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Saturday, March 25, 2017

Lamiastrum galeobdolon

     If you want a ground cover for dry shade that will establish and spread quickly, none is better than Lamiastrum galeobdolon, commonly known as Yellow Archangel.  Of course, that means one must keep after it to keep it within bounds, usually requiring shearing every month or two.  It gets about a foot high, so weeds are never able to get established in it.  It has attractive yellow flowers in late spring.  Photos 4 and 5 show it accompanied by one of my Leonardo da Vinci structures.
     There is a very unusual cultivar or variety of it, 'Herman's Pride.'  First, it does not spread with runners as does the species.  Second, its leaves are triangular, rather than round or oblong as the species.  And third, it does not do well in deep shade, as does the species.  I have about 70 plants of this variety, and I have had to move it as the trees growing overhead got older and bigger.  The last five photos show this variety.  In photo 7 it appears in a grouping on center right, and in photo 8 it is on top of the RR wall next to the walk with the railing.









Saturday, March 18, 2017

One more snowfall--the last, I hope

     Mother nature fooled me again.  Three weeks ago I had a full week of yard cleanup work that put me ahead of schedule.  Then the other day she dumped seven inches of snow on my garden.  At least it was pretty.
     Photos five, six, and seven are of wooden structures designed by Leonardo da Vinci 500 years ago.  I built four of them for my gardens, with two hanging in trees.  I found his model in a da Vinci museum in Venice, Italy.  The last photo is of a structure I built last year..







Saturday, March 11, 2017

Inspired by Frank Lloyd Wright?  Maybe.

     In the late 1970s, I bought some outdoor lighting fixtures.  They were tall and narrow, and they reminded me of designs of Frank Lloyd Wright.  In 1980, I tweaked the design and built several fixtures, large enough to house plants.  Not being a carpenter, there were some problems (such as "light leakage" from the corners).  In 2013 I had a cabinet maker make me several with better construction.  I have three in my gardens, one each of cedar (first photo), white ash (photos two and three), and ipe, a wood from Brazil.  Two are in my Japanese garden, as they remind me of Japanese architecture.
     Last summer I visited Taliesin, the studio and home of Wright in Spring Green, WI, 90 minutes west of my home.  In December I visited Taliesin West, his winter studio and home in Scottsdale, AZ.  I think he would like my design.  He, too, was presumptuous--and lived in Wisconsin. 


Saturday, March 4, 2017

Truly transformative

     Hedwigia ciliata is an amazing moss, taking only three seconds to go from a dead-appearing state to a very-much-alive green.  Just add water.  The first two photos, the first of "dead" moss, the second of very much alive moss, were taken just seconds apart.  Note the small expansive section of moss on the top left to prove it is of the same location.  This moss is usually found on granite rocks in full sun.  When it is dry (almost always), it goes dormant and looks rather unsightly.  With rain or fog, it is a very pretty moss.  If watered in the dormant state, it looks pretty in seconds, but not as pretty after it rains.  Nature apparently has magical powers.
     Photos three through six were taken after a light snowfall.
     The last two photos were taken in Japan, where the stems were much longer than I ever saw elsewhere, up to six inches.
     This moss is not too common, but if you search long enough, you should find it where there are granite rocks in the sun.  If you add water and in three seconds the "dead stuff comes alive," you likely found some Hedwigia ciliata moss.  If so, the next time it rains, see how beautiful it is.