Note to self: this area, while lovely with all of its orange flowers, needs something to cool it down.
The Melianthus major, whose cool blue foliage probably would’ve done the trick, is too short to be seen from the street.
Maybe replace the Drosanthemum micans with something with blue flowers?
Note to self: cutting back the Agastache ‘Golden Jubilee’ in late May made it look terrible for a couple of weeks but now it’s recovered nicely and it’s blooming like normal but with a more compact shape. Do this again next year, harder.
This might be a good choice for replacing the Drosanthemum and cooling off the orange cannas.
I mean, come on.
Pay attention to deadheading. The lewisia has been blooming for months because you’ve been diligent about snapping off the spent blooms, something you can do without shears.
Plant more annuals and biennials. They inevitably become your favorite plants and it’s fun to have your neighbors ask you what “the Dr. Seuss plant” is (Verbascum ‘Arctic Snow’).
Divide that Coreopsis ‘Moonbeam’ in the fall. It’s beautiful yellow flowers are threatening to eat the garden.
Stake the milkweed next year. These fell over badly and you couldn’t seem the blooms from the sidewalk.
The neighbors shouldn’t have to bushwhack to see these awesome milkweed pods. And maybe you’d see Monarch butterflies if you made them more apparent.
Never pull out the rue you planted. It might be coincidence, but once you planted it swallowtail butterflies started appearing in the garden. It’s not much to look at so far but it seems worth it.
Note to self: edit the back rain garden. It’s a freaking mess. Chop the penstemon next spring to keep it tidier.
Ditto the area behind the rain garden. It’s an amorphous blob of ratty green.
Thank Alison for forever burning the name “Hen and Dicks” into your brain.
More pots. They are like jewelry for the garden.































