13,520 Garden Web Discussions | Perennials

any such.. you use according to the label .. perhaps supplemented by the companies website ...
ken
Here is a link that might be useful: all links on that page are from the CO. website.... after the first advert

Have you considered Milorganite? Of course there is no true deterrent besides buckshot for a hungry deer, this seems to work well for me. My prperty is not frnced but I did grow some veggies last summer with no issues. If nothing else it is a lot cheaper than other offerings and my Canas absolutely thrived on it.

Looks pretty healthy to me.
Brown leaf tips can be a sign of low humidity, but also could relate to other culture problems. Having older leaves turning yellow from time to time is normal.
Frequency of watering per week is not a good measure of sufficiency (or overwatering). Make sure the pot isn't sitting in water and that the soil a few inches down isn't staying soggy between waterings. Too much water or fertilizer or too small a pot could be a problem. These palms like at least a bright location, preferably at least a few hours of sun a day (moving them suddenly into full sun could cause leaf burning).
Good luck.

you might also want to chime in the the houseplant forum .. and the palm forums ... if there is one ...
is that a very new leaf.. if so.. you might be over-watering ...
and the media in the pot behind.. looks awful peaty ... which further retains a lot of water ...
we dont do palms in MI ... but i see them in sand country ... and a peat media is just about the polar opposite of sand ...
so i suggest you look to your media also ...
ken


Hi KSimS,
Very attractive.
Love the colours.
That business about blue/purple and the camera:
I don't know much about photography, but got a new camera a while back. Started using it this spring and had a fit when the purple crocuses appeared blue in the pictures.
A friend pointed me to the "white balance" function on the camera. Turning it from White Balance Automatical to Daylight, for garden pictures, is currently solving the problem.

Thank you to everybody for your messages and for your help.
I them you that around here in my residential have more plumbagos planted but are with white flowers and not very attractives for me, I prefer the sky blue flowers.
But her I will place photos of the all plumbagos for that you can look.

Hi
Is a very common landscape plant in s. florida (U S) Comes in red white and at least 3 shades of blue .
Can't imag ine how it would grow in Colombia !!lol Very rampant I have 3 patches over 10 feet in both directions with constant pruning. IT does stay in flower year around
no pests and I love blue flowers!! lol
Have never tried to propagate it as it's very common in nurseries here .. Pick an area where the is enough area to expand against a fence is good. gary

After the late season freeze (Feb) and record breaking March rainfall the PNW experienced. I am not surprised that many plants have taken a big hit. In my role as a garden consultant, I have seen all manner of even very hardy plants bite the dust this season. The combination of a pretty mild winter and the early end of dormancy for a lot of plants followed by a 1-2 weird weather punch was just more than they could handle. Couple that with hollyhocks' typical short lifespan and I'd think it was time to replant with fresh plants :-))

Yes, I was surprised to see that they had a thin tuber..Shaped kind of like a dahlia. I believe, but would not swear, that I bought the double mixture from Costco. I am going to be patient, and maybe dig up around in there and see if there is any sign of life. They got to be 8' or so tall, and very impressive. I used Bayer Advanced disease care when they got RUST. They were gorgeous. Will keep you updated.


laceyvail, I wouldn't dig them up just yet, just cut back if you can't stand looking at it. 10 yrs is very established. The cluster of tubers underground are probably OK, some of mine got quite a bit of winter scald so the leaves aren't what they usually are but they are just now putting out new blooms -- no new leaves of yet here a bit further south, they do that later.
If they got too wet however, they might have rotted. You can sometimes tell by your nose with a bit of probing if thats the case.

In my gardens, Arabis foliage has always looked a bit tattered in summer, while Iberis (both Autumn Beauty and a couple other kinds I have forgotten) look better. I don't know if it's where I have it in only about 4 hours of sun, but Autumn Beauty has a less nice plant form, floppier than the other Iberis I have grown. If I were to do it again, I would get a shorter, spring-only blooming Iberis rather than Autumn Beauty which has spring and fall blooms.
I don't know what Arabis doesn't like about my growing conditions, since this is the second garden I've had where it's languished in full sun and well drained soil.
I have quite acid, fine sandy loam in this garden, and where I have previously grown Iberis was in acid loam, former farmland. Where I previously grew Arabis was at the top of a rock wall in well-drained rocky loam.

I was just cleaning up a bed today that is edged with Autumn Beauty, and I am considering removing it. It is leggy and floppy, no matter how much I cut it back, and the bloom is rather sparse. It also didn't do too well over this past winter, but I am not holding that against it - lots of things didn't do well this winter! Perhaps it's not in the right spot, but I am not overly thrilled with it. The foliage is pretty and in bloom it is lovely, but the form leaves something to be desired, IMO, and the bloom is not nearly heavy enough to make up for it... even though those few sporadic blooms in fall are precious... I may look into a different variety, because it is a pretty plant in general.
I have some rockcress in the very first garden I planted years ago, which is now very neglected, I'm ashamed to say, and the rockcress has spread quite a bit. I guess I wasn't aware it was a groundcover. I don't dislike it; it is a nice little groundcover with pleasant white blooms. But since this bed is neglected, I can't give a really accurate account of it since I haven't paid much attention! Obviously it is hardy, spreads well if that is what you want, and thrives on neglect, lol. I plan (ha, ha,) on renovating this bed this year so I may take out a lot or at least move it off the walkway, which it completely covers at the moment.
Dee


Well I cut them all back to about 6-8" so now just so watch and wait. We just had a ton of rain over the earlier part of this week so my beds are pretty wet, but no standing water in them at least.
TexasRanger thanks for the sand suggestion, but I think I'll wait and see how it all goes. I've heard conflicting stuff about sand and clay soil so for now I'm just making sure we till some composted manure in any new beds although it probably wouldn't hurt to use it as a yearly addition to the top of the beds too. Hopefully they'll be as big as yours someday.
Thanks again for all of your advice, everyone!


It really shouldn't matter if these are purchased bare root or potted. I also think it would be difficult to find these mail order as bare root plants. I've never seen them this way.
I suspect there's another reason your potted ones didn't survive. Possibly the time of the year you purchased and planted them, were they dried out in their pots for any length of time, were they watered adequately when you planted them, etc. etc.
Kevin

Do NOT wait until Fall. It's tricky to store bulbs that long without killing them, particularly lily.
The Daffodils may have a papery covering. The lilies will be scaly. The two of them can probably cohabit fine. (The daffodil blooms early and goes to sleep). The monkey grass is the thing you have to be careful to get rid of if you want the lilies to survive.



Probably Trillium erectum....It is a native wildflower but, unless your house was built in a wooded area, it was most likely planted - perhaps from wild stock from a nearby woods....? They will go dormant in the summer. If you want to move it, wait until it is dormant and then dig up the root, which looks vaguely bulb-like. If it's happy where it is, I'd be inclined to leave it rather than risk losing it in a move.
Thanks Woody, here's a picture where it lives. If you want to really see it you have to wade through the lilacs to lift a flower. But they give it the shade it likes. I guess I'll leave it.
Laddie