Tag Archives: beebalm

Monarchs Reign

Danaus plexippus (monarch) and Lantana camara (Common Lantana)

Danaus plexippus (monarch) and Lantana camara (Common Lantana)

A small number of monarchs usually visit my garden in late October but this year I have been spotting one or two at a time for the past month. They disappeared for a couple of weeks during the long rainy period, then returned with the sun.

For much of today I saw four or five dancing around the large lantana.

Danaus plexippus (monarch) and Lantana camara (Common Lantana)

Danaus plexippus (monarch) and Lantana camara (Common Lantana)

There always seemed to be a single monarch sipping nectar from the passalong dahlia by the back steps but the two other dahlias apparently offered no temptation.

Danaus plexippus (monarch) and Dahlia sp.

Danaus plexippus (monarch) and Dahlia sp.

Danaus plexippus (monarch) and Dahlia sp.

Danaus plexippus (monarch) and Dahlia sp.

A tattered and torn male finally settled atop a seedhead of Monarda didyma (Scarlet Beebalm) for a rest.

Danaus plexippus (monarch) - male

Danaus plexippus (monarch) – male

The black spot on each hindwing indicates this is a male.

Danaus plexippus (monarch) - male

Danaus plexippus (monarch) – male

Mid-June Musings

Garden View In JuneThe garden at this point in June seems like an entirely new one—so different from the early spring palette. A salmon-orange Gladiolus from years ago brashly turned up in the Southern border today. I almost admired it for being so bold, but in the end I cut it and placed it in a nice vase indoors. Beebalm is in full bloom, Echinacea is maturing in many parts of the garden and last year’s Allium ‘Drumstick’ is back. All are attracting bees. A hummingbird visited the beebalm yesterday. There have been a few other hummingbirds this year, but now that the beebalm is blooming perhaps there will be many more.

Foxglove

A Foxglove mystery may be solved. This Foxglove has been in the garden since 2008 or 2009 and I thought it had caramel in the name, but never could find the tag. The coloring is creamy when the flowers first appear. Inside the flowers are yellow with reddish-brown veins and a hairy lip. Today I researched it a bit and hope I have it identified properly now. Could this be Digitalis ferruginea (‘Gelber Herold’, ‘Yellow Herald’, Rusty Foxglove)?

Almanac

Today the weather was clear, hot and very humid, reaching 93°F. before severe thunderstorms passed through this evening. The winds overturned a bench and a flowerpot, but otherwise things seem ok for us. Some of our neighbors are reporting trees down, cable service lost and even roof damage.

Irises and Spiderwort

Iris Border

Iris Border

Despite the heat I chose today to dig up some of the dozens and dozens of Spiderwort that have aggressively expanded throughout most of the borders. I had to dig up many irises in order to get to the roots of the Spiderwort, so now there is a lot of work to replant some of the irises and find a good home for the rest. Fortunately the high temperature tomorrow will be a nice 81°F. so the work should be enjoyable. The irises have needed division for years, but actually they bloomed incredibly well this spring anyway. The amount of Spiderwort I managed to dig today is just a small portion of the total I want to remove.

Tradescantia (Spiderwort)

Tradescantia (Spiderwort)

This white one looked so innocent and beautiful this morning. Actually this particular clump has not spread like the others, but it is getting very large.

Tradescantia (Spiderwort)

Tradescantia (Spiderwort)

Garden Fauna

A variety of birds fill the garden with color and song. Fireflies or lightning bugs have been out in the evenings for several weeks. Frogs sing frequently and incessantly, though I have not seen one in the garden. A couple of little bunnies are nibbling Thyme in the meditation circle. No sign yet of the 17-year cicadas.

Mulch Game Heads Into Overtime

Daphne odora 'Aureomarginata' (Winter daphne)

Daphne odora ‘Aureomarginata’ (Winter daphne)

A week ago I had a large quantity of hardwood mulch delivered to our driveway. I immediately set out to distribute it, one garden cart at a time, around the shrubs in the front and down the sides of the house, before finally bringing the bulk of it to the back where the garden lies. Each day since, as I loaded the mulch into the cart, frequent drifts of lemony fragrance from the nearby Daphne odora ‘Aureomarginata’ (Winter daphne) made me happy and content to be outside.

I hoped this job would take just a few days, but secretly estimated it might take a full week. The front and sides are complete. With merely scant work done in the main garden, the project has now gone into serious overtime, but I am enjoying each moment.

Southern Path Leading To The Garden

Southern Path Leading To The Garden (facing West)

The side path down which I am carting the mulch into the main garden is tricky. Not well designed for a bulky cart, its slow meander is better suited for viewing Lychnis coronaria and lavender in spring and echinacea and rudbeckia and Perovskia atriplicifolia in summer.

Southern Path - Mulch week 1

Southern Path – Mulch week 1 (facing East toward the mulch pile)

Once lined with shrubs such as Sky Pencil and Wintergreen boxwood that succumbed to drought years ago, this side garden is a hodgepodge of plants. During winter it receives very little sunlight but in summer it gets strong, hot sun

As I put down mulch I am also doing some trimming, thinning and putting things in order. I usually forget to prune the ‘Jackmanii’ Clematis, so am trying to include tasks like that in this mulching project.

I saved for another day the job of cutting back the Muhlenbergia capillaris (Pink Muhly Grass), but cleaned up many plants, including Hedychium coronarium (Ginger lily) and Canna.

Daffodil

Daffodil

A patch of daffodils instantly looked better after mulching. There were signs of new growth from the Baptisia ‘Purple Smoke’ and more daffodils are emerging.

A section of stepping stones that lead through the gate were reconfigured, an adjustment that took several hours. During that time no mulch was being moved, but I was able to salvage some stones for another project.

Monarda didyma (bergamot, scarlet beebalm)

Monarda didyma (bergamot, scarlet beebalm)

All the while as I worked in this area, the minty scent of Monarda didyma (Scarlet Beebalm) kept me company.

On the opposite side of the house, our property is just a very narrow strip where buried gas and electric utility lines run. There are few plantings along this side, but new mulch has helped improve the look. Aquilegia canadensis (Eastern red columbine) and an attractive but weedy ground cover, Aegopodium podagraria(bishop’s weed), green it during summer.

Last week while mulching there I discovered the first open flower of the winter camellia, Camellia ‘Coral Delight.’ A group of Helleborus x hybridus (Lenten rose) brightens up that spot as well.

As for the main garden, there remains much work to be done. I have created several piles of mulch back there. This helped reduce the size of the mulch pile in the driveway and by Sunday night I was able to move the car back into the garage. (Bluebirds spent a great deal of time on the car last week.)

Mulch Pile On Wednesday

Mulch Pile On Wednesday

Over the week I put in one 8-hour day, but averaged 4-5 hours most days. It was cooler and more overcast than expected, but never was I uncomfortable.

A friend in the neighborhood volunteered a couple of hours of her time. She brought another cart and loaded one while I carried the other to the back garden, which was a huge contribution.

Most neighbors walking by the front of our house though were astonished, often helpfully suggesting I should hire someone to help.

Even putting cost aside, no one else has a special relationship with this little piece of earth, nor would know to be careful of the little wonders tucked away in various spots. The benefits are overwhelming for doing this task myself.

Purchasing the mulch forced me outside after too many days of lingering inside this winter. Moving mulch last week I was so content being outdoors working in the garden, it never seemed like work all.

Almanac

Last week’s weather forecasts of sunny, mild days held true for only a couple of days last week. Most nights were below freezing and it took a while to warm up each day enough for me to want to be outside. Just before the Northeast U.S. had several feet of snow, the storm brought an inch of rain here, leaving the garden too wet to work for a time.

Rain fell overnight and continued through this morning. Today’s high will 61F.  It will be slightly warmer this week, but overcast, then raining again by midweek. The forecast for this week does not portend well, but forecasts can change.

Rudbeckia Hirta ‘Irish Eyes’

Rudbeckia hirta ‘Irish Eyes’ cheers up the southern entrance to the garden this week. The long stalks, blown over in a storm, rest amid some Monarda that is enjoying an extended blooming period. Yellow and red are not a favored color combination in my garden, but the monarda is not usually blooming at this time of year. In general the garden is doing better than average for August. Almost all the blooms are happenstance, much appreciated happenstance.

 

January Winds Down

On this fifty-seven degree sunny afternoon, a mild breeze lifts the fragrance of Daphne odora wafting into the air.

Held up by a very cold winter, last year the hellebores began blooming by February 19 and continued through June 20, 2011. This winter they began blooming a month ago on December 30, 2011.

With its scent noticeable for a few weeks now, the aromatic Monarda didyma (Bergamot, Scarlet Beebalm) is growing. Beebalm is native to this area.

Monarda (Scarlet Beebalm)

Another native, Cercis canadensis L. (Eastern Redbud), is volunteering under the back steps, at least I think this is a redbud.

A Volunteer - Redbud?

Magenta Lychnis coronaria (Rose Campion) will be back in the garden this year thanks to a neighbor who shares my passion for these old-fashioned flowers. The garden is full of white rose campion grown from seed, but for some reason the magenta ones, which had been passed-along many years ago by a dear cousin, had disappeared. Rose campion are not native but generally do well in this climate, reseeding easily.

Rose Campion