Showing posts with label 'Double Knockout' rose. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 'Double Knockout' rose. Show all posts

Monday, May 27, 2024

Memorial Day in My Garden

Foxglove Penstemon in Herb's bed.

 

I don't have any red-white-and-blue-display of flowers to commemorate Memorial Day, not even a flagpole to hang a flag on, but the cycle of flowers in my garden continues. The Foxglove Penstemons are making  lovely display in Herb's bed at the moment. The peonies have just about finished blooming, but many others plants are getting ready for their annual blooms.

 

Texas Yucca flower spike (Hesperaloe parviflora)

 

The Texas Yucca (Hesperaloe parviflora) put out its first flowering spike this year, and the individual flowers are starting to open. Their coral color is very pretty--they're supposed to provide nectar for hummingbirds, but I've only seen one hummer around here this year.

 

Close-up of the Texas Yucca flowers

 

My 'Color Guard' Yucca has put forth two flowering spikes, after not producing a single one in several years, but it will be a couple of weeks before those flowers develop. The plant seems to be losing its yellow markings and reverting to the original Yucca filamentosa foliage. I've seen this in other plants whose cultivars sport differently colored foliage, and have no idea what causes it, but apparently once the reversion starts to happen, the shoots are stronger and will eventually dominate--the only solution is to prune back the reversions. I did that and therfore the lack of flowers in the past few years, but I'd rather have the flowers than the yellow-edged foliage.

 

Yucca 'Color Guard' flowering spikes.

Usually, lots of roses and the 'Dawn and Dusk' climbing rose and clematis combo are at their peak at this time, but this year the saw-fly larvae decimated the leaves and my roses look awful! The flowers haven't been affected as much, but still, the plants don't look very attractive.

 

Red Double Knockout rose in front yard.

The Dawn and Dusk combo on the side of the porch is a bit skimpy this year too, after a severe pruning in early spring. I need to train the rose back up the railing and post, to get the clematis to climb again--it's too close to the ground to make much of a show this year.

 

'New Dawn' rose and Clematis 'Etoile Violette'

Evergreens and Viburnum 'Brandywine' on the east side of the house.

The evergreens on the east side of the house are looking good, but the Rhododendron 'Anna Rose Whitney' behind the Viburnum probably needs to be transplanted to a better location. It's growing nicely, but the flower buds get blighted every year from lack of moisture. I've yet to see even one bunch of flowers on it open--the soil drains too well on this steep bank.

The hydrangeas are getting ready to bloom too--with 'Incrediball' leading. This spring's showers have helped them recover. Hopefully, this year the deer won't eat all the flower buds before they develop.


Hydrangea 'Incrediball' on east side.

My dark-leaved Elderberry (Sambucus 'Black Lace') is blooming, but some of the branches are showing wilting, despite all the moisture they've been getting. It's possible a wilt fungus is attacking it, but if so there's little I can do at this point; it will survive or die. 


Sambucus 'Black Lace'

Another plant in bloom is the Tradescantia 'Sweet Kate,' lovely with its deep purple blooms and yellow-green leaves!

 

Tradescantia 'Sweet Kate'

Stay tuned for more flowers later on!

Monday, June 8, 2020

The Extravagance of Roses

Double Knockout rose



For gardeners, roses are the ultimate extravagance: the queen of flowers! My mother cultivated more than twenty varieties of roses in her tiny Falls Church garden, along with countless other garden standards--her aim was to have "a garden for all seasons," but roses were her favorites. In those days there weren't many deer in the suburbs so she was able to enjoy her roses without having to worry about their depredations. I'm not so lucky here in Front Royal--voracious deer roam all about, and every year I do my best to try to fend them off with repellent spray, so I can enjoy some of their lovely flowers.


Climbing rose' New Dawn' and clemtais 'Etoile Violette'



Shortly after moving here I saw this combination of a climbing rose 'New Dawn' intertwining with the lovely clematis 'Etoile Violette' advertised as "Dawn and Dusk" in a gardening catalog--such an evocative phrase! The following spring I ordered the two plants to train up one of the columns of the porch of our new home. It's been seven years since I planted them, and the display becomes more spectacular every year.


'Petal Pushers' shrub rose with red 'Simplicity
Bed on the west side of the driveway with pink peony and Allium moly

The next year I began to extend the small, linear flower bed on the west side of the driveway and planted three 'Petal Pushers' shrub roses and a pink peony. Over the years I kept expanding the flower bed to include some bearded irises, flowering onions (Allium sp.) and a few more roses: a red 'Simplicity,' the yellow 'Molineux,' and one of my favorites, the hybrid tea rose 'Peace.'

'Molineux' rose
'Peace' rose or grandiflora rootstock?

The 'Peace' rose suffered greatly one very dry winter and died back, but the next spring it eventually came back. I have no idea if the tea rose was grafted or on its own root, and it was the rootstock that sprang forth, but it has gradually been growing and flowering. This rose doesn't look like a tea rose to me, but more like some sort of grandiflora, although it has a similar coloring to 'Peace.' In any case, it's beautiful, healthy and growing. I don't find much to recommend 'Simplicity' other than its bright color and easy care, although the rose hips that form after the flowers fade are attractive.

The only disappointment for me is that so few of these lovely roses have much of the traditional rose fragrance--'New Dawn' has a light scent, and 'Molineux' too. How I long for a beautiful, easy-care rose loaded with perfume! I peruse my gardening catalogs, and am determined that the next rose I plant must be fragrant to the max!