cobblehillgarden

Archive for 2011|Yearly archive page

My Cobble Hill Garden this summer

In Garden Maintenance, gardening, Uncategorized on 2011/07/09 at 2:43 pm

Finally, a new post from me! Because I work as a social media consultant, I am constantly on my computer (when I’m not in my garden) and I’m always thinking about what would be interesting in my next garden post.  But work, family, volunteering, work, etc. get in the way and the post is seldom written.  No more promises about trying to do more posting, but honestly, I’m going to try to do more posting!  Here’s a walk through my garden as of this week with comments and a few questions:

Siberian Iris 'Blueberry Parfait'

Many of you know I am an Irisoholic.  I started out with bearded Iris, mostly the border bearded or tall bearded, but they are short-lived and high maintenance.  I still have a decent collection, but have been slowly but surely building up my collection of Siberian and Japanese Iris.  They last longer, are 1/4 or less the work and are oh! so pretty.

It's a type of Impatien??

Every time I see a handwritten ‘Plant Sale’ sign anywhere where I am driving I screech to a stop and pull in.  I doubt this urge for the potential for one more good plant will ever leave me.  I screeched last weekend and drove down a very long land (it’s an 18 acre property) to a small plant sale filled with interesting plants conducted by the owner of the property and her gardener. What I really wanted to do was buy the world-class horse in the pasture, but he wasn’t for sale and would be way past my wallet-capability.  Anyways, one of the most interesting plant was the Impatien above.  It’s perennial, its stock is almost bamboo-like and the foliage is dynamic.  It’s aggressive and needs to either be in a pot or a place where you want taller, elegant groundcover.  The colour you see below is a coleus underplanted.  Please don’t mistake it for part of the plant.

Juassic Park coleus

Speaking of coleus, they seem to be developing them in huge sizes this year! Again, I love the coleus for their foliage and always have 3-4 pots of them during the summer.

Delmara Peltata

Hopefully I have spelled this plant correctly.  This is one of those occasional plants where I only know it by its Latin name.  A piece was given to me by a great plantswoman nearby, Ali, and I now have three thriving clumps.  Again, it’s all about the foliage, and its also a little Jurassic, but with a softer feel than a Gunnera.  Behind is the dreaded, dreaded invasive pond iris in our pond.  Three seasons of wading into the mucky, gucky bottom of the pond and ripping it out by its roots and still a few plants sneak back every year.

More Plants in Pots

I am not really a pot nut, and I have enough room to plant out most new plant purchases, but I’ve been known to put new purchases into pots for the first year or two to let them grow on while I figure out the very best place for them. Like retailers, plants are all about location, location, location! Here you see a Cooper Beech tree (I know, I know it will grow into a huge tree and out of that pot in a year or two), an Acer ‘Orange Dream’ and an Acer Palmatam (sp?) all just settling in.  They are handsome in their pots and perfect for this part-shade patio.

The Long Bed on Sea Soil

Gardening is a learning experience.  Misacanthus Giganteum is meant to be, well tall.  Same with the Nineback ‘Diablo’.  But maybe they shouldn’t be THIS big.  When this long bed was built four years ago, I thought, why not? I’ll splurge and use sea soil as the soil for the entire bed.  Don’t get me wrong…..like most gardeners….I will always be a solid fan of Sea Soil for soil augmentation, light mulching, etc. But here’s what happens if you use it for the main soil in the bed.  Most plant material has grown far past usual capability and in all this four years, apart from a bit of organic fertilizer for new introductions, I still haven’t added any more organic material.  Maybe this year.  Ever seen such a huge Nepeta ‘Dropmore Blue’?

Beautiful Japanese Iris

Enough said! In addition to my growing Siberian Iris collection, I am starting to add Japanese Iris.  I love their structure and wider foliage. This white one has been divided twice and is now scattered throughout the garden.

Can you see them?

Three bachelor ducks visit the pond every day.  There are two fallen logs across the pond (they both fell in high winds one year apart) and we left them there for the rustic look.  Those boys LOVE sitting on the log and falling off, flapping around to clean their wings, eating bugs and slugs (we love them for that) and they particularly like swimming through the plankton (aerator type top of water stuff) leaving paths and eating it.  They are totally undisturbed by the dogs, who mostly ignore them but they provide me with hours of entertainment.  Occasionally a lady duck accompanies them, and in previous years ducklings have had swimming lessons in our pond, but not this year.

Beautiful, lacey Elderberry

Not the very best picture, but this is a rather magnificent Elderberry (I think maybe Black Lace or Sambuca). The area its planted in was formally known as ‘the hospital’ which was a spot where ailing plants were put to either recover and improve or move on to the next life.  This plant chose to LIVE and its a beautiful airy addition to the area.

Next week is dedicated to hostas.  Its been a great year – with the cool spring and all that rain – for hostas and we’ve got quite a collection.  Hope you enjoy your garden half as much as I enjoy mine!

 

The Cedars Garden for 2011 – Rhodies unite!

In Corgis, Garden Maintenance, garden tour, gardening on 2011/05/22 at 5:06 pm

In case some faithful readers wonder if I have passed on, I haven’t.  I have had an over-the-top busy year with some trying elements – but the sun is finally out in Cobble Hill and the garden is growing and I’m baaaaack!

I posted something similar last year, but to kick off a little tour around my garden, here is the pride and joy of the garden at this time of year every year, R ‘Pride & Joy’. Just a spectacular variety……

The magnificent Rhododendron 'Pride & Joy'

We had the wettest, coolest long spring in the history of man (at least it seemed like that) and on the wet coast of Canada most plant development is about 3-4 weeks behind.  But, lots of plants which love cooler temperatures and lots of water are thriving.  Everywhere our hostas are busting out:

Hosta 'Great Expectations' (I think)

Here are the driveway plots.  We are hosting the Cowichan Valley Rhododendron Society next Wednesday night (May 25th), hosting the Mill Bay Garden Club for their AGM/Picnic on June 28th (my swan song as President of the Club) and Gardens West is featuring us in their magazine this year.  Awaiting when the photographer is coming – I will have to weed right through the night, I think!  We are very, very flattered.

Driveway plots

We went with the Cowichan Valley Rhododendron Society on a tour to some Lower Mainland gardens the past weekend.  We also stopped and had a BIG shop at Brian Minter’s nursery in Chilliwack and Cedar Rim Nursery in Langley.  At one of the private gardens in Surrey belonging to the Dodd’s  – a spectacular garden in every respect – they have a beautiful collection of Acers – both Japanese and otherwise.  Check this one out -

Acer 'Bellissima' or 'Brilliantima'

Well, I want one! (so did a few other tour members).  The caption on the picture is wrong. I’ve just learned (thanks Sharon) it is an Acer Pseudoplantanus ‘Brilliantissimum’ Any reader who knows where I could get one for my garden?  Minter’s will have it next year, Cedar Rim hadn’t heard about it, and the Outback Nursery heard about it, but don’t have any.

The iris bed - fingers crossed

Regular readers on the blog last year saw this bed in full bloom when we were included on Cowichan Family Life’s garden tour June 4.  Well, let’s pray that there are iris blooms at Finnerty Gardens at the University of Victoria, at Government House in Victoria, at Royal Roads/Hatley Castle in Colwood and at Glendale Gardens in Langford as there are huge Iris plantings there to be judged at the American Iris Society’s annual convention.  This is only the second time the convention has been held in Canada and this cold spring hasn’t provided ideal Iris growing conditions.  I am the Host Garden coordinator of the convention and many devoted individuals have kept the beds weeded, watered, fertilized, and loved for over two years.  I pray this upcoming week has some heat and sun in the forcast!

I love Brunnera

Brunnera seem to come in so many colour combos. This one almost looks like a hosta.  We have them here, there, and everywhere in the garden!

Bleeding Hearts LOVED this cold, wet spring

For me, a bleeding heart is just about the most durable, attractive, and long-loved perennials available.  This was originally purchased at the Mill Bay Garden Club Plant Sale for $10 5-6 years ago.  It has spread, never failed to bloom and is underplanted with four leaf clover groundcover.  Hey, I know some latin names, but not all.  Bleeding heart is Dicentra spectabilis.

Yup, this is Ivy and yes, its still challenging to garden with a corgi

Readers last year may remember my blog post ‘Gardening with a Corgi’.  Ivy still plunks that ball in front of me just when I am getting into my weeding stride………..and I still love her.

Went on an excellent Rhododendron Garden tour in #Nanaimo today and saw a particularly spectacular garden filled with specialty plants.  Next post I will show you pictures and hope you can help me identify a few.  Happy Gardening!

Shirley Valentine performance as a fundraiser for Music by the Sea

In Garden Maintenance, gardening on 2011/01/23 at 4:36 pm

Music by the Sea – A special Shirley Valentine performance

Music By The Sea Newsletter — January 14th, 2011
Music by the Sea Valentines Eve Special!

MBTS will present
Nicola Cavendish
in a minimalist version of
S h I r l e y   V a l e n t i n e
at the Union Club in Victoria on
Sunday February 13th at 6:00 PM
as a benefit performance for MBTS.  Call:
250-888-7772
to reserve tickets


Nicola Cavendish is one of Canada’s most distinguished and beloved actresses. She first played the role of
Shirley Valentine at the Vancouver Playhouse in 1989 and has since performed it more than 600 times across Canada, winning both the Jessie Richardson Award (Vancouver) and Dora Mavor Moore Award (Toronto) for best actress in the role. For our audience in Bamfield to get to hear and see this actress perform this role in a such an intimate and informal setting,  is a once-in-a-life-time opportunity — for anyone.

This will be a riotous evening.  A truly hilarious and moving performance of Shirley Valentine by such a treasured actress as Nicola Cavendish! — in an intimate setting with a sit-down 3-course dinner at the Union Club in Victoria. Our own host drink  (MBTS Royale) poured upon arrival and wine poured with dinner. Tickets are $250 and an issue of a $100 tax receipt is available.

2010 in review for My Cobble Hill Garden Blog

In Chocolate Labrador Retrievers, Corgis, Dogs, Foodie, Garden Maintenance, garden tour, gardening, Maui, Travel on 2011/01/02 at 7:58 am

This blog post came almost ready to post from WordPress.  I am CONSTANTLY amazed at the innovations, creativity, and things possible on the internet!  This blog suffers from lack of attention.  I do have a day job as a consultant to retail companies helping them to get started with social media like a business Facebook Page, LinkedIn, Twitter, etc. and I blog under the fancy title ‘The Burch Report on Digital Retail’ at www.brendadumont.com.

This keeps me pretty busy and I don’t get around to as many blog posts as I would like about my garden, my travels, my dogs, and the occasional book review.  I am taking 2 WordPress courses in January in Victoria (for more details on this if you wish to attend yourself, go to WordPress Word Camp Victoria ) to try and do a better job with both blogs by using more features.  The Retail Blog has a more sophisticated set-up – it’s actually a website – so I don’t get this nifty overview.  I guess they figure if you have the more sophisticated model you can figure out the statistics yourself!

Thanks very much to all readers for your comments, for passing on the coordinates for the blog and for helping me to build a vertical gardening, foodie, dog-loving, travel-loving community in my part of the world!  I promise to be more diligent with posts and updates in 2011 and look forward to learning and enjoying by reading your blogs!

The stats helper monkeys at WordPress.com mulled over how this blog did in 2010, and here’s a high level summary of its overall blog health:

Healthy blog!

The Blog-Health-o-Meter™ reads Wow.

Crunchy numbers

Featured image

A Boeing 747-400 passenger jet can hold 416 passengers. This blog was viewed about 2,800 times in 2010. That’s about 7 full 747s.

In 2010, there were 32 new posts, not bad for the first year! There were 142 pictures uploaded, taking up a total of 499mb. That’s about 3 pictures per week.

The busiest day of the year was June 7th with 73 views. The most popular post that day was Over 550 people enjoyed the Garden Tour.

Where did they come from?

The top referring sites in 2010 were blotanical.com, networkedblogs.com, ht.ly, digg.com, and en.wordpress.com.

Some visitors came searching, mostly for outback nursery courtenay, organic fertilizer recipe, oak leaf identification, i love hostas, and outback nursery courtenay bc.

Attractions in 2010

These are the posts and pages that got the most views in 2010.

1

Over 550 people enjoyed the Garden Tour June 2010
6 comments

2

Secret organic fertilizer recipe + epsom salts March 2010
2 comments

3

Never garden with a Corgi! May 2010
2 comments

4

Preparing a garden for a garden show February 2010

5

Climbing Roses, Cranesbill + Fashion for Gardeners March 2010
2 comments

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