The Fifth Annual Garden Cruise

Should you be so inclined, you can get up tomorrow, and go.  Our fifth annual garden cruise-a tour we sponsor to benefit the Greening of Detroit, starts at 9, and ends at 4:30.

We put on a reception afterwards-a light supper, summer style beverages as in gin and tonics, and French white wine, and the lively company of other garden afficianados.

100% of the proceeds from the sale of the tickets goes to the Greening.  That money helps fund their educational and summer employment programs.  They have an idea about a better city, and we support that idea.  100%.

All of the 7 landscapes on tour are very different-each the product of a person with a passion for the garden.  Each is chock full of interesting moves, and delightful decisions.

It is one of my most favorite days of the garden season.  It is the only summer day I am home all day.  I like seeing and talking with the people who tour. I like hearing what they have to say about my garden, and I am happy to share anything I know about the plants, or the design.

Afterwards I will join lots of other people at the shop-the seventh garden on our tour-to talk about what everyone has seen.  The nicotiana garden in the front is unbelievably beautiful-and fragrant.

Each gardener puts their best foot forward-and their best effort into creating a garden experience.  Should you decide to go, I feel confident you will be glad you did. 

We will be at the shop at 8 tomorrow morning, for those who want to get up and go.  A cruise ticket is 35.00.  A ticket with the reception-50.00.  We can take your payment info by phone, and email you the ticket.  Or you can stop by.

Hope to see you.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Nicotiana Fete And Fandango

 nicotiana alata

Being ever so fond of all of the cultivars of nicotiana, I planted the boxwood parterre in front of the shop this year with a mix of 3 kinds.  Nicotiana “perfume white” is short growing, and as  fragrant as the name suggests.  Nicotiana alata white is a taller, lanky growing nicotiana with larger and more widely spaced branches and flowers.  Bur nearest and dearest to my heart is the big growing species, nicotiana mutabilis.  I can’t manage to let a summer go by without planting it-usually in my own yard.  This year I planted lots of them at the shop.

The garden had an odd look early on-every single plant got its own 4 foot tall bamboo stake.  There for a while, we had a stake garden.  But there are few things more trying than staking a plant that needed that stake weeks previous.  If you have ever tried to get an Annabelle hydrangea that has gone over in wind or rain off the ground, you know what I mean.  The afterthought staking always looks like that afterthought.

nicotiana mutabilis

Our stakes go a good foot into the ground.  Given the torrential rains and high winds that accompanied all the heat we have had the last 10 days, I am so glad we did it that way.  We did not loose a single plant.  In another week, those stakes will completely disappear from view.  Nicotiana mutabilis is never more beautiful for me than it is in the fall-it is happy in cool weather.  But I see no signs of heat stress here.  We have watered heavily and regularly-as much for the boxwood as the nicotiana. Like the annual flowers, woody plant material stressed by too dry conditions are more susceptible to other problems.

  nicotiana perfume white

There are a few perfume white nicotianas in the window boxes.  They are a great size and height for a container that is already a good distance off the ground.  We keep the giant leaves at the bottom trimmed back, so as not to cast shade on the neighbors. When using nicotiana in containers, the grooming at ground level is important. They produce leaves prodigiously.  

nicotiana mutabilis

The flowers of nicotiana mutabilis are very small, and an utterly simple shape.  But a happy plant will produce thousands of them.  I don’t understand the science, but each plant will produce pale, almost white flowers, pink flowers-and hot pink flowers-all at the same time, on the same plant.  The slender stems make it seem as though those small blooms are floating, hovering over the container.

Nicotiana alata lime peroduces flowers that are just that-lime green.  In a good season, they will bloom heavily the entire summer.  I have seen them peter out in really hot weather.  In that case, I cut them back a little, and feed.  They seem to revive when the weather cools off.

I remember taking this picture of a pot at home some years ago in September.  The nicotiana was sending out giant thick bloom stalks.    The composition was no doubt lopsided, but I loved the exuberance of it all.  The stiff habit of those giant dahlias is completely masked by that cloud of flowers. 

nicotiana

This English concrete pot cast in a classic Italian style is a huge pot-it measures 39″ by 39″.  The surface is 12 square feet.  The nicotiana mutabilis makes a giant airy bouquet-the pot is the smallest element of the composition.  This picture was taken the beginning of September.  I like annual plants that can go the distance-an entire summer season-and on into the fall.  I like to get tired of looking after my container plantings before they give out. 

nicotiana mutabilis

One of more foolish container moments-planting nicotiana mutabilis in a relatively small Italian terra cotta urn. The bigger foolishness?  How much I loved the look. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What’s Rob Been Up To?

hanging baskets

What Rob has been up to involves some steel, some shade plants, and the airspace.  Before I say more, I should make it clear that I have always detested hanging baskets.  I would only purchase one to plant in a container.  Under no circumstances would I hang pots of plants in the air.   Why anyone would think this is a good look is beyond me.  A planting disassociated from the earth or the ground plane- is this innovative-or is it just plain silly?  The usual white plastic baskets with zinc wires terminating in a reinforced coathanger hook-they do not help the hanging basket cause. I get that growers choose a hanging basket that reflects heat, and conserves moisture. Why wouldn’t any garden center grow a second crop, in their greenhouse airspace?  A garden center is all about delivering a fresh and lustily growing group of plants to a consumer.  They have nothing to say about the look-but I do.  Suffice it to say that when I see white plastic hanging baskets fresh from the nursery summarily hung from a hook on the porch-this idea about gardening makes me wince.  However, Rob is up to gardening in the air in a way I find incredibly appealing.

hanging baskets

What has Rob been up to?  He ordered a series of sizes in steel spheres.  He ordered a series of fiber pot bowls.  Once planted, his grow spheres were hung from the branches of the big lindens at the shop.  Having had no end of requests for perennial or annual plantings underneath and in the shade of big trees, I applaud his idea.  A fiber bowl can be folded in half, and wedged into the sphere.  Shade loving plants can be planted in great soil, in that fiber bowl..  The bowl breathes. The plants live, and thrive.

alternative hanging baskets

Every gardener I know has that dead zone.  Deep shade cast by a tree.  The soil underneath that tree is congested with roots that require an axe, and infinite effort to penetrate.  Endless articles have been written about what to plant in the dry shade under an old tree.  Work and more work-and to what good end?  Are your plantings in the deep shade cast by an old tree thriving and newsworthy?  Mine are not.  I am starting to like these grow spheres, hung in the lower branches of a shade tree.  These Miss Muffet caladiums in a mossed basket hanging from a branch of our lindens-I am beginning to get interested in his particular take on the hanging basket. 

birds nest ferns

Rob’s planted spheres are remarkably original, and remarkably lively.  He dispensed with the white plastic, and the coathanger. His idea is both sculptural, and natural. He took great pains to hang the spheres at different heights via a hank of jute. 

hanging baskets

The shop has nothing planted in the ground, save our trees.  Every square foot of the ground is gravelled.  This makes it easy to display all manner of ornament for the garden.  What a relief to see his shady basket creations hung high and low, under those trees.  I would certainly recommend that if you plan to add hanging baskets to your garden, figure out how to hang them at a level that makes sense to your eye.  A white plastic basket in the air is a visual tutorial in a lack of gardening effort.  Moss baskets, please.   

 

vinca maculatum

 I do have a great fondness for vinca maculatum.  The variegated leaves are substantial.  They keep on growing, late into the fall.  They are easy to winter over.  The vines drape down, and keep on draping.  Baskets of them hung high will eventually make for a curtain of green that goes to the ground.  The plastic baskets here are entirely hidden by the vines.  We hung them very high in the grape arbor.  Julie insists she needs a ladder to water them.  These hanging baskets are ok by me.

green plants

Just inside the shop door is a sky light.  Rob has hanging baskets of pothos cris-crossing that 6′ by 6′ light space.  I would think by fall his hanging garden will provoke a great deal of comment.  In conjunction with his hanging shade gardens, his selaginella brick constructions.  He has planted a number of containers with shade plants set way above the rim of the pots.   

birds nest ferns

Selaginella, or club moss, is a densely growing shade loving tropical plant.  A four inch pot of club moss is a 4″ square brick-green on the top, and heavily rooted on all of the other sides.  Rob has been planting shade pots-in this case, a birdsnest fern, in a mound of selaginella.

green container planting

OK, I usually plant 4″ pots with the rootball cube in the ground, and the top side facing the light.  Rob has a different idea.  Any plant can be planted on the 45-by this I mean, on a 45 degree angle.  Those rooty soil cubes can make a wall.  This selaginella has no problem living,  planted on the slant.  This French concrete pot is all the better for a planting that lifts off.  The plants are beautiful.  The planter is equally beautiful.  The sum total of the two-all about Rob.

club moss

This planting of his is extraordinarily beautiful.  I just noticed it a few days ago.  What Rob is up to is so quiet, so self effacing-and so so and very very very good.  The rooted bricks of selaginella planted on an angle enabled him to present a single bird’s nest fern high off this French terra cotta pot.  Beautiful, yes?  His grow spheres, beautiful too.      

 

What’s Buck Been Up To?

spun-steel-bowl.jpg

If you read this blog regularly, you know that I have a company, the Branch Studio, whose sole mission is to design and fabricate ornament for the garden.  It is a small company, but it produces some very beautiful pots, sculpture, pergolas-and fountains.  The opportunity for me to design garden ornament, and get it fabricated for specific projects adds a lot to my landscape design projects.   

contemporary steel fountain

Detroit Garden Works is a retail outlet for those garden objects that get made at Branch.  We make pots, sculpture, pergolas, plant tables, arbors-the list is long.  Buck, Salvadore, and Dan are responsible for the fabrication we do in steel, wood, and concrete.  Buck takes a sketch of mine, and creates an object.  A Saarinen scholar in architecture at Cranbrook in the 1970’s, and a previously practicing architect for 30 years means no project of mine daunts him.  Bowl shaped steel-really daunting.  He took to it without any protest.   

contemporary fountains

He has fabricated a pair of fountains similar to this one for a company in California that owns properties across the US-one went to Fort Worth Texas, the other will ship out to Florida in a few weeks.  Those steel bowl shapes enchanted me-could we not design a contemporary fountain that could be delivered, installed, and plugged in? 

In March, Buck was well on his way with this fountain.  He was sure he needed a new Miller tig welder-ok, Buck.  The details of his fabrication -ingenious, as usual.  The bowl sits on a pedestal of steel that can sit at grade, if there is a garden planned in concert.  That pedestal can be buried below grade, should a client with a contemporary landscape like to see the bowl sitting, appearing to float, just above the grade of a gravel or stone terrace. 

Though round steel is entirely stable and strong due to its shape, the steel in this fountain is thick.  We placed it at the shop with the help of a loader. Buck wanted to be sure that if a child chose to climb up the side, or an adult decided to sit on the edge, the bowl would not move, or tip.    

Four people and a machine were involved in placing it at the shop.  The process of setting a fountain level with the horizon is time consuming, and essential.  More than any element of nature, water is always perfectly level.  A vessel out of level-the water will describe that problem in clear and obvious detail. 

I could not have been more pleased about the look of this contemporary steel fountain.  It has lots of options for installation.  Buck plumbed it, and set a good sized pump in the bottom.  A valve controls the rate of the flow of water.  The electric cord comes out at ground level from the pedestal. 

contemporary fountains

Arrange for delivery.  Install at whatever height seems good, in whatever landscape that asks for a coolly contemporary fountain 60 inches in diameter.  Plug it in, or hardwire it.  Buck thought through all of the issues.  As usual, he did the lion’s share of the work.  He makes it really easy to commit.  This fountain brings a smile to my face every time I look at it.   How so?  He builds beautiful things.  

contemporary fountains
Buck and his group have been really busy-I need to catch everyone up.