MySecretGarden

U.S.A., Washington State. USDA zone 8b. Sunset climate zone 5

In My May Garden

If you ask what is the main color of my May garden, I'd say purple and blue,
especially in the second part of the month.
As for the first half, it's pink and red and peach.
Pictures are mostly in chronological order.


New in my garden is Geranium phaeum Samobor: haven't decided yet where to plant it, 
so it's growing in a container so far.


This Dicentra is blooming better after I moved it where there is more sun.

Spread, hosta, spread...



Gunnera m. is getting bigger and bigger...



Petasites japonicus 'Giganteus Variegatus'  (Japanese coltsfoot, Butterbur) 
and Petasites palmatus 'Golden Palms' (didn't get in the picture)
feel themselves at home and, without restriction, would take over the garden.


The very first blooms in the Terrace garden were Forget-me-nots.
You never forget them if you planted them once.
They will return, whether you want them or not.



Black currant is not very popular in the U.S.
I keep it not only for its berries, but also for its leaves to add to my tea.

Love these little treasures

Lamium is under my watchful eye: I'm removing its flowers to not let it spread.

Hosta in a big pot


Honey Butter Rhododendron was the only one available at the Dragonfly Farm Nursery where I bought it, and I've never seen it anywhere after that.


I know, I take a picture from this point every year...
This birdbath was one of the best purchases for this garden.

Above: it was a leftover pile of Tagro soil that we bought for our lawn.
Randomly planted, it became a mixed bed.

My little woodland garden

Trillium kurabayashii 'Giant Red'

Native Dicentra


Every time when I see this epimedium, I think about a mass of it seen several years ago at the University of Puget Sound campus in Tacoma, WA:


One of hostas from James King's garden. Getting bigger and more beautiful every year.

Lemon scented geranium

I do love geraniums! I usually save some from a previous season and buy several new ones, including those from a 'Last chance plants' rack.

Yucca, one of many from my friend's garden, grabbed from a truck as being prepared to be taken to a dump.

Fern Leaf Bleeding Heart 'Red Fountain'

Labrador violet - a thug, but lovely!

If you have extra Camassia bulbs, I'll take them!





Some changes to my potager (don't you like this fancy name for a kitchen garden?):
1 - This year, I didn't plant my Abyssinian banana trees here, moved them to the Terrace Garden;
2 - Moved here is a second boxwood cone in a terracotta pot.

If you think that a woven triangle is a piece of garden decor, you are wrong. 
It protects the hosta from bunnies.
They are causing big damage this season.


Behind primula-candelabra, is Korean lilac. I hope it'll stay short.



I'm wondering if my new intersectional peony, bought last year, will give me a bloom







Later in May, saxifrage blooms start floating in front of the rhododendron, adding more charm to it.
 I have them also in other parts of the garden. Love them.


Native Sword Fern is at its best when its leaves are young and fresh

Azalia, primula and grass which is planted here specifically for dogs. They love it!

Ligularia is hidden in a pot from slugs. Love its dark stems.

Rhododendron Rex settled down  and shows considerable new growth which looks like an opening bloom


Polygonatum multiflorum in my woodland garden




Squirrels. Do you see two of them?
They are the reason why I don't plant many bulbs. 
They dig them out, even daffodils which they don't eat.


Last year's buy from Joy Creek Nursery, Deutzia gracilis 


This clematis montana (probably, rubens) is providing a wow effect, climbing to 
a nearby fir tree, up to 20 feet high.
I see it first thing in the morning from our bathroom window and it makes me smile.



Libertia... Love it.
They say it self-seeds. Waiting... waiting...


Penstemon digitalis 'Husker Red Strain'


You can see one of my Abyssinian banana trees moved here from the potager.
 I am curious if they like this location better. 





I know... too many pictures of the same section of the Terrace Garden.
But, this is my favorite part.




Silene dioica 'Clifford Moor' is having its best ever season in my garden.
It was sitting for years without my attention. Recently, I divided it and planted it in sunny spots.
It looks happy and adds lovely pink to the garden when not many plants are blooming.


I can't say that we have had a good harvest of grapes, but I'd keep grape plants just for their look.
I love their leaves and stems.


A piece of wood is one of a dozen slices left after removing a giant fir tree 
which grew in front of our house and died earlier this year.

I'm continuing to downsize the lawn.
A patch of it was removed to plant a new Blue Baron Rhododendron.
I still need to smooth the curves.
Behind it, is a narrow dry creek that we put in place to provide better drainage.

Emerald color of Pacific Northwest greenery keeps me in awe. 
This picture is not edited in any way.

Metal Cat was the very first garden ornament, it moved with us from the Midwest.

Green is king here.
I love to see multi-colorful, vibrant gardens, public and private, I admire them, 
but in my own garden, I am happy with the green of different shades and occasional splashes of color punctuating it here and there. I am a green person.

There is trouble brewing behind this columbine. Japanese anemone love 
the Sunken Garden. Fortunately, the plants are easy to pull up.

Alliums are my favorite plants, well, one of them.


The picture above was taken from the back porch early in the morning.
When I sit there before anyone else is up and listen to the birds and watch the first sun rays entering the garden, I feel happy, and I believe that gardens really improve the quality of our lives.
Whatever a new day brings, I have my portion of pure joy, calm and tranquility here.


***Copyright 2017 TatyanaS

21 comments:

  1. Do you know which epimedium that is? It's gorgeous!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It could be Epimedium pinnatum ssp. colchicum, but I'm not sure, need to research further.

      Delete
  2. Tatyana beautiful garden pa Zmorkusovic

    ReplyDelete
  3. Your garden is so lush and full of many textures and colors. Sometimes I become envious of that wet climate of yours when I see all the plants I would love to grow but it is too hot and dry here during summer. I enjoyed the tour.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Lisa, ironically, our summers are also dry. It's raining from November to April (or May!) and then suddenly, someone turns the switch! But, many previous months of rain help! I hope this summer will be good for your garden!

      Delete
  4. Since I'm a novice, I wish you would label the plants you are talking about in the pictures that are of a large area with many different plants in the picture. I never know which one you are talking about.....guess I should do my research and google it....hahaha....love visiting your garden though. :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Your comment made me laugh. I thought I'm doing a great job with naming plants. If you have a question about a specific plant, give me a number of the picture (click the pick, and you'll see all of them numbered), and I'll tell your the name.

      Delete
  5. Your garden looks beautiful in all seasons and is wearing it's May finery well! I don't know how you find time to make such a beautiful space, travel, and raise children. You and your garden are amazing!

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  6. Gosh, I don't know where to start! Your garden is every bit as incredible as a full public botanical garden. That Rhododendron is really something special, and the Trilliums--wow!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh, Beth, thank you! You are too kind... We have many beautifully landscaped gardens in our neighborhood, but in terms of diversity our garden, I thinks, does have bigger variety of plants.

      Delete
  7. After waiting so long, May passed all too quickly. I would have liked to hang on the the freshness of emerging May longer, but June will continue the explosion of growth.
    Thanks for the photos of your lovely garden.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Linda, thanks! I also love May! It's fresh, green and full of discoveries! This year, everything is a bit late, so June also should be a very interesting month.

      Delete
  8. Hello Tatyana,
    your garden looks beautiful! Really enjoyed the pictures!
    Best wishes,
    Lisa

    ReplyDelete
  9. Your garden is looking lush and beautiful! I like that variegated Silene. The colors in my garden have turned from pink to purple and blue now too. My Libertia has only spread a little bit, and the babies don't like to be transplanted.

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    Replies
    1. Thank you Alison! My friend gave me seedlings of her Libertia that has thicker stems and spreads.

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  10. Everything is so gorgeous I don't know where to begin. But wow - that gunnera! Too bad I can't grow it here (and too bad there's no room for it anyway). And those giant trilliums are amazing.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sarah, thank you so much! While looking at my Gunnera, I always recall a plant I saw in Oxford Botanical Garden. That Gunnera m. was huge!

      Delete
  11. I swear, you have the greenest greens there ever were! Gorgeous.

    ReplyDelete

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