Saturday, March 8, 2014
Landscaping with Daylilies
Lillium Oriental Stargazer |
Daylily or Hemerocallis belong to the family Hemerocallis that stemmed from the family Lillaceae. The botanical name for daylily means "beautiful for a day". Daylilies grow forming clumps with continuous blooms throughout the summer and into fall. They can be grown in zones 3-9 ideally in a rich most, slightly acidic soil in full sun. Whether you choose true daylilies or hemerocallis either can be a welcome addition to your garden.
Lillium Stargazer is known for its beautiful coloration and very fragrant blooms. Stargazer grows in clumps that are 12-16 inches in width and reaches a height of 36 inches and blooms from July-August. It is hardy in zones 4 to 10 and prefers to be grown in full sun in a slightly acidic and rich, well-drained soil. Stargazer can be easily divided by digging up bulbs and re-planting (best done in fall). Stargazer is a prolific bloomer that thrives in the garden and is an excellent addition to any landscape.
Lillium Oriental Casablanca Lilium Casablanca exhibits beautiful pure white flowers on stalks 24-36 " high. Fragrant blooms emerge in July-August against dark green foliage. This lily is as magnificent as the Stargazer and is a perfect addition to a moon garden. Its striking white flowers and bright red stamens contrast against a deep green background. |
Pink Oriental Lily |
Hemerocallis Stella D Oro The next group of lilies belongs to the family Hemerocallis. Daylily Stella D Oro is a compact clumping perennial producing fragrant golden yellow flowers on 18-20" stalks. Stella D Oro prefers a humus, well-drained soil in full sun but will tolerate partial shade giving some flexibility when planting. Out of all the daylilies it has one of the longest bloom times from late May through fall with little maintenance. Blooms can be extended through October with a late summer pruning to remove spent foliage. Stella D Oro adds long-lasting color to any formal or informal landscape and it a popular favorite in the garden. |
Hemerocallis Prairie Blue Eyes Hemerocallis Prairie Blue Eyes is a knock-out in the landscape displaying lavender-blue flowers with green throats that bloom on 26-28" stalks mid-season in zones 4-10. Prairie Blue Eyes can be grown in full sun to partial shade and will also tolerate a variety of soil types. |
Hemerocallis Grape Velvet Hemerocallis Grape Velvet shows off deep grape purple flowers with yellow throat on 18-24 inch stalks against deep green foliage. Grape Velvet grows in zones 3-9 and blooms July-August. It prefers to be grown in full sun and tolerates a range of soil types from slightly acidic to slightly alkaline. |
Hemerocallis Sammy Russell Hemerocallis Sammy Russell displays brick-red star shaped blooms with yellow-apricot throats on 24-26" stems. This outstanding hardy perennial blooms from mid-summer through fall highlighting the summer garden in zones 3-9 . This perennial prefers to be grown in full sun to partial shade and can tolerate a variety of soils. |
Hemerocallis Pardon Me Hemerocallis Pardon Me produces ruffled, fragrant cranberry-red petals with a yellow throats. Pardon Me develops new buds over a long-blooming period from July to October and is hardy in zones 4-9. It is a compact grower reaching only a height of 18 " which makes it easy to plan in the garden border and works well in small spaces. |
Hemerocallis Joan Senior Hemerocallis Joan Senior produces creamy-white blooms with a yellow throat and slightly ruffled petals. This perennial goes through two bloom cycles from early to mid-summer and grows to a height of 24-26" in zones 5-10. Lilies are a beautiful and versatile plant and are easy to grow. Their hardiness in several zones make them a popular and widely used perennial in landscaping. Lilies adapt well to a variety of soil types and conditions and exhibit a long bloom time. They add color and texture to the cottage garden, formal landscape or perennial border and can be enjoyed for years to come. |
Author: Lee@A Guide To Northeastern Gardening Copyright 2011. All Rights Reserved.
Friday, March 7, 2014
Step by Step Do It Yourself In Ground Fire Pit Installation
When thinking about building your own custom fire pit in your back yard, there are a few considerations you must take in to account. Do you want a conventional above ground fire pit or a classic in ground fire pit? Also, are you running natural gas or propane and are you going to go with a manual light system or an automatic ignition system?
If you are interested in an in ground fire pit, here are step-by-step instructions for you to install your own fire pit in your backyard patio. This tutorial will guide you from from digging a hole and running your gas line to the location through to completion of a classy looking fire pit for your friends and family to enjoy.
We also have several other links on our website for you to enjoy as well:
Step-By-Step Instruction on how to install a 24 Volt Crossfire Pit System.
Step-By-Step Instruction on how to install a 3 Volt Crossfire Pit System.
How to Install a Remote Controlled Ignitor on a Fire Pit - 24 Volt Remote Contolled Ignitor
And if you are not the type who likes to read, we have several do-it-yourself installation videos as well.
If you have any questions or concerns installing your own custom fire pit, please contact us at any time and well be happy to assist you. Call today - 1-877-556-5255
New for 2010
The Nice people at Godinton have asked me to teach over there.
Numbers are filling up fast, which is even nicer!
ROOF GARDEN COMMUNITY
Thought Id share some additional precedent on roof gardens that Ive researched...
Roof gardens are believed to have been used in ancient times as a communal space, an extra room to be used for an occasional visitor. In these earthen homes, which were built in the warm climates of ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt there is evidence of roof gardens above the house. Many times basic furnishings such as a bed, table, chair, and candle were set up for the occasional visitor. Interestingly, even downright surprising is the interpretation by some of roof gardens in the Holy Scripture. In 2 Kings 4:10 “Please, let us make a little walled upper chamber and let us set a bed for him there, and a table and a chair and a lamp stand; and it shall be, when he comes to us, that he can turn in there.”
While the psychological benefits of a hospital roof garden for patients are known to be beneficial, the physical and medicinal benefits of being several stories up above the city streets are thought to have validity. Tenement buildings in Brooklyn during the turn of the century (known as “wage earners’ homes”) were designed in some cases with roof gardens for the “general good health” of laborers.1
Hospital Roof used for the benefit of chidren
“The tuberculosis roof camp was another development in the early 20th century. Sufferers from ‘the malady,’ were invited to spend the day in these camps.” 2 Some of the press and medical field called for these tuberculosis “light” hospitals to be on the roof of every large apartment building in poor neighborhoods. There would be playground areas and covered areas for beds. The belief was that you would quarantine the already sick from healthy children and provide them with a better chance of recovery in this “purer atmosphere.” 2
The restorative benefits of time spent in a roof garden are well documented in the American Journal of Nursing. In 1935 the local garden club helped to create vegetable and flower gardens atop the Children’s Hospital of Akron, Ohio, “with a wish that blessings of health be restored to each little one entrusted here.”3
Illustration for nursing building with roof garden
According to Theodore Koch in “A Book of Carnegie Libraries”, ninety years ago along the Lower East Side of Manhattan, Public Libraries created open-air reading rooms on their roofs, complete with tables, chairs, flower boxes, awnings and lighting for late-night readers.
Young girl reading @ roof garden library circa 1910
1.Fortmeyer, Erik, “Were There Ever Roof Gardens in Boerum Hill?” http://www.boerumhillbrooklyn.org/archives/cat_history_of_boerum_hill.html
2 Shaw, Albert, (editor) American Review of Reviews Vol XLII, July-Dec 1910: Ann Arbor: U of Michigan Press 1910
3 Chambers, Marion, “A Roof Garden”, The American Journal of Nursing, Vol 35, No. 4 (April 1935) pp. 315-318
2 Shaw, Albert, (editor) American Review of Reviews Vol XLII, July-Dec 1910: Ann Arbor: U of Michigan Press 1910
3 Chambers, Marion, “A Roof Garden”, The American Journal of Nursing, Vol 35, No. 4 (April 1935) pp. 315-318
Thursday, March 6, 2014
Form function and color
We updated this front yard by removing overgrown junipers and shrubs along the house and walkways and replacing them with ornamental grasses for structure, red roses for all summer color, and dogwoods and mock oranges to frame the house. Lots of color in the perennial beds, along with some beautiful moss rock.
The Alnwick Garden
It’s a couple of months since I visited The Alnwick Garden, but I’m still not entirely sure what to make of it.
I suppose I should start by saying that I had absolutely no preconceptions about the Garden, and if we’d had better weather for our week in Northumberland, I might not have bothered going to see it. However, while the rest of the country was sweltering in 30 degree heat, the north-east was sitting under a thick layer of clouds and steady rain, and I was steadily working my way round the regions tourist attractions. As I love castles, one of the first places I visited was Alnwick Castle and as I had nothing better to do, took them up on their offer of a joint ticket to the Castle and Garden.
The first thing you see as you come into the garden is the gigantic, wibbly-wobbly cascade fountain, that appears to have been inspired by a jelly mould. I found it generally displeasing to the eye, and I was also slightly puzzled by what the frenzy of activity around the base of it was. On closer inspection, I realised that these were kids riding around in mini John Deere tractors (I didn’t take any pictures on account of not wanting to be arrested as a paedo). For the life of me, I can’t work out what these two things have to do with each other, and I think this sums up the whole Garden. It’s a series of wacky, “wouldn’t it be fun to have one of those”, that have absolutely no connection or relevance to each other. The Eden Project was obviously the role model for the Alnwick Garden, but whereas the Eden Project has an overarching philosophy of sustainability, hugging trees and generally appreciating the natural world , the Alnwick Garden is just a bunch of unrelated stuff.
Some of that stuff is actually very fun and inventive, other bits less so. As a landscape architect, and something of a pseud, I have a bit of a problem with the whole design. It feels rather alien, as if somehow it’s been beamed into place, with rows of immaculate, specimen grown trees and topiary - it‘s not awful, but it’s all rather contrived. There is no sense of Northumberland about the Garden, and little of the British Isles. The giveaway is the surfacing, which is a side-laid clay paver that I’ve only ever seen used before in Belgium (yes I know I‘m being spoddy). No surprise then that the designers, Jacques and Peter Wirtz, are Belgian. I can’t help wonder how the garden would have turned out, had it been designed by someone with more understanding of the areas landscape and gardens.
That said, if the brief was to create the most flamboyant garden possible, then the Wirtz boys have had a fair crack. It is without doubt the campest garden I’ve ever visited. You want examples? Well apart from all the fountains and other froo-froo, the backdrop to the main cascade is provided by what I can only be describe as giant, topiary birdcages!
Which kind of brings me onto my second major gripe with the gardens - cost. According to the bumf you get with your ticket, the cost of the garden was £42 million and I can well believe this. Everything looks seriously expensive, from the very tasteful Sir Michael Hopkins visitor centre, to the stacks and stacks of specially grown trees. The worst offender by far though, is the aforementioned topiary birdgcages, which must have been astronomically expensive. They’ve been formed by training hundreds and hundreds of specially grown hornbeam trees (minimum cost £200 each I’d suggest) over a giant pergola, to create… actually I don’t know what they were meant to create. There’s not an awful lot going on inside them at all, as I think my photo’s show. My point is that if you’re going to spunk a shed-load of cash on something, I think that it really ought to have some sort of purpose (as it happens I found them reminiscent of the Hiroshima dome). Similarly, someone should have reminded the person that ‘designed’ the Cherry Orchard, that simply specifying hundreds of the most expensive trees you can find, won’t necessarily give you the best result.
Ok ok, I’m being really critical and in fairness most of the punters I saw seemed to be really enjoying themselves. There is lots that good…
The liberal use of water features is pretty cool. I know it’s easy for designers to get a bit sniffy about this, but the public loves a good fountain, and the Alnwick Garden certainly delivers them. There are big water features, like the main cascade, but the little riffling channels that run through the gardens are a really nice touch. I particularly liked the circular pools, which sit behind my favourite giant topiary things.
The visitor centre is very pleasant, and serves nice sandwiches in a setting that’s reminiscent of the Eden Project. Oh and the loos are amusing too, with different coloured led’s for you to aim at.
The Poison Garden is a fun idea (yes a garden full of mildly to moderately poisonous plants, located behind big gates marked with a skull and cross bones), if only one suicidal teenager away from disaster! I can see the Daily Mail headline already.
The formal gardens located in an old walled area, are nicely laid out around a structure of fountains and channels. At present the perennial planting is a bit disappointing, but hopefully they can develop this with time.(p.s. The rose gardens are a bit dull)
In particular, I thought the Bamboo Labyrinth was inspired. Mazes are fun anyway, but the use of bamboo made for a really dense and atmospheric screen.
Finally, I probably ought to mention the water features again, because if you’re under the age of 12 you’re going to love them. The Serpent Garden has a whole bunch of fountains, and the excitement levels of the children is something I’ve not seen since they took the tartrazine out of orange squash.
You see there’s so much that’s fun and positive in the Garden, that I could almost forgive it. And then…
I see the Treehouse.
What in God’s name made them build this monstrosity? Not in Walt Disney’s wildest dreams could he have come up with this. It’s beyond kitsch, beyond fairy’s down the bottom of the garden with Harry Potter - it’s quite unbelievably tacky, twee and hideous. Who is it for? No really, it may look like something that you’d use to decorate a particularly saccharine, 6 year old girls bedroom, but it actually contains a ‘fine dining restaurant’. Who in there right mind thought these two things could go together? I suspect there’s a reason why Gordon Ramsey hasn’t installed an adventure playground at Claridges.
Well there you go, that’s my take on the Alnwick Garden. It saddens me to be so critical, because the idea of building a new contemporary Garden is one I’d support. You certainly can’t criticise the investment, but the taste, or lack of, is at times rather obvious. Theres lots thats good about the Garden and it is in many ways so nearly right, but certain elements seemed to be something of vanity project. Whether this was from the designers or the Duchess patron I don’t know, but someone should have said that certain things just aren‘t right - like putting a classy restaurant in a Disneyfied, treehouse is never going to work. I’ll be really interested to see how the Garden develops, but my advice is that if you want to visit a brilliant, contemporary garden in Britain - go to the Eden Project first.
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