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I got it! (a sought after plant, of course)

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This a tale of lust, plant lust. My first sighting of the variegated daphniphyllum was in this garden, such a beautiful plant!

How could I not fall in “love”…

Then of course there’s the huge specimen at Hersonswood, on the Kitsap Penninsula. I stood and stared in awe…

All internet searches seemed to lead to Buchholz & Buchholz, yet when I asked I was told it was not available. Heck even the standard green daphniphyllum I admired at Portlands Chinese Garden seemed nearly impossible to find...

At the Hardy Plant Society "Winter Interest" display at the Yard Garden and Patio Show I spied Daphniphyllum macropodum foliage from Roger at Gossler Farms Nursery.

That had me remembering...the owner of that fabulous garden (where I first laid eyes on the object of my affection) had mentioned his plant came from Gossler Farms, and as luck would have it we'd planned a little trip south to Eugene, Oregon…Gossler Farms was nearby, I wonder!? Searching their online catalogue yielded no results so I called, after all they’re not open regular business hours and I needed to make sure a visit was okay. Ya, they might have one, we’d take a look when I was there (!!!).

The night before our trip to Eugene I attended Plant Nerd Night. Dan Hinkley (of Heronswood fame, now selling plants under the Windcliff label) was there and selling a couple small Daphniphyllum macropodum for $14.

I had a moment and grabbed one. I mean sure I might find the variegated plant the next day but wasn’t a little $14 insurance a good thing?

In the end I put it back, only to watch the last one be grabbed by another shopper. I realized I hadn’t recorded the tag information and asked her if I could take a photo of the tag before she bought it. You’d think I’d asked her if I could take the plant, she gave me a harsh look but handed over the tag.

Just in case you’re wondering if I did buy anything at Nerd Night I’ll diverge from the topic at hand and share my purchases. First was Pittosporum tenuifolium 'Atropurpureum’ from Cistus which I passed up at the YGP Show. Just look at that sexy foliage!

And secondly an Ochagavia carnea, from Mr Hinkley. Reportedly hardy spikes, of course I have to try them.

Okay back to our story, the hunt for the variegated daphniphyllum. When I first arrived at Gossler Farms there was no one around so I wandered in and out of the greenhouses, in my own little plant nirvana. I eventually found these…

So I at least knew I could make up for letting the Windcliff plant slip through my fingers the night before.

Then, finally, in a sort of a propagating and special plants space, I found this…

It’s what I was hoping for but it certainly didn’t look happy, extremely unhappy actually. Further hunting turned up a very large plant in a greenhouse that was off in the distance, perhaps off limits (oops).

Beautiful but too big to haul home, and probably too big to sell.

About then Roger Gossler joined me, I identified myself as the one who’d called looking for the variegated daphniphyllum. He took me to the sad plant but said he thought there was another tucked away in an outer greenhouse. We found it, but the graft had taken in a rather odd way (a 90 degree angle in the trunk) and we both feared the plant wouldn’t be structurally sound long term. He was sure the sad plant was only sad because it needed water. I was dubious, primarily because I’d recently lost a plant that looked exactly like this one did.

Decisions, decisions…

I took a leap of faith and went for it, buying the drooping one rather than the bent one. And look at it now…

I’ve got my variegated daphniphyllum!

All material © 2009-2014 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

More from Gossler Farms...

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As I mentioned yesterday, the weekend before last had me at Gossler Farms Nursery in Springfield, Oregon. I’ve already sheared the biggest highlight of the visit but there was so much else to see!

This nice agave collection is cozied up next to the office under the eaves.

There are some good ones in there, especially surprising for a nursery specializing in magnolias, dogwoods and witchhazels...

But oh the magnolias...

Kinda hard to believe someday these will be tall cardiocrinum...

Don't you just love the possibilities?

Oh ya...

Fall color in March...

Rhododendron 'Elsie Frye'

Rhododendron edgeworthii

And the family from which my Rhododendron 'Ebony Pearl' came from...

Their gunnera, all toasty in a greenhouse, are a lot further along than mine. But heck, I'm just happy mine has a green leaf showing up after last winter's cold.

Trochodendron aralioides, or the Wheel Tree

I was just telling a friend the other day that I'm not so sure if I like these.

Oh the magic altered schedule of a greenhouse,!

No label on this grevillea, it's a looker though!

One of my strange infatuations, Cunninghamia lanceolata.

And one of those yellow pines everyone is so hot for...

Quercus dentata 'Carl Ferris Miller'

No label on this guy and he was the only one of his type around. I think it's Pittosporum illicioides 'Strappy' and since I killed mine by moving it and accidentally breaking off its largest root I really considered grabbing this one, but no, it stayed behind.

This greenhouse appears to be more of a propagation and "special plants" space, it's where I found the sad looking variegated daphniphyllum.

Finally it was time to wander the display garden a bit, just a bit though the weather was quite wet. Here's a large Trochodendron aralioides, see what I mean about not being sure I like it. It's not terribly attractive, in my opinion.

And see what I mean about wet?

And windy too.

I love these...

Okay I've fast forwarded to the end of our visit. I've paid for the daphniphyllum and it was time to get on the road home, however how could we leave when there was free entertainment. The little guy, a Corgi named Bennie was using the big dogs tail as a chew toy, and then his body as a trampoline, it was really too cute.

And he knows it...

All material © 2009-2014 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

Tetrapanax papyrifer is my favorite plant in the garden, this week…

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It's now official, I have no new ideas. I could have sworn that I hadn't featured the tetrapanax as a favorite plant, yet there it is featured last June. Okay, so I never intended to repeat myself but I'm just so happy they are putting out new leaves after our  winter cold that I had to talk about them.

Last December when we went into a deep freeze for a week with a low low low of 12 F I wrapped the trunks with pipe insulation, cheap and easy insurance! I didn't want to loose the height and it turns out I haven't.

This is how things looked last summer...

So so so happy to see those little leaves, which will become big leaves.

This is the (too) tall trunk on the far side of the patio. I didn't wrap it because I kind of wanted to knock this plant back a bit. The only thing that really seems to get the tetrapanax sending up shoots is digging in the soil around the plant or having the main trunk die back from a freeze. I thought maybe if I didn't protect this one it would die back, after all it has before.

Looks like it had other ideas.

This is what it looked like last summer, near the outer edge of desirable height.

That crazy crook in the trunk is where it died back in 2010.

On to the stock tank tetapanax, this is my oldest, that tall business at the back is the original plant.

This is what it looked like last summer.

There are new leaves on some of the smaller shoots around the mama plant...

But nothing on mama herself. That dead end is the 2010 freeze point. The two branched bits are where she regrew that spring.

I have a feeling that's what's happening again, the trunk has little nubbins starting to grow all the way up. Experience says a couple of them will take off and become new arms, the others will die. I can live with that.

I'm just so happy there are new leaves showing up and they aren't all dead. To get the stats on this FABULOUS plant visit my original post here. What's looking good in your garden this week?

All material © 2009-2014 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

Pot Incorporated at Contained Exuberance

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If you've been to the Xera Plants retail shop here in Portland you've no doubt seen the potted creations of Bob Hyland, owner of Contained Exuberace/Hyland Garden Design, who shares their space. While I always enjoy checking out what Bob's come up with, things just got a whole lot more exciting because he's carrying the brightly colored hanging "Hover Dish" pots designed by Pot, Incorporated. You know, these guys...(photo of their display at the Northwest Flower & Garden Show, taken by Vanessa Gardner Nagel)...

Since I missed the NWFG Show this year I hadn't gotten to see these containers in person, until now.

The are just as fabulous as I suspected they would be.

Naturally Bob had a wealth of plants to chose from to plant these up...

I have to share this unexpected gem just outside the Xera shop door...Adinah from Xera came up with this creative solution for a space that could have easily become a neighborhood ashtray.

Too cute right?

These are pretty spectacular too. I've lusted after the metal version for years.

Bob's container choices tend toward neutral colors...

So when he throws in a pop of color it's all the more striking.

While chatting about the Pot, Inc. containers Bob commented on how well made they are.

With great details like the ability to release the wires and move them out of the way while planting.

And look, a drainage hole! Yay for that.

These are not inexpensive containers, priced at $125, $135 and $175, but also not out of the range of other comparable designs.

Before I left I had to head outside to soak up more sunshine and look at a few more containers...

Well designed hanging planters are so hard to find, I'm thrilled these are now available here in Portland!

All material © 2009-2014 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

Hiding ugly…

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When I posted photos of our new fence like this one…

I intentionally cropped them at the point where the color changes on our neighbor’s garage. I wanted you to be able to appreciate the fence, and not be distracted like I am every time I walk into the back garden. Of course in the interest of full disclosure the real ugly was pre-privet removal…

Closely followed by our new view.

Yes it’s hideous. Yes it screams 3rd grade child let loose with crayons. Yes I should march right over there and ask them if I can paint, after all it’s the back of their garages which they never see. However, I’ve learned there is no solution quite like the one you own. So I throw $60 of paint and 20 hrs of my time at a nice paint job. Then one of the houses sells and the new owner repaints, AUGH! So while I may still inquire about painting I really needed to take steps to conceal the ugly within the confines of our own property. Thinking thinking thinking…

A kind friend offered a chunk or two of Chusquea culeou 'Gigantea'– pretty much the dream of an instant screen. Ugly garage? What ugly garage?

A smart person probably would have gone for this option (free, instant, lush). However I just couldn’t shake the feeling this plant was too big and too shaggy for my small urban garden. I gave up the perfect screen in favor of a long term solution I would be happier with.

Yes, really. You read that right. Me, the gardener with no patience, chose a long term solution. No, hell did not just freeze over, at least I don’t think so.

So Andrew signed off on buying a specimen size plant. I started researching. I schemed and schemed and I changed my mind. This is the second crazy thing you’re going to read in this post. I had the okay to spend serious cash on a new big plant, but I chose not to. Instead I went shopping in my own garden. It turns out there is a hidden benefit to planting things too close together and in places where they don’t belong. You can liberate them! This poor loquat (Eriobotrya japonica) was planted too close to our house.

It was a small thing when I planted it, but 4 years later it was growing and obviously not in a place for long term success. Here it is shortly after purchasing and before planting (April of 2011), I was waiting for the house to be painted before planting.

This photo is from last summer…lush!

And there it is in its new home…

Fingers crossed that I got enough roots and it will make the move okay. Closer…

It’s got a little growing to do, I’m working on that patience thing.

All material © 2009-2014 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

Visiting the O’Byrnes nursery and garden…

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If you’re a hellebore lover the names Ernie & Marietta O'Byrne are legendary. They’re the plant breeders behind most of the spectacular hellebores now on the market. Their nursery just outside Eugene, Oregon, Northwest Garden Nursery, is only open to the public two weekends a year. I visited on March 8th.

While I do appreciate the beauty inherent in a spring blooming hellebore I am by no means a fanatic. I would have never considered venturing 2+ hours south just for the chance to purchase from the source. No I was the odd woman out who just came down to look at the garden, and not even the hellebores! My desire to visit was based on an article I read in the most recent Pacific Horticulture Magazine "Success with Dry Plants in Wet Conditions," written by Mary-Kate Mackey. Luckily since Pacific Horticulture puts their content online you can read it too (and check out pictures of the garden in high summer). As it turns out the object of my interest was the last part of the garden I visited and I really enjoyed the journey.

I started my tour by checking out the plants for sale, and even though I arrived just a couple of hours after opening on Saturday it was almost empty! This was the second weekend of their open garden and they were hit hard the first weekend.

There were several goregous plants with tags like this in them, their owners off touring the garden and leaving their loot behind.

The people in line to pay had overflowing carts...

And there were several people confused by sights like this, so many plants but not for sale.

Time to tour!

This is a very large garden and there was much to see...

This is just a tiny portion of the podophyllum pushing out of the ground.

There were dozens of trillium in bloom...

And even a schefflera! (with a Cistus label tucked in the ground) I should mention Marietta said their garden got down to -10F in December. She named a long list of plants that had died and been hauled away, while this one isn't looking it's best it looks pretty darn amazing considering.

And yes, there were plenty of these...

Crossing back over the main drive let's take a look at the area around the house.

That was a tall screen of bamboo separating the house and front garden from a busy road. Most of it was brown. What a job to clean that up, I hope they don't loose their screen entirely.

That bamboo looked a little better.

I feel a little like I'm sharing to much information but that set of french doors opened off what appeared to be their bedroom, what a lovely place to sleep on a summers night!

Perhaps Podophyllum 'Kaleidoscope'? (thanks Adam)

For a moment I couldn't tell what that mop headed business at the end of the path was, but I was definitely curious.

Aha!

This one really confused me, that foliage was perfection. I could only think it was some sort of euphorbia but it's actually Fritillaria persica.

Jeffrey Bale has been here...

Little baby hellebores...

And finally, we have arrived at our destination!

That foliage again!

Things are looking pretty darn good for early March coming off a disastrously cold winter.

However there were several manzanita that didn't make it.

This pruning job was responsible for quite the entertaining conversation I was lucky to overhear. One person was just sure these were pineapples, growing right here in the ground in Oregon! Her friend wasn't so sure. There were several back and forths but finally the pineapple theorist won the argument.

Another fatality, Garrya elliptica.

Another visitor commented this was the largest "hen and chick" he's ever seen.

Finally a glimpse in another green house and a future crop of hellebores...

Oh wait, I bought something! I had no intention, especially when the pickings were so slim. But this beautiful plant was waiting for me, somehow passed up by the others. Jade Tiger...

I love green flowers and the fact the purple splotches are on the top of the petals.

If you are nearby I highly recommend a visit to Northwest Garden Nursery, either arranged in advance (they are not open to the public regular hours) or try to make it to their open garden event next year!

All material © 2009-2014 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

Veratrum californicum is my favorite plant in the garden, this week…

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Seeing the green tips of Veratrum californicum pushing through the ground is the first, and most reliable, indication that spring has arrived in my garden. The syneilesis (Shredded Umbrella Plant) are about a week behind and the hosta are still sleeping. As those wide, bright green, pleated leaves unfold I am smitten all over again.

The first time I spotted that foliage was during a visit to Gossler Farms back in 2009 (photo from that visit below). I was infatuated and thankfully left with a name, my search finally ended at Portland Nursery about a year later.

Mine bloomed in 2012.

But couldn't manage to stay upright.

Nothing quite compared me for seeing this plant growing in the wild around Crater Lake. It was a definite "wow" moment.

My friend Peter, The Outlaw Gardener, recently shared photos of Veratrum californicum as part of his Foliage Follow-up post on the 16th, he included lots of fascinating information about the "dark-side" of this plant.

The stats from a gardening perspective...
  • perennial growing in USDA Zones 4a-9b
  • said to prefer sunny locations although for some reason I planted mine in the shade and it seems to be doing fine.
  • 3-6ft tall - although I imagine 3 is the plant and 6 is the bloom


Veratrum is nothing short of spectacular, and earns it's keep solely based on those leaves. However it does fade as the summer's heat approaches, that's fine for me because that's when it's neighbors step up to steal the show.

What's looking good in your garden this last week of March?

All material © 2009-2014 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

Elk Rock Garden

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I’ve only visited this garden once before, in February 2013 when the hamamelis were in full bloom. However since they're known for their magnolia collection I figured this was a great time to return, for a second look...

They did not disappoint. Of course on a beautiful day such as this everything looks good!

I really must return again to see this wisteria in bloom.

I heard of many a loropetalum dying last winter. Their L. chinese 'Pipa's Red' seems to be fine...

Can anyone tell me what this plant is (maybe a lily? maybe a particularly leafy Paris polyphylla, nah...). I love the foliage...

Such a huge expanse of lawn, a pity they don't allow picnicking.

It's still such an usual sight I couldn't stop staring at the cloudless blue sky.

Cryptomeria japonica 'Spiralis'

It was quite the beauty.

I have it in my head this is a Rhododendron sinogrande, perhaps we were told that on my last visit (it was a guided tour).

Stewartia pseudocamellia, I wish you could feel this bark, so smooth...

These didn't have name signs but maybe they're Chamaecyparis lawsoniana 'Wissel's Saguaro'?

We briefly considered adding an Araucaria araucana (monkey puzzle tree) to the garden (in the former Privet-lands), while I was thrilled at the idea we ultimately decided it just wasn't a good fit. I'll continue to enjoy them in other gardens.

Cute little ground-cover like plant, or weed? Anyone know?

Another stately monster, Taiwania cryptomerioides or Coffin Tree. Odd form...

But fabulously spiky little needles.

With colorful tips (cones?)

Finally the hamamelis which were in bloom last time, and bare this time. Maybe I'll return to see their fall color?

All material © 2009-2014 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

The Testa-Vought Garden, a stop on the 2013 Garden Blogger’s Fling...

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This garden was the last stop on a (long, hot) Saturday of garden fun last June. We were told the garden was designed by Bernard Trainor (a little name dropping, understandable) but it was obvious from the moment we stepped foot in the garden this was also a space loved and utilized by the home owners. Of course I started snapping photos the moment we got off the bus, out on the street.

But things really got interesting once we went behind the wall…

Yes this is a walled garden, something I covet dearly.

While it starts off tame, even a little sparse...

It gradually ramps up the excitement level...

Until you come face to face with this...

Oh California...

I'm not sure the kitty shared my California love on this hot day.

Scott and Peter, they seem to have shown up in a few of my photos from the Fling.

Going through and editing these photos now, 9 months post-Fling, this image (below) filled my heart with joy. Why? I remember everything in every garden as being the very picture of perfection. Not a leaf out of place...but look! There is debris in the plant, on the gravel top dressing and the surrounding paving. My garden is going to be a stop on the Portland Fling this summer and I can say with great confidence there will be a lot more of this, and a lot less perfection. May everyone look with a forgiving (and understanding) eye.

Monster Agave attenuata!

And that banksia! I presumed to know which it was at one time, but now I'm just confused by its beauty.

Amazing.

Oh hey, here's something I can grow! Eryngium, not sure which one.

Okay it's time to leave, I've retracing my steps towards the front.

But not before I look up and spy another monster Pineapple Guava. Wow, these really are trees.

It was the bloom that gave it away.

All material © 2009-2014 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

Meet Louis II…

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As regular readers know there are a few plants in my garden that have earned names. Those that come with big personality, or in the case of Louis, remind me of someone I know. Louis, the person, is a blogger up in British Columbia who shares my love of the sun and plants we “shouldn't” be growing here in the Pacific Northwest, his biggest love is for palms. Louis, the plant, a Trachycarpus fortunei, was purchased late in 2012, planted in early 2013 and formally introduced here.

When we next saw Louis it was in January of this year and he wasn’t looking good. The cold temperatures of December were wreaking havoc with is beautiful fronds.

It just got worse from there. Louis was a goner, never particularly lively he seems to have been doomed from the very beginning (and I did purchase him for a rock-bottom price at a nursery of somewhat questionable means). It seems fitting this, his last photo in my garden, was taken in the sunshine...bye-bye Louis...

So, I am pleased to introduce Louis II...
A gift from Sean at Cistus this stately Trachycarpus wagnerianus already has a few feet on the old Louis and looks to be a fine addition to the family. Welcome Louis II, may you live long and prosper...

All material © 2009-2014 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

The curse of the favorite…

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Seventy one favorites, that’s how many “favorite plant of the week” features I’ve done (plus one where I cheated and picked our new fence as a fav). Last weekend as I pulled out the Grevillea junipera ‘Molonglo’ and ‘Lava Cascade’ in the front garden I started wondering just how many of my fav’s are still around. Perhaps being a favorite might actually be a curse? After all so many of them have died, favorite one week, dead the next. It’s hardly a good sign.
Puya coerulea in the foreground with Grevillea juniperina 'Molonglo'in the background

Of course a lot of things I’ve featured simply because they were looking fabulous in that moment and I realized their time was doomed, like the Puya above which was featured right before our December cold snap.

But I’m curious, how does the overall list hold up, it's time to take a tally. My featured plants are listed below, the name is a link to their “fav” post and notes on their current condition follow (and yes, this is one of those posts that’s more for me than you, still I hope you find it useful).

Veratrum californicum - looks even better than last week when I featured it.

Tetrapanax papyrifer - of the 11 stalks total, 6 are leafing out at the top, the other 5 are showing signs of branching further down the trunk.

Polypodium scouleri/P. guttatum/Acorus gramineus 'Ogon' - all are happy and looking good.

Agave bracteosa - most of them sailed through the winter although 2 looked so bad I put them out of their misery.

Asparagus densiflorus 'Meyersii' - looks great!

Genista aetnensis - they booth look exactly like the day I posted about them.

Astelia nivicola ‘Red Gem’ - didn’t loose a single leaf, still looks wonderful.
Astelia nivicola ‘Red Gem’

Ajuga black scallop - looking good and preparing to bloom.

Podocarpus matudiae -  it’s growing, still needs to be put in the ground.

Yucca filamentosa 'Color Guard' - all good!

Adiantum venustum - lots of green new growth.

Aucuba japonica ‘Longifolia’ - had to dig one of the three to make room for the fence construction and it's since been replanted. None of them missed a beat.

Juniperus conferta 'Blue Pacific' - so perfect I bought a second and wish I could find a third or fourth.

Mr. Big, Agave Americana ‘Variegata’ - looking good after a winter spent in the shade pavilion greenhouse.

Puya coerulea - dead dead dead - a mushy brown mess.

Banksia marginata - top trunk and branches dead, all foliage dropped - might have come back from the roots but I don't have the space or patience to wait and see.

Fatsia polycarpa 'Needham's Lace' - I did the unthinkable and moved this beautiful plant a couple of weeks ago, it looked pretty sad but is starting to come out of it, I am hopeful it will make it.
Fatsia polycarpa ‘Needham’s Lace’

Euphorbia ‘Blackbird’ - both are in the beginning stages of blooming.

Agave gentryi 'Jaws' - the center cone turned to mush, the whole thing fell over and I put it out of its misery.

But it looks dead! (a Halloween addition) - the only plant from this ensemble post that didn't make it is a Pseudopanax crassifolius. It put up a good fight but succumbed to the winter madness.

Echium candicans 'Star of Madeira' - dead in a big dramatic and ugly way.
Echium candicans 'Star of Madeira

Eryngium venustum - all good, although greatly reduced in size from the winter chill.

Mesquite Tree (at my mother-in-law’s) - still happy.

Salvia discolor - very dead from the winter cold, I will buy another when I see it available.

x Mangave 'Macho Mocha' - a stinky pile of goo, I left the roots and only removed the bits above ground hoping it might make a comeback when the temperatures warm.
x Mangave 'Macho Mocha' with Agave ovatifolia in the foreground

Fatshedera 'Aureo Maculata' - a bit burned back by winters cold, all in all quite happy and I recently bought a seond plant!

Senecio mandraliscae - over wintering happily on the window sill and due to return outdoors soon.
Senecio mandraliscae

Cordyline Cha Cha - dead!

Hedychium coccineum 'Tara' - dormant and hopefully due to return, only time will tell.

Agave americana ‘striata’ - looking good in the shade pavilion greenhouse.

Clematis tibetana var. vernayi - new green growth started emerging about a month ago, very much alive.

Sansevieria cylindrica - powering on, still in less than ideal conditions.

Acanthus sennii - no show thus far, fingers crossed that any day it will start to push up out of the soil.

Eryngium maritimum - pretty much dead, I have very little hope.
Eryngium maritimum

Leucadendron ‘Ebony’ - happy and about to be planted up into a larger container.

Rodgersia 'Bronze Peacock' - still sleeping, should make an appearance soon.

Alstroemeria isabellana - oh gosh, I'm worried about this one, giving it a little more time to wake up.
Alstroemeria isabellana

Podocarpus alpinus ‘Orangeade’ - looking fabulous.

Tetrapanax papyrifer - I "faved" this one twice and it was covered at the top of the post.

Rhododendron sinogrande - it sailed through the winter cold!

Cordyline australis - gone but not forgotten, they'll come back from the roots for sure.

Wingthorn Rose - cut back to the base and starting to regrow, there is no stopping this one.
Wingthorn Rose

Echium x wildpretii 'Rocket' - it bloomed, I cut it out, the bees mourned.

Adiantum pedatum - all's good...starting to send up new shoots.

Leptospermum 'Dark Shadows' - made it through another winter in a protected container, gotta love that.

Sophora prostrata 'Little Baby’ - dunno. When I do the scratch test the trunks are green, but there are no leaves. I have hope.
Sophora prostrata 'Little Baby’

Agave parryi 'JC Raulston' - a couple of leaves have blemishes but I don't think I'll loose any.

Stachyurus salicifolius - buds about to burst open any day.
Stachyurus salicifolius

Epimedium wushanense - a little knocked back by the cold but keepin on keepin on.

Euphorbia stygiana - so beautiful in it's demise but dead dead dead.

Sempervivum - just dandy.

Eriobotrya japonica - the oldest just survived a move (fingers crossed) and the younger is now poised to take over the former privet lands!

Dasylirion wheeleri - these just keep on being amazing. Up to 5 of them in the ground and I bought another that will be planted soon.
Dasylirion wheeleri

Arctostaphylos densiflora ‘Harmony’ - a bit of tip die-back from the cold but all in all unharmed.

Clianthus puniceus - oh so dead, from the cold.

Ophiopogon planiscapus nigrescens - if the name "cast iron plant" wasn't already taken it could apply to this.

Acacia pravissima - sad, dead. So dead, and gone.
Acacia pravissima

Yucca filamentosa / Yucca gloriosa 'Variegata' - it's got a super ugly case of yuccahne but it should grow out of it.

Euphorbia rigida - the plant I featured is gone (a causality of the rhody removal) but it's babies live on.

Sedum rubrotinctum - unbelievably some are still alive, having made it though 12F in a container in the unheated garage, wow!

Saxifraga - another group post and they all look great.

Echium wildpretii - the one pictured below bloomed and died it's natural death. Two others died in the ground, ones that would have bloomed this summer. However one tiny little plant powered on, we'll see what it does this summer.
Echium wildpretii

Edgeworthia chrysantha - just finished up blooming and is starting to put on it's leaves.

Yucca filamentosa at my mom's - made it through another cold Spokane winter with no ill-effects, although my dad talks of getting out the chain saw and taming it.

Callistemon viridiflorus - both plants seem to have made it through the winter with out missing a beat. Hopefully there will be blooms this year!
Callistemon viridiflorus

Mystery yucca - it has returned, with a tiny sibling.

Cast Iron Plant -  all the solid green leafed plants are grand. The spotted ones (not featured in the post) however are crispy and ugly, presumed dead.

Grevillea juniperina 'Molonglo' - as I mentioned at the very beginning of this post I dug them all out last weekend. They were defoliating from the center out and just too ugly to leave. There was green wood and they might have staged a come back but I just couldn't look at them any longer. A plant that used to being me great happiness was bringing me down.

Carex brunnea ‘Jenneke’ - dug both of these out too. They just turned ugly.

Fatsia japonica - nothing gets to this plant. It lost a lot of leaves in the cold but is putting on new growth and looking fabulous.

Callistemon ‘Clemson’- this is the plant that started it all! My first "fav" - sadly it couldn't cope with the winter chill and died back to the ground. We'll see if it has the strength to come back from the roots.
Callistemon ‘Clemson’



Shall we tally them up?
Dead = 16
Too early to tell = 6
Which means the vast majority are still alive, okay I guess there's no curse just a gardener with a taste for risk...

All material © 2009-2014 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

Visiting Grey Greer Gardens...

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I made one other stop during our recent jaunt to Eugene, Oregon...Greer Gardens.

This was my second visit to the nursery (the first was in 2009), and it's been hit hard by time and temperature. I had the place to myself and it was an enjoyable, if somewhat melancholy, experience. In fact, when I met back up with Andrew, and we discussed what we'd done while apart, I told him I'd visited Grey Gardens. If you've seen the movie you'll understand my metal mistake.

There were a lot of conifers...

Some quite fetching, Cedrus atlantica 'Glauca'...

Abies concolor 'Candicans'

Cunninghamia lanceolata 'Glauca' (although it wasn't looking very "glauca" perhaps it was the rain.

The big bamboo looks happy, the little bamboo, not so much.

This visit was on March 8th, it was a surprising to see a rhododendron in full bloom.

There were many trees and branches down, blocking pathways.

Great form!

The red aucuba berries were so bright I could see them from quite a distance.

At first I thought this was a spectacular silver leafed shrub, but actually just the undersides of the leaves on a fallen branch.

There were rhody's as far as the eye could see...

And even a surprise yucca.

Winter really did a number on their hoop houses.

Washingtonia filifera, which have seen better days.

The covered area off the back of the office fared better and held several treasures.

Callistemon citrinus 'Splendens'

Lots of gunnera

Cordyline australis 'Renegade'

Sophora prostrata 'Little Baby'

Back outside it was time to make my exit.

But not before I admired this Metasequoia glyptostroboides...no doubt rooting into the ground.

And wondered about this odd tree...

What is it? Or what are those nuts (?)...

All material © 2009-2014 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

Joe is in the house!

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Okay he’s actually in the garden.

This is a wrap on one of my longest running cases of plant lust...I first fell for Agave ‘Joe Hoak’ in October of 2009 when we visited San Marcos Growers in Santa Barbara a, CA. Since SMG is a wholesale grower I felt fortunate to be allowed to wander their grounds and didn’t dare ask to buy this fabulous new introduction on display…

Who knows if they would have even sold it?

When we visited the Desert Southwest in 2012 I bought plants all across 4 states, the entire length of the trip, Joe was on my list but I didn’t find one. However I did discover this Agave ‘Quick Silver’ when I stopped at Elgin Nursery in Phoenix, the day after we’d packed up all the plants and shipped them home. Buying this one would have meant carrying it on the plane. You have no idea how many times I wish I would have done just that.

It wasn’t Joe, but pretty darn close. Agave ‘Quick Silver’ is a cross between A. desmettiana and A. medio-picta, and indeed was much more silver/white than Joe, who tends to the yellow side of things.

San Marcos has this to say about Joe: “The origin of this plant is confusing. We received our first stock plant from the late Dutch Vandervort, of California, who got his start from Jim Georgusis of Harahan, Louisiana. Jim told us it came from Joe Hoak of Hoak's Nursery in Miami, Florida. It is sometimes listed as Agave meridensis variegata 'Joe Hoak' or A. meridensis (perhaps referring to the city of Merida on the Yucatan Peninsula). The graceful curve to the leaf has led some to believe that this plant is a hybrid or sport of Agave desmetiana. As per Jim Georgusis, Joe Hoak himself thought this to be the case. Supporting this is the similarity to meridensis of one of A. desmetiana's synonyms, Agave miradorensis. Whatever its origins, it is one of the prettiest Agave we grow!”

I’ve been on the hunt for Joe ever since, in fact I was sure I’d bring one home from the San Francisco Garden Bloggers Fling last summer, but no. So how did Joe finally end up in my garden? From San Marcos Growers of course! Via my friend JJ de Sousa of Digs Inside & Out…thank you JJ! You’re an enabler and I love you for that.

Lest you think such a rare beast would live a cush life, treated with kid-gloves, no. It looks like Joe may have had a few run-ins with the nursery bullies.

He cleans up well.

Yep, Joe’s a looker.

All material © 2009-2014 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

Finding Joe’s big brother…

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I potted up and photographed Joe on Friday afternoon. On Saturday I pulled into Cornell Farm Nursery and came face to face with the only other Agave ‘Joe Hoak’ that I’ve ever seen in Oregon, hell only the third one I’ve ever seen in person!

There it was, just hanging out with the rest of the gang as though they belonged here (and I guess they did, really).

Oh Joe Sr. You’re big, you’re beautiful…and you’re expensive!

Joe Jr isn’t nearly you’re size but I’m okay with that.

One of Joe Sr’s friends, Agave parrasana ‘Fireball’ love the variegation and the red spikes.

Agave medio-picta ‘Alba’ lovely...

Aloe distans, I thought mine was growing tall as a reaction to indoor lighting (even though it's close to the grow-lights in the basement), good to know this is normal.

Aloe marlothii

Sedum ‘Cherry Truffle’

Sedum ‘Chocolate Drop’

Ah, ‘Blue Glow’…

That’s a nice salad for lunch!

This seemed to be the “it” plant of the spring. The one which would be hard to find and everyone would want.

Alstroemeria ‘Rock & Roll’, the market is already flooded. Not that I think that’s a bad thing. It’s a gorgeous plant, everyone who wants one should have one.

Then there’s this.

I see it and I am drawn to that foliage. So fabulous!

But the blooms, always the blooms (Rhododendron linearifolium), still I do consider the purchase.

This one stopped me in my tracks, my blood pressure rising.

But worry not, it’s the “well behaved” alternative.

There were a pair of luscious acacias. This one Acacia cultriformis…

And this, Acacia boormanii.

Yucca gloriosa var. recurvifolia 'Bright Star', how do they make them look so beautiful?

Elegia capensis, *swoon*…

And yes when I spotted this, the third Leucadendron ‘Ebony’ I’ve seen here in Portland I did feel just a little smug, knowing I may have had the first. (the second is/was at Cistus. I know, pride is not pretty)

One of the things I love about this nursery is they put together great color stories. I was attracted to a couple of plants in this display that I would never have looked twice at, had they not been surrounded by orange.

Lust! Grevillea 'Long John'

And honesty I was on information overload by now and didn’t get the name of either one of these Leucadendron…

I am just so happy to see these plants here HERE in Portland, hallelujah!

All material © 2009-2014 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

Ceanothus 'Dark Star' is my favorite plant in the garden, this week…

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I bought my Ceanothus 'Dark Star' last March, when I thought I'd be getting rid of the Sasa palmata and needed something to plant in it's stock tank. Cooler heads prevailed and the bamboo stayed. What to do with the ceanothus? It went in a container, holding for the moment it could eventually go in the ground.

Last year it was stressed from life in a nursery container and didn’t bloom much at all. This year it’s rewarded me with dozens of big plump (and plum) buds for weeks. They were beautiful on their own, if that had been it I would have been happy, but of course the blue flowers are an entire other level of bliss, for me and the bees. Oh and they smell good too, I wasn't expecting that.

Thankfully I've been able to show my appreciation for all this plant has given me by sinking it's roots into the ground. It's got pride of place in the former privet-lands. (please pardon the construction zone aesthetic)

The stats for this ceanothus:
  • USDA Zones 7-10
  • 4-6ft tall and 6-8 ft wide, eventually
  • Heat and drought tolerant
  • loves sun but can get by with light shade
  • evergreen


My favorite thing about it is the tiny, yet deeply folded leaves. They look great year-round. What's looking great in your garden this week? Please tell us about it!

All material © 2009-2014 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

The Nichols Garden, my last post from the SF GB Fling…

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Here we are, my last garden visit from the 2013 Garden Bloggers Fling in the Bay Area. Coincidentally today marks just 3 months until the kick-off of the Portland Fling, on Friday, July 11th. What an adventure we had, and what an adventure we’ll have! I wish you could all be here with us.

This garden figures large in my memory of the SF Fling simply because as the bus drove by and I caught sight of it I was going to do whatever it took to get out and see it in person. Thankfully the bus stopped and I didn't have to resort to extreme measures.

This was one of those gardens that makes me green with envy. Can you imagine growing these plants in the ground?

And this, in the hell-strip!

Look at that tall cordyline! One of a pair, there was another on the left of the house in the first photo.

Notice the oxalis behind the bromeliad. There was too much of it for it to be an accident.

There's my fav plant of the Fling, Leucadendron 'Ebony'..

Close-up

I love a staircase lined with plants.

Ahh...

Notice the palm trunk on the right, it's covered in tillandsia!

Fabulous.

Beyond the palm...Begonia luxurians in the gound...

Mahonia gracilipes, hey I can grow that!

As if the front garden wasn't amazing enough things continued to be interesting as we started up the side garden. Lots of little discoveries to be made...

And the best koi-protecting pond screen ever!

Water followed the pathway down the side garden.

This garden showcased Japanese forest grass (Hakonechloa) so well I was thankful I am able to grow it here in Portland.

Those begonia leaves were huge HUGE...

The back garden stepped up away from the house.

And up again.

This is it. The end of a fabulous garden and an amazing three days. I'm not sure if I'll be posting much about the Portland Fling but hopefully there will be many posts from the attending bloggers which you'll enjoy!

All material © 2009-2014 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

A line and a circle…

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The line, it’s a straight one, out about 11ft.

That’s the length between my corner of Tetrapanax papyrifer and the red sempervivum next to my neighbor’s driveway.

The red sempervivum next to which I recently noticed a tiny tetrapanax baby. A baby that somehow traveled under 8ft of concrete driveway to emerge ready to grow tall. Thankfully my neighbor looked at this as a gift, not a curse.

The circle is just up the street, in another neighbor’s front garden. This is a chestnut, and its roots are going to strangle it…someday.

Right? I mean this can’t be good.

It’s time for April’s Garden Bloggers Bloomday...

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My garden is very much in transition right now. As I move forward, repairing winter’s destruction, and attempt to make sense of the bare ground where the privet used to be I hadn’t really stopped to notice what was blooming, didn’t have time! And that’s why I love Garden Bloggers Bloomday. It’s a reason to stop and smell the flowers, and photograph them. I look back on my 5 years of Bloomday posts as a great reminder of plants I had which are no longer with me. These posts also act a garden clock, reminding me if the garden is early, late, or just right. Here’s how this April is shaping up…

My accidental Epimedium (E. wushanense) produces the characteristic alien space-ship like flowers, they do make me smile.

This crazy business was an attempt to cheer myself up on a grey ugly day. Camarillo Fiesta Bouganvillea bridges the dangerous gap between pink and orange. The papery bracts start out pink but fade to a delicious orange. It borders on being a hot mess but I LOVE it. Of course the color is nearly impossible to photograph, especially on a windy day.

Ceanothus 'Dark Star', photo borrowed from last week's "favorite" post...

Ajuga 'Black Scallop' in the front garden...

Ajuga 'Black Scallop'...waiting to be planted in the back garden...

Euphorbia 'Blackbird'...I managed to not photograph the aphids, trust me they're there...

Euphorbia griffithii 'Fireglow'...I love this one...

Euphorbia amygdaloides var. robbiae

Euphorbia cyparissias, creeping here and there and everywhere...

Geranium phaeum 'Samobor' in another windy blur...

Pulsatilla vulgaris

Rosemary

Stachyurus salicifolius, able to breath with the removal of the privet and the death of the Clianthus puniceus. It finally gets to be the star it was meant to be!

And finally the Alocasia amazonica, which has been doing time in our shower jungle, is blooming. Yay! Flowers in the shower are even better than flowers in the garden.

As always the Bloomday fun is hosted by May Dreams Garden, all the links to blooming posts are to be found there.

All material © 2009-2014 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

The spring Hardy Plant Society of Oregon plant sale…

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Last Saturday I attended what's been called the largest plant sale on the West Coast. HPSO's Hortlandia. Every year there seems to be an "it" plant at the sale, one you see over and over again. At first I thought it was going to be the rodgersia...

But part way through the sale I decided it was the podophyllum. There were so many fabulous ones, and tales of even better ones that were scooped up before the sale even opened to the public (volunteers get to shop early)...

There were several agaves. This one in The Desert Northwest booth...

And this pair in the Blooming Junction booth.

Speaking of blooming, this beschorneria was hard to pass up.

However I did grab one of these Abutilon 'Red Tiger', mine isn't blooming yet but has several fat buds...

Artemisia ludoviciana 'Valerie Finnis', beautiful! I got a division from a blogging friend last fall.

I admired this bizarre Aesculus 'Laciniata' and then later saw it in my friend Peter's haul. Great minds...

This is interesting, both of these plants were labeled Quercus dentata 'Pinnatifida' yet look how different their leaves are. I noticed the same thing last fall when I bought my tree.

Cercidiphyllum japonicum 'Rotfuchs'...Katsura 'Red Fox'...I was tempted. Very tempted.

This poor plant was fondled by every single passer-by...

Heliamphora heterodoxa x minor, dubbed as the most amazing plant at the show by a friend. For $45 I had to leave it behind.

There is a whole "garden art" section to the sale which I typically ignore. My friends Peter (the Outlaw) and Alison (Bonney Lassie) were down for the sale and spent some time checking it all out. When I went looking for them Peter had just fallen for this fabulous seedy/poddy/vasey thing. I like it and I think it went home with him.

So what went home with me? Well as I mentioned I picked up an Abutilon 'Red Tiger' and I also grabbed one of these Geranium maculatum 'Elizabeth Ann'. I love the leaves...

After all they are "sophisticated!" But the flowers I saw when I looked this one up on plant lust. Yikes! I think I'll be cutting them off.

Look another Banksia marginata! I lost mine last winter and the owner of The Desert Northwest made sure I tried again. I've got just the spot picked out.

And finally my only other plant purchase at the sale, Microcachrys tetragona. I bought one last fall when I visited The Desert Northwest and asked for another. I love this plant!

You might be thinking "only 4 plants?"...worry not, there was more plant shopping afterwards. That's tomorrow's post...

All material © 2009-2014 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

After the sale, making a day of it...

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As I mentioned yesterday my friends Peter and Alison made the trip down from Tacoma for the big HPSO plant sale. Since they were in town they had to make the trip out Highway 30 and invited me to come along. First stop Cistus, of course. There was so much to see...

This Epimedium wushanense (I believe) was theatrically lit for our visit.

As was the Schefflera delavayi.

I was so enchanted by these yucca I forgot to record their name. Bad blogger!

Yucca faxoniana, perhaps?

Yellow flowering Hesperaloe parviflora, you don't see that everyday...

And more beautiful abutilon flowers.

Pittosporum patulum

Leptospermum lanigerum - purple leaf form

New foliage on a Dendropanax...

Another Elegia capensis tempting me (I saw one weekend before last and wanted it too)...

And a freaky variant of Echium candicans 'Star of Madeira', I think Peter ended up with one of these.

This photo reminds me of something very sad. My Sonchus canariensis has passed on to the compost pile in the sky. Late last summer I didn't notice the container it was in wasn't draining properly until the foliage started to wither. Root rot. It was too far gone to save. So very sad...

Ugh! Another death. My Musella lasiocarpa hasn't recovered from our winter cold. It should have been brought into the house or s.p. greenhouse, not left in the unheated garage. But there were so many things to care for during that time, something was bound to slip through the cracks.

Happier thoughts! (lots of spiky things)...

Here's most of my group getting ready to check out. That's Nathan behind the counter (yes, he works there), Heather in front of the counter, Scott with the hat, and Alison in the orange t-shirt. Peter can't be seen because he's off...

Falling in love with a yucca...

Cistus is the center of the PNW universe if you're looking for fabulous Yucca rostrata...

Dyckia 'Naked Lady', for those afraid of extra spikes.

Didn't get the name of this one but I'm pretty sure I should have bought it.

Leucadendrons!

So what did I buy? Well this fabulous Nolina microcarpa...

And a couple of Othonna cheirifolia (below) as well as an (unpictured) Cerinthe major 'Purpurascens'...

We spent so much time at Cistus that our stop at Joy Creek Nursery (just up the road a bit) was cut short since they close at 5pm. I did buy a fabulous Persicaria Brushstrokes, which I neglected to take a photo of. Instead I was transfixed by this Melianthus major 'Antonow's Blue'...looking very purple.

And several choice Euphorbia glowing in the late afternoon sun...a day spent plant shopping with friends, does it get any better than that?

All material © 2009-2014 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.
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