I'm joining Chloris at The Blooming Garden in featuring my top 10 blooms this August. August isn't a month I usually associate with flowers but, as mentioned in my earlier Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day post, judicious applications of extra water this year have had a major input on the floral output. We haven't received our August water bill so I'm not yet feeling as terribly guilty as I'm afraid I may feel soon.
Winnowing down the flowers in my garden to 10 selections wasn't easy. The sheer volume of bloom was a major factor in my choices. The current condition of the flowers was another, as was their photogenic qualities, but ultimately it's an emotional decision.
Rosa 'Medallion' was an easy choice because it surprised me by making its first appearance of the year by blooming en masse. Roses here usually bloom best in spring before our temperatures soar, if they bloom at all. I had very few rose blooms last year and even fewer this spring after the lowest winter rain levels I've ever measured.
Heteromeles arbutifolia was another surprise. If this tree-sized shrub was blooming a week ago, I hadn't noticed it but now the blooms can't be missed.
My dahlias were another obvious choice as a favorite but which one can be said to rule my cutting garden is another question altogether. Each and every one deserves recognition. Could you pick just one?
The zinnias in the cutting garden also came on with a bang this month but there is one, grown from seed rather than plugs from the local garden center, that impresses me every time I see it.
Have I forgotten my Lisianthus (Eustoma grandiflorum) you might ask? Of course not but, like choosing a favorite dahlia, the Eustomas that draw my eye shift from one week to another.
A number of more common flowering plants make up the rest of my mid-summer bloom list.
Could you distill the bloomers in your garden down to just 10 plants? Visit Chloris to find her list.
All material © 2012-2018 by Kris Peterson for Late to the Garden Party
Winnowing down the flowers in my garden to 10 selections wasn't easy. The sheer volume of bloom was a major factor in my choices. The current condition of the flowers was another, as was their photogenic qualities, but ultimately it's an emotional decision.
Rosa 'Medallion' was an easy choice because it surprised me by making its first appearance of the year by blooming en masse. Roses here usually bloom best in spring before our temperatures soar, if they bloom at all. I had very few rose blooms last year and even fewer this spring after the lowest winter rain levels I've ever measured.
Heteromeles arbutifolia was another surprise. If this tree-sized shrub was blooming a week ago, I hadn't noticed it but now the blooms can't be missed.
My dahlias were another obvious choice as a favorite but which one can be said to rule my cutting garden is another question altogether. Each and every one deserves recognition. Could you pick just one?
The zinnias in the cutting garden also came on with a bang this month but there is one, grown from seed rather than plugs from the local garden center, that impresses me every time I see it.
This is Zinnia elegans 'Benary's Giant Giant Salmon Rose'. Each bloom is perfect. |
Have I forgotten my Lisianthus (Eustoma grandiflorum) you might ask? Of course not but, like choosing a favorite dahlia, the Eustomas that draw my eye shift from one week to another.
A number of more common flowering plants make up the rest of my mid-summer bloom list.
Gaillardia 'Fanfare Citronella' in the same bed as the Lantana is another current favorite. While the flower stems are annoyingly short, the flowers are prolific and of course loved by bees. |
Could you distill the bloomers in your garden down to just 10 plants? Visit Chloris to find her list.
All material © 2012-2018 by Kris Peterson for Late to the Garden Party