bwisegardening

Cultivating a Culture of Gardening™

Monday, February 28, 2011

Day 149 - A Window of Opportunity


Most of us dream of doing something extraordinary. We want to create something that touches lives and instills curiosity for creating greater things. And some people see the opportunity to do just that and won't let go until that dream becomes a reality.
Louise Hartwig saw the opportunity and the need for a children's garden. All she needed was quite a few thousand dollars and hundreds of hours of volunteer work. You can read about that journey at the link below, but enjoy now the gorgeous windowbox plantings she created for the Butterfly House - the centerpiece of this gardening feast. Created from easy to find plants like Gaura 'Whirling Butterflies', Petunia 'Supertunia Raspberry Blast', and 'Supertunia Royal Magenta', you have the opportunity to create this windowbox at your own home.
Smiley Park Children's Garden in Van Wert, Ohio http://ourlittleacre.blogspot.com/2007/08/dream-becomes-reality.html

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Sunday, February 27, 2011

Day 148 - Cooking Up Some Succulent Planters





At the UT Jackson trial gardens a couple of years ago, the staff there haunted junk stores and abandoned attics and basements to come up with this incredible succulent display.




Bon Apetit!
Wait, Carol, I was just kidding!
I'm wondering if my college son's sink has things like this growing in it.

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Saturday, February 26, 2011

Day 147 - Simple Saturday Solution

You have company coming for supper and you need a quick solution to your empty planters.
Easy care, easy planting, almost instant container beauty!
Green Panda Bamboo and True Blue Viola. Green Panda is an "evergreen" bamboo though it didn't prove to be as evergreen this winter in my zone 6 with the long stretches of deep freezes that we had this winter. This was an easy planting job and since it's been protected on the porch, it kept looking good throughout the winter.

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Friday, February 25, 2011

Day 146 - Saul's Wall


A visit to Saul Nursery is always a treat. I'm continually amazed at the creative way they display their plants and stand in awe of this plant wall.
If you look far back behind the wall you will see my sweet friend, Jean, loading up the back of the car with plants. I call her sweet because most the plants were mine, the car was stuffed from front to back, and she literally had plants at her feet and elbows for the rest of our 3 day garden trip.

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Thursday, February 24, 2011

Day 145 - Retro Thursday

About this time last year I was in Dallas for work and got to check out Dallas Blooms at the Dallas Arboretum. I loved these containers with the overflow of Begonias, Bacopa, bulbs, beautiful Cardoon, Shrimp plant (Justicia brandegeeana), Ornamental Kale, and Violas. Dallas Blooms starts again this year on March 5 and goes until April 10 - if you go, tell Jimmy Turner that Barbara sent you.

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Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Day 144 - Wordless Wednesday

The latest variety of Tulip tree...

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Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Day 143 - Is It Really What's on the Inside That Counts?

I 'm going to step outside the rules here. I guess, though, since I'm the one who started this 365 Days of Container Gardening, I can in fact make up my own rules. So far, my rule that I have set upon myself is to provide a daily inspiration for the different styles and options that container gardening offers. We've looked at more than 142 different plantings that you can use to garden in a container. But today, I want to look at just a container in a garden. Empty. Just there for interest.


While visiting in Florida, I admired the interest that these empty olive jars gave to the winter landscape. Even as lovely as they are, their emptiness beacons me.
Tomorrow we'll get back to plants. Today I'm just enjoying a promise of what's to come that an empty planter whispers to me.

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Monday, February 21, 2011

Day 142 - The Glory of Coral Bark Maple


Coral Bark Japanese Maple -Acer palmatum 'Sangokaku', hardy in zones 5-8, offer a good portion of the country a highly underused container plant. I use them often in my winter container plantings and come spring, move them from the planter into the ground in some landscape design. The impact that they give against a light colored wall is striking. This planting is cushioned in with miniature boxwoods, layered with yellow pansies and winter creeper -Euonymus fortunei 'Coloratus'. Properly watered and given a bi-annual feeding of compost tea or Espoma Plant Food, you could easily keep this in a container for several years, only changing out the pansies in the spring to a summer annual like calibrachoa. Coral bark maples like partial shade so protect them from afternoon sun.

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Sunday, February 20, 2011

Day 141 - More Winter Windowbox Ideas

Even with spring just around the corner it's still fun to see some plantings that can make great winter window boxes here in Middle Tennessee.



Euonymus fortunei Green and Gold, Heuchera Georgia Peach, Vinca Illumination, and Violas

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Saturday, February 19, 2011

Day 140 - Today I Visited Botswana

The weather was cool and damp, I've been fighting some little stomach bug, the guys were all off doing all their own activities, so I decided I would take a trip. I needed to go to another land, to hear other people's stories, to experience an adventure.
So I picked up the latest book in the #1 Ladies Detective Agency series and escaped to Botswana. Through the miracle of words I could feel the African heat and hear the lilt of Botswanan English as the adventures began playing out among these well loved characters that Alexander McCall Smith has given flesh to.
I love that a book or movie or even a blog can take you to distant lands and give you a glimpse of the world we inhabit. So in honor of the arid, hot, dry land of Botswana, I bring you container plants that would love that environment - succulents!



And since these pictures came from the Nashville Lawn and Garden Show 2009, this is a reminder that you can escape in two weeks to Nashville Lawn and Garden Show 2011 - March 3-6.

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Friday, February 18, 2011

Day 139 - Memories of Bay St. Louis, Mississippi

Several Februaries ago I took a week-end trip with a group of gardening ladies to Bay St. Louis and stayed at Lagniappe Church, who teamed up with Habitat for Humanity to help rebuild this beautiful little town after it was devastated by Hurricane Katrina. Our job for the week-end was to landscape 20+ new homes that had been built by Habitat and to "spruce up" the facility that Lagniappe used to house, feed, and organize the thousands of volunteers who came to help rebuild this area. From the herb planter above,
to the perennial/annual beds

to the planters filled with ferns, ivy, and Muehlenbeckia axillaries (Creeping Wire Vine), the job was a joy to accomplish. The stories we heard from the residents in Bay St. Louis would break your heart. Their perseverance and determination would strengthen your heart. I left things there to grow; the people of Bay St. Louis planted a seed of community and resilience to grow in me.

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Thursday, February 17, 2011

Day 138 - Retro Thursday: Redeeming Myself

Last week I had some company over to watch the Super Bowl. I opened the door to welcome one of my sweet friends and she greeted me with this look of dismay and shock. After she walked in, she looked at me and said, "I've been seeing your daily post of beautiful containers so I couldn't wait to come to your home and see what you have in your containers. And I walk up to your door and THEY ARE EMPTY!!!"
I really think she was going to cry. Yes, my pots are the cobbler's children. Sometimes.
In my own defense, I had just removed the Christmas display of evergreen branches that I had arranged in the planters for the holidays.
So to try and redeem myself, I'm showing my planters from a season past filled with Variegated Ginger, Begonia Bonfire, Non-stop Red Begonias, and Purple Oxalis. Every once in a while the cobblers children get shoes and my planters get a little attention.
And sometimes I need to remember that there are more people than just my momma reading my blog.

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Wednesday, February 16, 2011

An Early Trip to the Horticultural Candy Store







For the past few years I've made a pilgrimage to Mary's Greenhouse in McMinnville, TN, to peek at all the goodies growing for this spring. While today's trip was a little earlier than normal (I had to get a few things for a Lunch and Learn class I'm giving tomorrow), there was enough there to make me already start planting for the next trip down with all three vehicles to load up.
Enjoy a little taste of what's to come with Bougainvillea baskets, lovely blue Lavender, and pink Mondarda.

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Day 137 - Signs of Spring


Red Twig Dogwood (Cornus sericea) with blooming Winter Jasmine (Jasminum nudiflorum) and white Iberis, a few Sedum Angelina and miniature golden Chamaecyparis tucked in, this planter defies the snow in the background to be a harbinger of spring.

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Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Day 136 - Today's Indoor Centerpiece Can Become Tomorrows Patio Planter

Chamaecyparis Sungold, hanging baskets of Chenille Acalypha hispida, purple Girard, fiery red Nandina 'Firepower', Primrose, and Ivy helped me create a colorful stage for the speakers at this event in Franklin, Tennessee.

Centerpieces for the tables were glazed bowls filled with Primrose, Bougainvillea "Raspberry Ice", and Ivy "Needlepoint"
While it's still too cold here for the Chenille and Bougainvillea to survive outdoors, put these planters in a sunny window for another 2 months then let them be your spring planters come April.

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Monday, February 14, 2011

A Little Valentine's Day Passion

Passiflora manicata - Red Passion Vine

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