As a follow-up to my October Bloom Day post on roses, my roses were still blooming well into November. Last month, I somehow left out Excellence von Schubert, so here you go.
Autumn Beauty: the Fern Fronds change color too
The Frost is Coming: It’s Time to Cut All the Flowers
Well, it’s supposed to get down to twenty-four degrees tonight, so I cut down all those beautiful flowers from Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day, only a few days ago. It’s sad to see another gardening season end, but at least I had a couple more weeks this year than I had last year.
A Late Season Bouquet in Tyra’s Garden
I always take note of particularly inspiring arrangements and Tyra’s of papavar seed heads, fig, ivy and more is a beautiful example of a bouquet without blooms. Check it out here:
Rosa virginiana hips
Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day November 2008 – More Blooms Than I Ever Expected
Well, I still thankfully have yet to experience my first frost of the season, so my zone 6b garden has more blooms than I would normally expect for this time of year. Given my prior bloom days posts for September featuring dahlias and October featuring roses, I’m going to focus on other blooms–annuals, perennials and one flowering tree–though both dahlias and roses are also continuing to bloom. Check out what is blooming in other bloggers‘ gardens over at May Dreams Gardens.
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One of my favorite clematis, ‘Venusa Violacea‘ in the Cutting Garden.
Autumn Cherry in the Walled Garden (more pictures and information here).
Petunia in a container in the Bird Garden.
Brown Eyed Susans continue to bloom from August until the frost in the Front Border. As a cut flower, it lasts for over a week in a vase.
Japanese Anemone in the Front Border. The white was so bright it took me several attempts to get this picture.
Mexican Sunflower in the Children’s Garden.
Verbena bonariensis in the raised vegetable beds in the Children’s Garden.
Globe Thistle on Lilac Hill.
Mexican Bush Sage – Salvia leucantha outside the Children’s Garden.
Chrysanthemum on the edge of the Rose Garden.
Nasturtium trailing from a container on the deck.
Petunia in a container on the deck.
Salvia elegans in a large pot on the deck.
Asclepias curassavica–annual Butterfly Weed–at the entrance to the Bird Garden.
Salvia farinacea outside the Bird Garden.
Geranium ‘Roxanne’ is everywhere in the garden. It’s one of the most useful edging plants I know. This one is in the Long Border. "Put the Pruners Down and Step Away": Autumn is not the Time to be Pruning your Roses and Hydrangeas
As a relatively new blogger, I’m still learning about all of the different blogging tools available. On Google Analytics, I’ve just figured out how to look at the keywords and web pages that visitors to my blog have been searching and reading.
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Much to my surprise, I’ve recently attracted a lot of traffic to my prior posts on pruning roses and hydrangeas. My advice? Wait until late winter/early spring. I do absolutely no pruning of hydrangeas at this time of year and the only pruning of roses that I do is either of completely dead wood or canes that have grown so tall that they are likely to break in the winter winds and damage the rest of the plant. For more information, click below:
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Hydrangeas: Why and How to Prune
How to Prune Roses, Part I: An Introduction
How to Prune Roses, Part II: Old Rose Pruning Secrets
How to Prune Roses, Part III: Why Prune?




















