Category Archives: Flower

The Cutting Garden

I planted a cutting garden for the  first time last year, growing a variety of annual flowers from seeds.  I enjoyed the convenience of having a supply of flowers to cut for bouquets without having to worry about how they looked overall in the garden.  Once the seeds germinated, it required some attention to keep the weeds at bay.  As the annual flowers grew, however, they took over and significantly reduced the chore of weeding.

Because I enjoyed it so much last year, I decided to plant another one this year.  I planted cosmos, bachelor buttons, larkspur and a variety of zinnias.  One mistake was planting the cosmos near the front of the cutting garden in one section because they grew so tall that they blocked out nearly everything behind them.  Otherwise, the seedlings took off and started to flower.

The cosmos are still blooming.

Although the tall plants have collapsed due to the wind and heavy rains we have received.

I know.  It kind of ruins the lovely images of the cutting garden that you might have had, but it is the grim reality at this point in the summer.

The zinnias are blooming in all shapes and sizes.   Before last year, I refused to even consider growing these flowers because I had always stereotyped them as ugly “old-lady” flowers.  You know, in the same group as marigolds.  After browsing through the seed packets at the local nursery, I decided to give these old standbys a chance.   I am so glad that I came to my senses because these flowers are the stars of the cutting garden with their variety of shapes, sizes, colors and textures.

I battled the new crop of mosquitos today after work and went out and picked a bouquet to brighten up the indoors.  The flowers are getting a little tattered from all the weather, but I still managed to find enough to put something together.  Having flowers from my garden in the house makes me smile and always cheers me up.

It seems as though I typically only go out to pick a bouquet of flowers if we are expecting visitors.  This is unfortunate because bringing the garden indoors is a great way to admire the fruits of your labor.

I plan to have a cutting garden again next year and hopefully I will remind myself to take the time to treat myself to a bouquet of flowers inside more often.  After all, that is the point of having a cutting garden!

In these last few weeks before our first frost, my goal is to continuously have a bouquet on display in the house…just for me.

Lynell

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Skyscraper Sunflowers!

Summer is flying by and we are swamped with vegetables to harvest, flowers to pick, weeds to pull and grass to mow.  We enjoy a variety of fresh vegetables at each meal and inevitably eat too much.  The rewards of all the hard work in the garden are paying off and it is a great time of year to be living on our little hobby farm.

The last few summers I have grown sunflowers in the garden.  Last month I posted about my Pastiche sunflowers, with a promise to provide pictures of my Skyscraper sunflowers once they reached their full glory.  As a thunderstorm was rolling in this evening, I made my boys come outside for a photo by the fully grown and blooming sunflowers because I was afraid the predicted high winds might damage them.

We have enjoyed watching their growth through the season and the kids would point out their dramatic change in size upon our return from the cabin each weekend.  My oldest is close to 6 feet tall, so I am guessing that makes these flowers around 14 or 15 feet high??  I think these are my tallest ones yet.  Skyscrapers, indeed.  Once again, they have not disappointed.  And as I flip through the seed catalog in the dead of winter, I will definitely be ordering these seeds again.

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July in the Perennial Garden

The month of July is a time of transition in the perennial garden.  Many of the early blooming perennials are starting to wind down, allowing others to take center stage.  Aside from an early infestation of aphids on my Lupines, I am having a good year in the flower garden.

I planted some White Coneflowers last fall and I am enjoying their first season of blooms.

I rescued these pretty pink Delphiniums last July from a plant sale at one of those temporary nurseries set up in the grocery store parking lot.  The leaves were severely damaged from inconsistent watering and dwindling attention as the peak planting season passed.  The 75% off sale price convinced me to take a chance on the sad plant and much to my surprise, it came through the winter strong.  The Russian Sage was a new addition this spring.

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Smiling Sunflowers

I have planted sunflowers the last several years because I love seeing the beautiful blossoms towering above the garden.  They are such happy flowers that seem to smile all day long in the sunshine.  Of course, they have the added benefit of providing the birds with some tasty snacks once they go to seed.

I plant them along the north fence in the garden so that they do not shade out any of my plants.  The fence is also a strategic support, especially for the Skyscraper sunflowers that grow really, really tall.  I love these gigantic plants and the huge flower heads they produce.  I will definitely post pictures of them when they begin to flower.

Last year I planted Pastiche Sunflower seeds along the barn, in the pumpkin patch, but had very poor luck with germination.  The beautiful pictures in the seed catalog made me forget that experience, however, and I ordered them again this spring.  I planted them along the north fence with the Skyscraper sunflowers and this year they did not disappoint.

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A Rose is a Rose…

I love roses and keep adding to my collection each year.  The roses have been bursting with blooms lately and I admire them daily.  I thought I would share a few recent pictures of my blooming beauties.

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Winter Sowing Update

It was months ago that I decided to attempt starting perennial seeds by using a winter sowing method that I had read about in my Northern Gardener magazine.  I posted (here) about getting everything set up and flower seeds planted in these plastic milk jugs in the dead of winter.

Over the next few months, I set the milk jugs out in the snow and let nature take its course.  As things started to warm up in the spring, I opened the jugs up during the day to allow the germination process to start, triggered by the moisture and warm rays of sunshine.  The seeds eventually started to sprout and I had lots of little seedlings.

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Simple Garden Moments

It finally feels like summer to me.  The kids have all returned from various camps and grandparent visits.  Our evenings have opened up somewhat and I am not dashing here or there to sit and wait at practices, rehearsals or lessons as often.

The good news about this is that I have more time to be outside working and enjoying our farm and the simple pleasures of gardening.  Moments like these, for example, when you are digging around in the flower bed and look over and see a beautiful butterfly enjoying your plants.

The bad news is that I usually write my posts while I am sitting at practices, lessons, rehearsals, etc., so I have less time now to blog about all the stuff we are doing around here!  Summer is short, however, and things will be back to the usual high-speed chaos before you know it.   In the meantime, I will continue to do my best to steal a few moments to provide updates…maybe on rainy days when I am forced indoors.  🙂

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Preparing and Expanding the Perennial Gardens

Although my husband might disagree, it is my firm belief that you can never have too many perennial gardens.  So, after a few years of threatening to expand my gardens, I decided to go ahead this year.

I always start my landscaping projects by laying out a garden hose in various shapes and looking out the windows in the house to see how it will look.

I tried many different variations this time to try to find a shape that I found pleasing.

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Flower Power

Some time in January, my 87-year-old grandmother, who has always lived on her own, was hospitalized and underwent major surgery.  Eventually she was moved to a nursing home to recover.  She has been there ever since.  It turns out that recovery does not happen as quickly in an 87-year-old body as it does in a younger one.

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Punishing Minnesota Heat???

It seems like just yesterday that I was lamenting about the frigid May temperatures we were experiencing here in Minnesota.  Actually, it was only two short weeks ago when we woke up to snow one morning and frost the next.  Scenes like this in May are disheartening for anyone, but especially for a gardener.

My perennial gardens endured these frigid temperatures, however, and bounced back quickly.

This past week we have seen much warmer temperatures and starting yesterday, the humidity rolled in too.  Today, just two weeks after temperatures in the high 20’s, it is in the mid-90’s with a dew point of 64.  The air is thick and oppressive.  The National Weather Service has even issued an “excessive heat” warning.  Bottom line is that it is damn hot and miserable.

Instead of snow and freezing temperatures, my perennial gardens must now suffer under this punishing Minnesota heat.  The same Autumn Joy Seedum plants pictures above with snow look like this today.

They are wilted and look pathetic, as do the Shasta Daisies. Continue reading

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