seeds this fall! (and the frost did not affect them- yay!)
I was also delighted to discover a coneflower with magenta florets within the boundaries of my "formal" garden. It first appeared last summer in the prairie, and clearly some seeds found their way into the flower beds. Its stalks and leaves are remarkably similar to those of the prairie coneflower, so I had mistakenly labeled them as such, until they bloomed. I have studied my plant books, and perused the web, but I have been unable to make a formal identification. Can anyone help? Until then, I am mentally referring to them as magenta coneflower. Update: thanks to MB of Small City Scenes and Pat of Mille Fiori Favoriti for helping me identify this as Mexican Hat/Upright Prairie Coneflower. (In general, the coneflowers are more droopy following the frost.)
Several other plants have also performed well with self-propagation, including the goldenrod. I was amazed to locate one among the gilia and blanketflower. I have also learned that it is easy to confuse goldenrod and fireweed, especially when they are small. Goldenrod tends to have one stem; fireweed is likely to have multiple branches as it grows. What they have in common is that the deer love them! (Fireweed is an important colonizer of burned areas. It spreads rapidly by seeds and buried rhizomes. When bombs levelled parts of London in WWII, fireweed appeared in the heart of the city for the first time in generations.) The goldenrod and fireweed were unfazed by the cold.
As the summer has progressed, I have also marked many spots containing what I believe to be volunteer bee balm. If I am correct, I will be quite happy since it has been hard for me to harvest seed from this plant - as soon as it is done blooming, the whole plant turns brown, and I have been unable to identify anything that looks like a seed!
As many of you know, bee balm is another plant that draws pollinators in droves. Below is a video of butterflies on and around the plant.
As long as we are looking at videos, check out the hummingbird with the scarlet gilia. For weeks, this female hummer was guarding this section of the garden by sitting on the chicken wire in between feedings. (The gilia showed no reaction to the initial cold snap.) You may have noticed the blanketflower that is mixed in with the gilia. This plant has a special corner of my heart - it seems to bloom continuously with that eye-catching yellow/orange combination. Also, it was unaffected by the frost, its seeds are easy to collect, and I had great results with the seeds that I sowed in the spring. A keeper!!!
Let's pause for a moment and talk about critters. Deer continue to be a nuisance. Other than chicken wire/fencing, all of my methods for deterrence have had very limited success (including the deer repeller I wrote about on 9/8/2019). As the garden self-propagates, it is more and more impractical to protect individual plants. I have had some success with placing chicken wire around large sections, such as the gilia and blanket flower you have seen in some of the pictures above. I think my next plan is to move those large chicken wire enclosures from year to year, allowing a new section to get well-established. We can only try, right?
On July 23, I found aphids on the Norway Maple. I consulted with the experts at Montana State University, and they recommended washing them off with insecticidal soap. Realizing that I can't reach all the leaves, my contact reassured me that all trees have some aphids, and that there are lady beetles, lacewings and parasitoid wasps that will come in to control the aphids. I am inclined to take their advice since I have seen a complete recovery for my sand cherries since I pruned them per their guidance (see below). August 9, I chased a bunny from the front flower bed, and I have not seen it since. And, as usual, the ground squirrels went into hibernation in the middle of August. One less thing to worry about!
Admired for its silvery gray, fragrant foliage as much as its lavender-purple flowers, Russian sage make a bold statement in a garden. The abundant, spiky clusters of flowers only started blooming in mid-August, so I was a little chagrined to see that some spike tips were affected by the frost. Also, the wind has weakened some of the branches and spoiled the normally symmetrical look. Nevertheless, all three of my plants are spectacular, and I love the show. They have also produced a number of volunteers, and I have learned NOT to water them - Russian sage likes very dry conditions.
Another implication of a short growing season is a lack of time for a second bloom. For both Catmint and Salvia, it is suggested that shearing/deadheading can produce a second bloom. I have been watching the Catmint carefully, and as recently as a week ago, it still had blooms frequented by bees, which makes me hesitate to shear it. At this point in the season, it would be fruitless to try for a second bloom. In fact, with some plants, you should stop deadheading to allow the plant to focus its resources on preparing for winter. I deadheaded the Salvia at the beginning of August and one plant out of three has produced a few new blooms. I think next year I will try trimming it lower on the stalks and supplementing with some additional water. (Neither the catmint or the salvia were harmed by the frost.)
I have been very pleased with the performance of the Black-eyed Susan plants, and it is a direct result of guarding. I ran my own experiment, and most of the Susans that were not protected were nibbled, especially the flower buds!
Susans are also prolific in the prairie, as a result of the seed mix we planted in the fall of 2018. It is hard to capture in a photo, but you can see a few of them below, among the naturally-occurring yarrow. (The tallest Susans were hard hit by the frost. I was able to protect some of the shorter ones with a few strategically placed buckets. These pictures were all taken before the cold snap.)
As I walk around the prairie, I keep my eyes peeled for other treasures. I am pretty sure the daisy* and larkspur were in the seed mix, but the harebell is so plentiful in the woods around here that I am sure these seeds were already present. And the Oceanspray is a shrub that has clearly been here for quite a few years. It is the only one that I have seen on our 15 acres! *oxeye daisies are considered invasive in Montana, so I pull them up when I see them
I have been doing some reading about prairies, generating some ideas that are part of my garden planning for next season. But this post is already long enough, so I will start to draw to a close with some photos of the Coreopsis that has exploded on the southeast side of the house.
The soft tissues of the Coreopsis were blackened by the frost, but some of it close to the ground is still alive. Even before the cold snap, the plants had produced drifts of seeds visible on the stone steps. Birds, especially pine siskins, perched delicately on the stems to pick out the miniscule morsels, and flew off in a pack when you opened the mud room door. I suspect I will be plucking hundreds of volunteers next spring! Before then, these beds will be subject to significant thinning/transplanting; some of these plants may find new homes in the rock garden at the front of the driveway. By far, that bed has been my biggest disappointment this summer, but you know me -- I have MAJOR plans and HOPE springs eternal!
Dedicating my prayers today to all those suffering the impact of wildfires, hurricanes, and flooding.
Welcome to Mosaic Monday, a weekly meme
where we get together to share our photo mosaics and collages.
Please include at least one photo mosaic/collage in your post.
The link will be open from 1 p.m. Sunday until 11 p.m. Tuesday (U.S. Mountain
time).
Remember to add the link to your Mosaic Monday post and not the one to your
blog.
Please link back to this post so that your readers will be able to visit and
enjoy more wonderful mosaics; taking the MM blog button from my sidebar is an
easy way to link back.
As host I will visit every participant and leave a comment so that you know I
stopped by.
Please try and visit as many other blogs as you can, especially those that join
in later, so that everyone's creativity can be appreciated fully.
Thank you for joining in today and sharing your mosaics with us.