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Wednesday, October 13, 2010

The Rest of the East Bed

A recent post showed the part of the east bed next to the house.  This is the area I left off with.  The fence to the right is where the back yard is.

The Rest of the East Bed

Jenny from Morning Glories in the Round Rock asked me to show a close up of the helenium.  First, I'll show a shot of a clump, then, an individual bloom.

The Rest of the East Bed


The Rest of the East Bed

Here's a broader view of the area to the north of the house, and east of the back yard.  You can also see a bit of the back yard.  The morning glories took over some of the space on the lattice that belongs to a few clematis plants.  Our deck is on the other side of the lattice.  Larry and I are determined to only let 2 or 3 vines grow next year.

The Rest of the East Bed

I was hoping to get the tub sunk into the ground to keep the bear's breetches from spreading.  I didn't realize when I planted them that they have a tendency to spread.  When I went out to see if I could dig a trench for it, parts of the tub chipped off.  I realized that the whole thing would decompose if I sunk it.   I'll have to figure something else out.  I planted this the spring of 2009.  It hasn't bloomed yet, but it is much larger than it was last summer, so I am thinking it will bloom next year.  The bare spot to the left of the tub is where a daffodil was.   Last year, I left the seed heads on the lovage, which is between the tub and the downspout.  I liked how tall they were.  I don't remember why I took them off this year.  I think they were falling down or something.  Maybe I was trying to keep a whole bunch of little lovages from coming up.

The Rest of the East Bed

There are a few blooms coming on shorter stems of the lovage.

The Rest of the East Bed

I am thinking this is pitcher sage.  I got it at a plant sale put on by our community gardens.  I hope it spreads a little next year.  It's just been blooming a few weeks.

The Rest of the East Bed

Here's one of the volunteer asters that came up in a good place.

The Rest of the East Bed

Heading north, the agastache and veronica blooms have faded.  I don't remember how many times I cut the amsonia back this season.  It seems to be shaped pretty nicely, even though it's pretty large.

The Rest of the East Bed

Here's a closer peek into the back yard.  I didn't keep up with deadheading the false sunflowers on the east side of the fence this summer, but there is still some color.

The Rest of the East Bed

Another clump of asters behind the agastache:

The Rest of the East Bed

The false baptisia behind the amsonia and chicken holds its own in that spot.

The Rest of the East Bed

I think the aster here is a volunteer, too.  The black and blue salvia has grown so big, I couldn't find the purple milkweed last I looked.  I hope it's still there.

The Rest of the East Bed

I can't remember what this annual is right now.  I'm glad to see it's blooming.

The Rest of the East Bed

The pincushion flower still has some blooms.

The Rest of the East Bed

This is the same area as 3 photos above, a higher view.  You can see the morning glory on the light Larry's dad put there when this was his place. 

The Rest of the East Bed

I like the black eyed Susan vine on the ladder.

The Rest of the East Bed

I wish I remembered what kind of goldenrod this is.  I planted it on the other side of the shed when Larry's dad lived here.  I moved a clump of it to this spot when we had the shed repaired.  It seems to like it here.  The grasses were planted to block the view of the garbage cans.  I was not a fan of grasses, but Larry wanted them, so we planted them here.  They have grown on me.

The Rest of the East Bed

I like to grow this annual helenium.  It has a long bloom time.

The Rest of the East Bed

I had a hard time staying awake when I was posting these photos.  Believe it or not, I deleted some that were similar to each other, as well as some duplicates.  Still, I'm showing some different angles of the same plants. 

The Rest of the East Bed

I need to cut down the spent stalks of the hollyhocks.

The Rest of the East Bed

The cleomes are volunteers.

The Rest of the East Bed

A 'Spooky' Dianthus is blooming again.

The Rest of the East Bed

Just on the other side of the wheelbarrow, in the lower right corner, is a plant that won't be shaded by its neighbors in the spring.

The Rest of the East Bed

I look forward to seeing the hellebores bloom.  There are others hidden by their neighbors in these beds, too. 

The Rest of the East Bed

Yes, I'm acknowledging it's fall, and a nice one so far.  I hope to spend most of the last week of this month outside, since I will be off of work then.  I am only able to be out an hour or so at a time these days.

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