Let's play a game! We'll call it the MidAt Yearbook. Pick one plant (Yes, just one) and tell us why you loved it so much last year. Please post pictures of the plant, various times of the year, angles, or combinations.
You all heard about my Rudbeckia hirta 'Indian Summer' here: http://davesgarden.com/community/forums/p.php?pid=9756658
What made you decide to plant your favorite plant of 2013 in the first place?
If it's not a new addition to your garden this year, how long have you had it and what made it special this year?
What did you love about the plant?
Was there anything you did not love about the plant?
What did you find about the plant that you didn't expect?
Will you grow it again in 2014 or beyond?
Would you recommend it to others? Why or why not?
(any other questions you think should be here?)
Let's keep it to ONE POST PER PERSON and discussions in the Yardening thread: http://davesgarden.com/community/forums/t/1348312/
Yearbook 2013: Your most favorite plant, flower, shrub, tree
This looks like a fun one!
OK, my favourite plant this past year is probably my Dahlia "Happy Single First Kiss". This was the first time I'd ever attempted to grow Dahlias. It was near the end of the Summer and I was cleaning up perennials at work; cutting back what was to be kept, and tossing what had died... or, rescuing what I wanted. ;) She was one of my rescues, but I didn't hold out a lot of hope, never having grown them before. She came home with me as a couple brown stems and a couple of leaves. Within about 3 weeks of installation she just exploded with foliage and buds, and not long after that she had her first bloom. WooHoo!! I love the depth of the green of her foliage, and her blooms are just so cheerful. Having saved her life makes her very special to me, and her returning the favour by flourishing so nicely makes me love her even more.
What did I find out about the plant that I didn't expect? LOL, that I could actually take care of her successfully! =)
Would I grow such Dahlias again, or recommend them to a friend? Absolutely! The foliage is great (I am a big fan of foliage), and they are much easier than I expected.
There is nothing about this plant that I do not love, and I plan to make room for more in 2014.
Pic 1: Sorry it's sorta blurry, but there she is with her first bloom. :)
Pic 2: A close-up of that pretty little face.
This message was edited Jan 30, 2014 5:48 AM
Oakleaf hydrangea!
Planted in spring 2012, and bloomed for the first time in 2013.
Required absolutely NO CARE. No watering, pruning, dead heading, fertilizing. No pests, no
diseases.
I do wish it would grow a little bit faster.
I have another one that I got from Jan. I hope that one gets nice and big!
I highly recommend it! What a fun little shrub with gorgeous flowers that last all season!
One of the plants that ended up making me happiest this past season was one I totally did not expect. My huge celosia. I didn't plant it--it sprouted up as a volunteer. At first I wasn't sure what it was, and then there was the mystery of, What color will it be? Not only did it get absolutely humongous, but the bees totally loved it, and it stayed in bloom very late into the season, when practically everything else for the bees to enjoy was gone. I saved lots of seeds!! :-)
Love this idea, will have to give it some thought.
For me, last year's most special plant was Agastache Purple Haze, http://www.missouribotanicalgarden.org/PlantFinder/PlantFinderDetails.aspx?taxonid=270833&isprofile=0&pt=8&tt=1 and http://www.northcreeknurseries.com/plantName/Agastache--Purple-Haze
I planted "Purple Haze" on my awful front hill which is an arid, ugly hill that previously had just sported vinca, poison ivy and weeds. It was one of many plants I tried out on that hill. I started that project in the fall of 2012. I was dubious whether anything I planted on that hill would "take." And many of the ornamental grasses that I planted in 2012 on that hill did not make it through that first winter. Most of the perennials were ok, but not robust.
In any event, I planted the Agastache in very late 2012. I gave its selection very little thought -- it was just one of many plants pulled out of a hat because they could take a mostly sunny spot, with little supplemental water, weren't fussy, were long-lived, and weren't deer candy. I don't think Agastache is supposed to be long-lived, but I gave it a shot anyway because Donnerville kept urging me to try it. I thought Agastache liked good drainage, which I don't have. I didn't really believe Donner's assessment of its merits and I wasn't optimistic about its prospects.
To my shock, it bloomed early and spectacularly and -- to my continued shock -- it kept blooming for most of the summer. "Purple Haze" is well named - it was airy and gloriously purple and splendid. And it was a bee magnet. And it just kept blooming. It was a focal point. A "heart be still" event. Who knew?
It is a fairly big plant -- a bit taller than the 2.5 feet Mobot gives it. I planted 6 plants together on 2 square yards (three plants to a square yard). They were by far the most successful of the plants on my awful front hill, in my opinion. I also planted two other Agastache -- "Golden Jubilee" (from Donner) and "Black Adder" (from Santa Rosa). I planted them in the spring of 2013 -- might be that they need a winter before they can get going (as I said, I planted "Purple Haze in late 2012). They were not special in 2013.
There was nothing I didn't love about "Purple Haze" last year.
My photos of it from last year do not do it justice. The attached photo is from North Creek. Mine were not this upright -- they were more fountain-like. They didn't sprawl, but they were open rather than erect. They blended to together and looked like a single plant, though there were 6 together.
As much as I loved it, my husband never remarked on "Purple Haze" -- and trust me, I dragged him out to look at that hill every day so he had plenty of chances. He instead focused on plants that did nothing for me.
Which is one of the many magical things about gardening -- we each find delight in what pleases us, even if what catches our eye means nothing to the person standing next to us. It is both a private and a very public celebration.
It remains to be seen whether "Purple Haze" will do well in follow-up years. I am fickle, and in 2014 expect to be drawn to some plant as yet unknown....
This message was edited Jan 29, 2014 10:26 AM
Hands down for me was the Lisianthus that I grew from seed.
Although it took a LONG while to get the seedlings to germinate and to grow large enough to put outdoors, I think they were definitely worth the wait. I had ivory, blue, lime, pink and yellow blooms which lasted a long time from July til October.
Can't locate the pictures for some reason, but they look like long stemmed roses and catch everyone's eye.
Salvia guaranitica 'Black and Blue'. It doesn't do it full justice, but here's a photo: it's the tall plant in the back on the far right.
I bought one plant 3-4 years ago as an impulse buy and was so happy with it that I bought another last year. Deer don't touch it, insects barely touch it, and it's disease-free. Hummingbirds and bees love it. It blooms from late spring/early summer until frost eventually does it in - this photo was taken in late October.
My one disappointment was that the bumblebees seemed to drive away the hummingbirds. Don't get me wrong - I'm glad to see bees (even though they did take over one of my bird houses) - but I wanted to see hummers too.
I dead-headed the plants throughout the summer in spite of the bumblebees that were there all day long. I don't know whether dead-heading is necessary, but it was easy enough and I never got stung!
My favorite is this hydrangea. It had both pink and blue blossoms, and did well with very little care. I didn't fertilize it because I was told that some fertilizers keep it from being blue. I was surprised at how fast it grew this year. I was so pleased that I bought another on sale that was a little poor looking and planted it out back in the shade. It did very well too. I especially like this plant because it does well and provides colorful long lasting blossoms without a lot of sun. Here it is getting 2 or 3 hours of morning sun, which is about the most sun I can get anywhere in my yard.
This message was edited Jan 29, 2014 8:39 AM
Mine would have to by our Pinus densiflora 'Oculus Draconis'. I planted it mid summer 2012 to replace an Alberta Spruce that got hammered by spider mites (no big loss there). It did great for me for most of last season but took a dive towards early fall in our drought. Since it doesn't have deciduous 'leaves' I couldn't tell that it needed water until a bunch of needles turned brown and fell off. It looks terrible right now. It pains me to think it might not make it. I gave it supplemental water once I realized it needed it so hopefully it wasn't too late. Our Pinus strobus that has been in the ground for 3 seasons has some brown needles too so I'm crossing my fingers. If it makes it, I'll make sure to keep it watered during dry periods.
Judy--
Your Hydrangea looks just like mine. Mine is a bit older, though.
When I bought it years ago--it was pink, Then-over 3 years time, with me
feeding it acid food, it was all blue.
I have been slack in keeping that going and it is starting to look like yours-
pink AND blue...
BTW--I always cut mine back about half way in late fall. Mostly for space reasons...
It always re-grows and blooms just as nicely the next year.
Cuttings taken in spring can be rooted pretty easily.
G.
from June--2009.
My favorite plant this year is my Wildeve Austin rose. All of my roses looked fantastic last spring, until I dug them up, put them in pots and moved them. Some of my neighbors were wondering if I was going to take my roses with me, of I course I did! I divided and shared some perennials, but not my roses. Some are still in pots, overwintering in sheltered locations waiting for me to clear more weeds and dig more holes for them in my new gardens.
Wildeve was the first rose that survived the winter in my garden. I got her as an own root potted plant right off the truck at Walmart. I didn't know what kind of rose "AUSbonny" was, but loved the peachy pink flowers. I have looked for similar roses since then, but never saw any Austin roses at Walmart again.
When I dug her out to move her, she was too big for my largest pot - a monster of a pot over 3' wide. I had to cut the root in two places. The narrowest part of the root was as thick as my wrist! I brushed the cut parts with sulfur powder and hoped for the best. All three plants survived and bloomed in their pot which was dumped by the movers in the shade of a rose of sharon shrub. What a survivor!
I simply CANNOT list just ONE favorite! I have so many favorites...
My Dr' Seuss Brug (Now gone--starting again from a rooted cutting.)
My KK Hibiscus
My "Sweet Surrender" Rose
The Lobelia cardinalis (new to me--2 years--I have seeds!)
My B&B Salvia--also just second year.
Lady-in'Red salvia (took lots of seeds)
Frans Hals Daylily (have a slew of bulbils I collected).
My little "Piilu" Clematis
etc...etc...
Like children--how can I choose a favorite???
G.
