Tag: flowers

  • Cosmos bipinnatus

    Cosmos bipinnatus

    Some plants just seem to want to give you “the finger”… When I think about how I coddled and cuddled my little cosmos seedlings last spring and summer, padding them with mulch, hovering over them with the watering can – and still the tiny little spindly things just wanted to die throughout the summer before finally…

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  • Oxalis articulata / triangularis

    Oxalis articulata / triangularis

    One of those nice surprises that an older garden can offer: two different Oxalis plants that keep popping up where they must have been planted a long time ago. Oxalis is a South American native that has been naturalized in many regions, including Southern France, Portugal and Spain. Depending on which source you look at,…

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  • Portulaca grandiflora

    Portulaca grandiflora

    Portulaca: One of those simple and seemingly “stuffy” plants that I had always ignored – until I needed to find some pretty summer ground cover for two large pots on the terrace. These plants are everywhere and they are so inexpensive that they are practically thrown in with your purchase at the garden center. They…

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  • Achillea millefolium

    Achillea millefolium

    I know there are many beautiful varietes but somehow I’m always underwhelmed by Achillea and its “homely” flowers. Supposedly they work in hot and dry climates so I’ve tried them in the garden. In 2022 I planted Achillea millefolium “White Beauty”. In the summer of 2023 their bright white quickly turned into a very dirty…

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  • Lonicera

    Lonicera

    Lonicera or honeysuckle is a very diverse species, including wonderfully scented vines (periclymenum, japonica, tatarica, xylosteum…) or shrubs (fragrantissima, purpusii, syringantha…), fruit-bearing shrubs (caerulea/kamtchatica…) as well as evergreen hedging shrubs and groundcovers (nitida, pileata, crassifolia…). Lonicera japonica I love the scented Lonicera vines and was more than happy to discover that the massive hedge of…

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  • Hibiscus syriacus

    Hibiscus syriacus

    Hibiscus syriacus offers some of the most beautiful flowers I know and is a favorite of mine. Alas, it is not made for this climate and this garden, although two specimens had been planted years before. Hibiscus syriacus loves rich, humid soil and temperatures up to a maximum of 27-30 degrees Celsius. It may survive…

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