Alpine Garden

One of my favorite sections of the garden is the Alpine Garden.  The area is a steep slope to the left of the stone steps leading from the upper yard to the lower yard.   When we moved in, the area was overrun with strawberries and various  groundcovers.  A waterfall of hens and chicks spilled over the edge.  I tried various things trying to hold the slope but not much worked.  Five years ago, we went hiking in the Italian and French Alps on a trek called Giro del MonViso with some Swiss friends…fantastic trip.. here’s some video of the area I found on the net  (http://www.cuneo360.it/itinerari/102 ).  The wildflowers were amazing too.   Two weeks after we returned, we learned that our hiking companion and friend Ruedi (whom I had know since high school) fell off a trail while climbing and died.  I made the Alpine Garden as a tribute to him.  I have put some plants in this garden that we saw while hiking together.  Others are suited to rock gardens.  Some have done better than others but the garden is thriving.   I will look through my file and get the proper names for these petite gems , but in the meantime here are some photos.

This is the Alpine area to the left of the steps.

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Some new babies

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Aquilegia alpina

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Mazus reptans

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Dianthus

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Antennaria ‘Nyewood Pink’ (Pussytoes)

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Androsace primuloides ‘Chumbyi’

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Dianthus ‘Sternkissen’

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Orostachys iwarenge in a field of Sedum nevi

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A close look at the rock structure and hens and chicks and sedums

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Campanula

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Some baby sempervivum

 

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More plants coming later…

 

Columbines – Aquileglia

These beauties have been blooming for a few weeks..  some of  the colors differ every year since they reseed and mutate.  Some of the names are long gone but the flowers are still beautiful.  The leaves often get a leaf miner which is unsightly but usually other foliage covers that up and the blossoms float above it all and strut their stuff.

Here is an alpine only 3 inches tall that bloomed in the alpine garden back in April

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Wild columbine – Aquilegia canadensis

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Burgundy and white bi-color

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Common purple

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I think this one is called Green Apples

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Burgundy colored double

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A pale pink one

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June

Ah beautiful word, June.  It conjures up all sorts of wonderful things.  Today lived up to James Russell Lowell’s poem:

“AND what is so rare as a day in June?

Then, if ever, come perfect days;”

The garden is full of color, unfolding buds, and promise of things to come.  There are also invasions of bittersweet in the lupine meadow, red lily leaf beetles, and some ugly little green caterpillars eating the rhody leaves. Ack.  I’m trying to focus on the good stuff.

Clematis climbing up a blue spruce back where the shed used to be

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Not much blooming – but lots of color.. love that foliage

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Geranium macrorrhizum – I’ve had this plant forever.. moved it from a few houses.  It smells wonderful when you brush against it and the leaves turn a gorgeous burgundy in the fall.

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Forget-me not .. almost spent

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A funky viola complimenting the hosta ‘Marmalade’

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Allium

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I can’t remember what this is..

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Centaurea montana.. also called perennial cornflower

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Rhododendron buds

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Tree peony from friend Olga

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Zizia aptera.  I got this cool native plant a couple of years ago on a visit to Nasami Farm – the native plant nursery of the New England Wildflower Society.  It is also called Heart-leaved Golden Alexander.

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Variegated Comfrey from friend Marilyn

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Variegated Solomon’s seal from friend Sue B.

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Veggies!

Sara has been asking about the veggies.  I’m a week late in getting this post done, but the veggie beds did get planted over Memorial Day weekend.  In the upper bed there are nine different kinds of tomatoes, sugar snap peas, cukes on a trellis, summer squash, zucchini, and pole beans.  In the lower bed, there are herbs, strawberries and a few iris I am holding over until I can find a place for them.

 

 

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View from the other side

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Memorial Day

Our town has a wonderful little Memorial Day parade and it goes right by our house on the way to the cemetery.   Some veterans ride by in vintage cars, some march.  The boy scouts, girl scouts, police dept and firemen ( and trucks) parade by as well.  There’s a Revolutionary War drum corps and people in period dress. The Minutemen have their muskets and they are fired from time to time.  Little kids ( and big ones too) cover their ears at the sharp report.   Its a great parade.   Here are some red, white and blue  flowers from the garden in honor of Memorial Day and our Veterans.

 

Peony – ‘Early Scout’

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White lilac that came with the property

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Wood hyacinths

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Solomon’s seal

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Hydrangea

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Amsonia from friend Karen H.

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White bleeding heart

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Baptisia

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Blueberry blossoms

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The red chairs – a place to sit and contemplate

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End of May

 

Such a sad phrase –  “end of May”..  but glorious June is around the corner.  As May winds down here are some scenes from the garden this past week..Allium rising above the daylily foliage

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Transplanted Hellebores amidst the Bleeding Hearts and Wild Ginger – Asarum canadense

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Euphorbia polychroma – Pincushion Spurge

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Prairie Smoke – Geum Triflorum

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Hosta ‘Marmalade’

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A primrose gift from friend Effie

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Forget me nots and an unknown yellow companion

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The slope

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Some perfect heart-shaped leaves of European Wild Ginger – Asarum europaeum

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Esther snoozing in the green stuff

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Jack in the Pulpit

These Jack in the Pulpits came from Connecticut where I grew up.   They go everywhere I go  and are really doing well here in front of the porch…..

 

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An unfolding bud…

 

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Up close

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The shape, form, and color are just magnificent.. looks like a cobra doesn’t it?

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Fairy gardens and woodland beauties

Fairy gardens are popular these days.  I have always like miniature plants in the garden and granddaughter E. likes fairies.  I made this little woodland garden last week for a centerpiece.  Some moss, wild violets, may flower, ferns, a wood anemone,  star flowers and forget- me- nots.

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May apples – Podophyllum peltatum.   I got a piece of this from friend Wendy a few years ago, and I think she got it from friend Peg… it has spread most delightfully..  here it is unfolding

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And here it is with a blossom

 

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Phlox stolonifera

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Woodland phlox  – Phlox divaricata..  this came from friend Martha

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Flowering shrubs and trees

The forsythia is still hanging on due to the cool spring.   Pear blossoms are declining and a breeze is dispersing the petals into a fluttering whiteout.  The crabapples are popping but not in full bloom yet.  Lilacs are in full glory  and of course we are supposed to get heavy rain.. it seems like we always get a rainstorm when the lilacs are at their best.. the branches are so laden with blossom that they droop very low.  Therefore, I was out in my bathrobe this morning (lilac colored, so I blend) taking some pix before the showers come.

Three different colors in the front yard

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Some old fashioned lilacs out behind old man willow – these used to reside  up in the main beds.. thank goodness we moved them when they were smaller

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This beauty was in the garden when we moved here.  It took a hit in the October storm a few years ago , but has come back nicely..

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This is a close-up of the blossom.. it has a pinkish hue and smells divine

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Sand cherry on the left, flowering almond on the right

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Sand cherry close-up

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Flowering almond: when I was in 1st and 2nd grades we lived in an old Victorian house in Keene, New Hampshire.  There was this beautiful pink shrub in the side yard  that I adored.. one of my earliest garden memories.  I always wanted one but never got around to getting one.  When we moved to this house in 2001, there was a flowering almond in the garden.   I moved it from its original site to where it now blooms..   simply spectacular.

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Eastern redbud:  my town has a group called Friends of the Trees.  They plant roadside trees where they think an area needs some beautification.  A few years ago my friend Suzanne G. asked if I would like some redbuds.   Well, yeah. Here they are in the area between my property and the neighbors.. looking over the lupine meadow (wait til you see that in bloom).  I live in a pretty great town, don’t you think?

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