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Tickled About Pink in the Garden - The Springhouse BLOG#4
Posted on September 26th, 2009 5 commentsBy Richard J. Weber, Garden ExplorerTickled About Pink in the Garden!
Looking out the back windows of the Landscape Office, I’m happy to see the return of a little color to the Hillside Shade Garden. Through the summer, it’s been mostly green out there on the shady slope. But starting in late August I noticed some wispy Pink Anemones starting to brighten up the garden. Sure, the anemones are aggressive, but after trying in vain for so long to get them going, I’m not going to disparage them now that they are taking over everything in their path. They sure do add a cheery splash of color to our wooded site.On the other end of the garden, the hardy begonias (Begonia grandis) are also showing lots of color. This is an old favorite of mine that surprises so many people when they learn there’s actually a perennial begonia. This is a classic pass-along plant, because they don’t really like to be in pots for long. We also have a patch of begonias along the path in the Walking Shrub Border behind the Sun Mounds, which started blooming about a month earlier and are 3’ tall (the tallest I’ve ever seen)! In combination with Gold Dust Aucuba, it is quite a memorable sight.
Adding a little more color to our back garden is Aster divaricatus (White Wood Aster). They started blooming in late July and are still blooming 2 months later. This Kentucky native is one of the few plants I brought from my childhood home and have had them now for probably 35 years. That’s what I call a long-lived perennial! I used to go up to a farm near Stanton, Kentucky with Paul Kress, a friend of my father’s. Mr. Kress would take me out rock hunting and in the process I would always find a few plants he’d let me dig up from his woods. This aster never did all that well in my garden on Cross Keys Road. I planted it under a huge old honeysuckle bush that I had limbed up to make a shade garden. It was always very dry under there, and although I’d get some nice rough textured heart shaped leaves every year and a few white flowers each fall, it was nothing spectacular. When I started the gardens at Springhouse, I brought a piece here and planted it behind the office. It kind of sat there for the first few years like it did in my other garden, but then it took off and started multiplying! The asters must really like their new home and they reward me with lots of great foliage and bigger and more plentiful flowers. Curiously, the flower color has changed from white to pale pinkish-purple and are blooming longer than I ever remember. I guess this is the right plant in the right place!
There is another pink late summer bloomer that is one of my favorites — Hot Lips Turtlehead. Maybe it’s because I’m really a kid at heart and I can really imagine this flower as a turtle’s head (although I’ve never seen a pink turtle!) Turtlehead (or Chelone if you prefer Latin names) really likes it wet. Native to stream sides and low lying areas, I had just the place to plant one – in our stream bed just before the water disappears under the patio by our office. The dark green glossy leaves look healthy all season and the interesting flowers bloom for over a month. This year, some white smart weed and orange jewel weed have popped up to keep the Turtlehead company. This little trio is growing so well in the soggy soil - actually too well with all the extra rain this year - so I’ve had to do a little pruning so the Turtlehead doesn’t get overtaken and covered up by the rambunctious companions.
They say timing is everything and these plants are no exception. The color provided by these late summer flowers comes at a most appreciated time. Their subtle beauty will soon be eclipsed by all the more vibrant and riotous colors of fall, which are just around the corner.
5 responses to “Tickled About Pink in the Garden - The Springhouse BLOG#4”
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Hello. I came upon your blog at Blotanical. I love your photos. Especially the pink Anemone and the Begonias.
Welcome to Blotanical!
Noelle (azplantlady)
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Found you listed on Blotanical. Hope we’ll see you around there a lot.
Really enjoyed your oriole post - I’ve heard them in Tuscany, but have never actually seen one. they’re much too shy.
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Love all those photos of pink flowers. The ladies of the American Cancer Society’s Breast Cancer Awareness groups would have loved them for display last month when they were pressing us to ‘think pink.
Turtleheads were among my mother’s favs that I have not tried to grow. I need to try hardy begonia again. I forget if they drowned or the drought took them out. We had too much of both, last year and this.
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Hey Richard, I found your blog via Blotanical and had a great time looking around. You reminded me of begonias, a plant that I will be looking around for this weekend. Thanks for the tour.
Scott -
Pink Anemone looks gorgeous…I now have to have one. Curious to know Is it growing in normal soil?
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