Author: jamesrebar
Grandmother Garden
Plants Purchased – (from Wavside Catalog)
- Delphinium – Pacific Giant – Blue/Purple (1 dozen)
- Holly Hocks – Country Garden Mix (1 dozen)
- Honey Suckle – John Clayton
- Mock Orange – White Philadelphia
Seeds Purchased (from Parkseed Catalog)
- Dianthus – Arctic Fire (2 packets)
- Foxglove – mix of color (2 packets)
- Phlox – Unique Mix, Dramandi (1 packet)
- Stock – Cinderella Mix (2 packets)
- Sweet Pea – Matucana (1 packet)
Purchased at a local greenhouse
• Snapdragons
• Johnny Jump-ups
• Mums (in autumn)
• Pansy (Whiteford Greenhouse)
Wish list – will ask Herb Society members
- Ferns – one or two Forget-me-not
- Lambs Ear
- Lily of the Valley
- Peony – intense pink color, the old-fashioned type
- Rhubarb
- Viola Odorata or Violets, sweet smelling
- Lilac – 1 bush
- Oriental Poppy
- Tiger Lily
Existing Plants – will leave in current location or relocate
- Autumn Clematis
- Autumn Sedum
- Black-eyed Susan
- Bleeding Heart
- Butterfly Bush
- Columbine
- Forsythia
- Hosta
- Iris
- Rugosa Rose
- Shasta Daisy
- Veronica or Penstemons
- Vibernum
Original Culinary Garden Layout
The original layout for the Culinary Garden:
Original Everlasting Garden Layout
The original layout of the Everlasting Garden:
Original Fragrance Garden Layout
The original layout for the Fragrance Garden:
Seasonal Rose Maintenance
Seasonal Maintenance for Roses
- Take care not to let fertilizer fall on the base of the plant as this may cause scorching.
- Hoe the soil lightly; remove weeds and improve soil condition – sometimes called a dust mulch.
- May use a mulch of peat or pulverized bark. Apply when the soil is damp.
- When spraying make sure your applicator reaches under the foliage. This is as important as covering the top surfaces. Always follow manufacturer instructions.
- A jagged cut when pruning means pruning shears are not sharp. Damaged wood will create a haven for insects.
- Never cut a rose plant when wood is frozen or during a hot, dry spell.
- Prune above an outside bud. Allowing the branch to grow outward. Buds growing inward towards the center produce an unattractive bush.
- In tying a Climbing Rose – slowly flex cane tip to a horizontal position. They are at their most flexible in spring.
Climbing Roses
Climbing Roses
Illusion on Pillar and New Dawn on Arch
- Remove covers as above.
- Treat mound of soil as above.
- Don’t prune climbers except deadwood for first 2-3 years.
- Shape while dormant – don’t take as much wood from everbloomers.
- Apply fertilizer at the beginning of the growing season, after each bloom cycle
and ( 6 weeks before last bloom cycle to discourage new growth & winter freeze). - Keep faded flowers plucked off everblooming roses. Do not take foliage since repeat blooms are produced from top leaves immediately under the old flower cluster.
- Cover base of plant with mulch.
- Tie branches horizontally – this creates stress & results in more blooms. Canes growing straight up produce flowers only at their tips.
- Always use soft natural string as ties.
- Check for soil moisture – water if necessary.
Shrub Roses
This section is essentially overtaken by events. Because there is only a skeleton crew maintaining the herb gardens, the decision was made to give up on the roses, as they are the most labor-intensive of the plants in the gardens.
Along Fence
- Remove covers – burlap and straw as weather becomes more moderate.
- Leave mound of soil until new growth is 1″-2” long and all danger of frost is past.
- Gradually acclimate the plant by washing away an inch or two of the mound a day.
Pruning Shrub Roses
Never cut a rose plant when the wood is frozen.
- Use sharp clean pruners.
- Cut on a slant 1/4 inch from outside bud.
- Paint the cut with glue or nail polish.
- Cut out old wood, weak shouts – never use your best pruning shears to cut out dead wood as it will ruin the cutting edge.
- Reduce the remaining wood by 2/3. Cut back the branch to an outside eye – a dormant bud growing outwards.
- Leave a good framwork of strong wood. Remove canes growing toward center. Remove suckers.
- Fertilize after pruning and foliage starts to appear.
- Mulch 2-4” around plants – leaving a circle of bare soil.
Outside Gardens Maintenance
If time allows:
- Rake around gardens and place the debris from trees in dumpster or over in area where we throw the rock (outside fence beyond compost bins) East.
- Haul dirt from accross the road (playground side) behind the barn on pavement.
- Clean and rake outside gardens.
- Prune Butterfly bushes to 1 ft. above the ground.
- Prune the fall blooming Clematis behind out-house to about 3 ft. to encourage new growth.
- Fill in holes under plants with soil (Holes made by our resident ground hogs)
- Remove dead and weak wood from ivy along walk.
- Add compost to all outside gardens. Use middle bin of compost.
- Fertilize evergreen trees and add compost.
Seeds to Plant
- Globe Thistle
- Globe Amaranth
- Strawflowers
- Annual Statice
- German Statice
- Opal Basil
- Bay Tree 9. Impatients
- Violas or Pansies
- Hostas-from whatever we can beg, borrow, or steal.
- Saffron Crocus – to be planted in August.
Medicinal Garden Maintenance
Medicinal Garden Trimming and raking
- Rue – Trim to the ground.
- Germander – Shear to shape and encourage branching. Shear to same height as in other gardens making a uniform hedge all around.
- Check perennials for survival and make note for replacement – some appear late.
- Check markers – place properly.
- Enrich soil with compost, add Bonemeal and Bloodmeal. Use compost from middle bin at the Herb Garden.
- Build up low areas and corners in garden where needed.
- Divide perennials if necessary to encourage fuller, healthier plants.
- Add new soil and compost before replanting.
- Avoid walking if possible on wet soil, it compacts and doesn’t aerates – taking a long time to recoup.
Seed Planting in May
- Sweet Marjoram
- Calendula (plant in April)
- Cornflower
- Safflower
- Flax may need to buy a pkt. or a plant
Plants
- Soapwort
- Myrtle