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What July is all about in my garden(picture heavy)

Posted by wieslaw59 Denmark (My Page) on
Fri, Jul 19, 13 at 21:08

July is about getting as much bang for my money as possible. The Big Bang comes in August, but July has something that August does not have: Delphiniums

A selection of shots :

A view photo DSC05948.jpg

A view photo DSC05949.jpg

A view photo DSC05951.jpg

A view photo DSC05969.jpg

A view photo DSC05957.jpg

Red and blue

Red and blue photo DSC05956.jpg

Blue and yellow

Thalictrum flava photo DSC05954.jpg

Blue and blue : delphinium Merlin and Lanzentraeger(darker blue)

Delphinium Merlin photo DSC05940.jpg

Delphinium seedling

Delphinium photo DSC05937.jpg

Blue and orange

 photo DSC05850.jpg

Yellow and red

Yellow Red photo Liliesjpg.jpg

Red and blue

Red plus blue photo DSC05874.jpg

Veronicastrum virginicum Lavenderturm

Veronicastrum virginicum photo DSC05930.jpg

My oldest delphinium(lost count of years , pre 2000)

Delphinium photo DSC05921.jpg

At evening time

Evening photo DSC05881.jpg

Yellow and yellow

A view photo DSC05953.jpg

A view

A view photo DSC05946.jpg

Enjoy!


Follow-Up Postings:

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RE: What July is all about in my garden(picture heavy)

Thank you, Wieslaw.

Truly exceptional.

I love all your July colours and colour combinations.

That you'll have a different, but equally beautiful garden in August, is attributable to your skill as a perennial gardener.


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RE: What July is all about in my garden(picture heavy)

  • Posted by mxk3 z5b/6 MI (My Page) on
    Sat, Jul 20, 13 at 10:10

Wow!


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RE: What July is all about in my garden(picture heavy)

You have brightened my morning!

A couple of questions -

I am finally going to try some delphiniums next year. What ones do you recommend? Belladonnas? Elatum? Something else? Any particular cultivar (hopefully something I can buy this side of the pond!). Any hints for keeping them healthy and happy?

Secondly, what is that puffy yellow flower?

Finally, I love your lilies! Mine are done for the year.


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RE: What July is all about in my garden(picture heavy)

Wieslaw, with all those delphiniums, do you have trouble with the worm that eats the flowers? And if so, how do you cope with it?
I have the healthiest most robust plants this year, but I see some of them are affected and the bloom is ruined.
I don't know what this worm is called, but it eats out the bud, hence no flowers. They are tiny and many. If I'm going to go to the trouble of staking etc, I'd like to be rewarded by blooms!

I always look forward to pictures of your wonderful gardens.


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RE: What July is all about in my garden(picture heavy)

Very colorful and beautiful! You have established a nice collection of perennials that look like they're thriving in your conditions. Wow I can't imagine that August gets even more floriferous!


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RE: What July is all about in my garden(picture heavy)

Sunnyborder, mxk3- thanks!

a2Zmom, the yellow fluffy thing is Thalictrum flavum ssp. glaucum. I have 3 belladonnas of which I had Piccolo and Volkerfrieden for several years and Atlantis for 2 years. Piccolo stands exceptionally well(stormproof). For the first time this year it got mildewed so I was forced to cut it down. But normally it is breathtaking .Of the elatum ones I have some I bought and many from seed. The bought ones are mainly of German origin and were created by Karl Foerster in the first half of the last century. I chose those which stand up without staking. Jelitto Seeds had seed from the best cultivars for many years, that's where I bought the seed. But I do not know if they still sell them. I only keep the best seedlings, and throw the floppers out. The English cultivars are mainly good for cut flowers, their florets are too big and too heavy to stand up in the garden , and they need special staking.

North53, now that you mentioned this: resounding YES! And FOR THE FIRST TIME IN MY LIFE!!! I wouldn't know, but I observed a flock of sparrows landed on 2 plants. There was so many of them , that some florets broke! I immediately checked what was going on, and I could not notice any worms, so I assumed the sparrows just ate the buds for fun. Now I have to check again!

Some more combinations

Phlox and Eryngium alpinum

Phlox Eryngium photo DSC05965.jpg

Eryngium alpinum and delphinium seedling

Blue Blue photo DSC05833.jpg

Eryngium alpinum from seed are like snowflakes: each has its own pattern of "teeth"

 photo DSC05836.jpg

Eryngium photo DSC05832.jpg

Aruncus Horatio, I kept it because my wife likes it. It is bigger than I expected, very robust

Aruncus Horatio photo DSC05848.jpg

My oldest plant 30+, Lythrum salicaria

 photo DSC05990.jpg

Here is the delphinium on which sparrows have landed and broke the florets

 photo DSC05989.jpg

Blue and red

 photo DSC05994.jpg

This post was edited by wieslaw59 on Sat, Jul 20, 13 at 12:08


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RE: What July is all about in my garden(picture heavy)

as always.. stunning...

thx for the effort to take the pix.. upload them.. and post them.. i personally know what a chore that can be ...

ken


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RE: What July is all about in my garden(picture heavy)

Beautiful! You are really making me rethink eryngium. Bought two varieties when I first started gardening, and lost both, and haven't had any since. I might have to rectify that after seeing your photos!

Thank you for sharing!

Dee


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RE: What July is all about in my garden(picture heavy)

Beautiful!! I am going to have to research those delphiniums that don't flop. I love delph's and they grow well for me, but they break and flop if I don't stake them. Which is not only a pain, but I don't like the look of stakes in the garden.


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RE: What July is all about in my garden(picture heavy)

Your garden is always amazing. Thanks for posting these stunning pics.


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RE: What July is all about in my garden(picture heavy)

Wieslaw, I grow that variety of meadow rue but mine does not look like that!

Mine is only two years old and is grown is part shade. I wonder if it just needs time to bulk up? Because the flowers are very wispy at the moment.


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RE: What July is all about in my garden(picture heavy)

Terrene, August has heleniums, phloxes in all colours, helianthus and orientpet lilies. Those combined , with a few others, make the biggest bang here, as far as perennials are concerned.

a2Zmom, I propagated them from seed, and out of 100 seedlings I kept only 2 most fluffy, with bluest foliage, and standing up best. So it was a hard selection. So no wonder they look more spectacular than a random plant you can buy in a nursery.

 photo DSC05979.jpg

Some more pictures:

Geranium pratense Violaceum Plenum

 photo DSC05982.jpg

Campanula lactiflora Superba, looks best in the evening

 photo DSC05984.jpg

 photo DSC05985.jpg

Cimicifuga dahurica

 photo DSC05983.jpg
 photo DSC05961-1.jpg

Lilium davidii, one of my absolute favourites

 photo DSC05981.jpg

Daylily What Nerve!

 photo DSC05995.jpg


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RE: What July is all about in my garden(picture heavy)

LOL, I might get one of those daylilies just for the name! Its awesome!

Dee


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RE: What July is all about in my garden(picture heavy)

I agree, thanks for posting. So lovely to see. Interesting also how blooming times of similar plants vary by location.

In a garden walk last week one garden had several hundred different day lilies. Reading the names was half the fun.


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RE: What July is all about in my garden(picture heavy)

100 seedlings! I assume that they had to grow to a far size for you to know the information you were looking for.

I'm not sure I'd have the room or the patience.


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