Home of the Practically Perfect Pink Phlox and other native plants for pollinators
Showing posts with label Gaura lindheimeri. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gaura lindheimeri. Show all posts

Thursday, September 8, 2016

Gaura is finally happy in the garden

And that makes me happy.   
Gaura lindheimeri/Oenothera lindheimeri is a fantastic plant for my pollinator friendly garden. This Texas and Louisiana native is a beauty with lovely cultivars like 'Whirling Butterfly' and 'Siskiyou Pink'. I chose a pink variety for Clay and Limestone.
Bees of all sizes love Gaura
 The secret to success is: full sun, great drainage and a few neighbors to lean upon! That spot is at the bottom of the sloping Susans border, where it makes a big, colorful flowery presence.
Prior to trying out the slope, Gaura happily bloomed in a large container planting
Its supporting neighbors are also beauties.

Amsonia hubrichtii is sited just above it on the slope. It flowers lightly for me, but the fall foliage is a delightful golden color and as it ages/dries the leaves curl. (Post: Amsonia after the fall)
 Agastache 'Blue Fortune' is next to the Bluestar. I love Agastache, but, it's not a perennial in my garden. Every spring I trek all over the city/county to find Agastache plants! Trust me they're so worth it and the blue flowers are lovely, just ask the bees.
A true annual in my garden, Cleome 'Senorita Rosalita' is planted in a container between the two Gauras. She's never happy in the ground here, but, thrives in containers. Btw, when you see containers in my garden beds, they're probably sited above a hunk of limestone bedrock that this gardener cannot dig up!
Allium tuberosum is the third beauty in this planting. It has seeded itself on the bottom of the slope and no amount of editing has been able to rid the garden of all of it, so I decided to go with it. The white flowers echo the white on Gaura and the hint of white on the Cleome.




Yes, the Garlic Chives are thuggish, but, it really does look great and the pollinators love it. Just remember to cut the seed heads off when the flower dries up or they will spread every where. I do mean every where!









I am really happy with the trio.

Fingers crossed that there's enough drainage to keep the Gauras alive this winter.

xoxogail

Please note that Gaura has a new Genus name~Oenothera! Now they shall be known as the ex-Gauras!

Gail Eichelberger is a gardener and therapist in Middle Tennessee. She loves wildflowers and native plants and thoroughly enjoys writing about the ones she grows at Clay and Limestone. She reminds all that the words and images are the property of the author and cannot be used without written permission.

Thursday, June 16, 2016

Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day June 2016

 Welcome to Bloom Day at Clay and Limestone. It's still green time in my garden. That's the time between spring's extravagant display and summer's rough and tumble wildflower show, but there are some blooms to make a gardener and visitor smile.
Coreopsis 'Mercury Rising'


C 'Mercury Rising' and a dwarf Coreopsis grandiflora



Arisaema dracontium and Autumn Fern



Gaura lindheimeri 'Siskiyou Pink'


Oenothera speciosa


Echinacea purpurea 'Magnus'

Rudbeckia hirta 'Chim Chiminee'
Elymus hystrix

Phlox x 'Wanda'

Crocosmia x cocosmiflora 'Orange Lucifer'


 Now make this garden blogger smile and pop over to May Dreams Gardens, where our delightful hostess, Carol, has set up the Mr Linky magic carpet ride to take you to more Bloom Day posts than you can imagine.


Happy Bloom Day to you all.
Gailxoxo

Gail Eichelberger is a gardener and therapist in Middle Tennessee. She loves wildflowers and native plants and thoroughly enjoys writing about the ones she grows at Clay and Limestone. She reminds all that the words and images are the property of the author and cannot be used without written permission.

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

GBBD: October 2013

 Welcome to my Central Basin woodland garden and the Garden Bloggers Bloom Day fall show.

The garden has begun its transition from the golden hues of the Susans and the Goldenrods to the the soft purple mist of violets and blues of the ex-asters. They aren't the only flowers in bloom, but, they are the big fall show and dearly loved by the many garden residents and visitors who visit for pollen, nectar and seeds.
The centers turn red centers when the flower is pollinated
Symphyotrichum shortii(N) is by far the most abundant ex-aster in the garden. They were one of the first wildflowers to introduce themselves to me almost 30 years ago when we moved into this wooded neighborhood and I've loved them ever since. I let them stand all winter and set seed every where. I think they are stunning massed, but, for a less exuberant look pair them with grasses and bold leaved plants.
Don't tell the other seasons, but, Autumn is my favorite and October is my favorite month! The sky is a seamless blue, the days are cooler and the light is fantastic. (See post October Blue Skies)
Aster tataricus
It's a busy time in the garden, even busier than spring. Wildflowers welcome the foraging bees, the nectaring butterflies, a host of other pollinators and birds as they make a mad dash to mate, to provide for offspring or to prepare themselves for migration. (see Pardon My Big Aster for more on Aster tataricus)

It's one of the best times to photograph the critters, they're slower and pose sweetly on the flowers. I like to think they're savoring the last of the pollen and nectar.
Gaura lindheimeri 'Crimson Butterflies'
Many of the plants that stopped blooming in the summer make a repeat visit in October. I welcome back the pink butterfly blooms of Gaura lindheimeri. It sulked all summer, but is putting on a vary nice show right now.
Some wildflowers only bloom in the fall and Eupatorium serotinum(N) is one of them. It's a magnet for pollinators and colonizes wonderfully to fill in large areas with its white Asteraceae blooms.
Salvia leucantha
 Salvia leucantha is a very late bloomer. It opens up when one needs its pop of violet and white flowers, just in time for the last of the nectar robbing carpenter bees to forage on it.
Luscious, velvety Salvia azurea(N) is a counterpoint to the yellows and golds of early Autumn. Collect seed and sow in the garden for a large stand.
Floppy Golden Aster (N) brings a much needed spot of golden yellow back to the garden when the Susans fade.
The Sulphur butterflies rejoice when Salvia elegans begins to bloom. They've been circling the garden for weeks, waiting to make a big yellow statement against the intense red flowers. The hummers are thrilled, too. If truth be told, so am I.

Although, this is a native plant garden, I do plant annuals like the Salvias mentioned earlier, delicious red Pentas (above) multi-colored lantanas, a few violas, cupheas, Purple hyacinth vine and,
Bumble resting on the rusty sunflower while nectaring on the Verbena bonariensis
Verbena bonariensis for their long bloom, their lovely flowers and to feed the pollinators. The sight and sounds of busy bees, butterflies and other critters makes me happy.
Before long the humming and buzzing will be gone, until then I will appreciate each and every flower that feeds the critters and fills my heart with joy.

xoxogail

It's October 15 and you know what that means! Garden bloggers all over the blogosphere are celebrating Bloom Day. You can see more gardens then you can imagine in one day if you stop by Carol's blog, May Dreams Gardens to take the Mr linky magic carpet ride to flower adventure.

Gail Eichelberger is a gardener and therapist in Middle Tennessee. She loves wildflowers and native plants and thoroughly enjoys writing about the ones she grows at Clay and Limestone. She reminds all that the words and images are the property of the author and cannot be used without written permission.

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

My Mother Was Right About Two Things


Of course she was right about a lot of things, but, two things in particular have had my attention lately.

First, she was absolutely, positively correct when she said I looked better with short hair. Which was exactly the kind of pronouncement that fed my reactivity as a young woman and kept my hair long for way longer than it should have been. Some women look marvelous with long hair. Emmylou Harris, Goldie Hawn, Meryl Streep and my dear friend Tina Bennett can carry it off marvelously. Me, not so much. After fighting it forever, I am happily wearing my hair short and I know my mom is somewhere smiling. She never said I told you so, but, I'll give her this one. "Yes, Momma, you were right about the hair."


The second thing that she was right about has had a profound impact upon my life. It was really quite simple, she never failed to say, look it up, you'll remember it that way, whenever I asked her to tell me the meaning of a word. It used to aggravate me to no end, but, I learned much more than how to look up words in the dictionary. I learned to take responsibility for my learning and to love finding the answer to simple and complex questions.
I can't help but, believe that my mom would be delighted to know that her simple lesson blossomed into a life long love of learning that eventually led me to wildflower gardening! Which is ironic when you consider how very much she detested gardening. (The Faux Gardener)  I know that she is somewhere laughing with her sisters about the lesson she no doubt learned from her mother and passed on to me.
She was a wise woman, although it took me most of my life to realize how incredibly amazing she was. I am forever grateful for her look it up yourself lessons and all that it has brought me~gardening, a deep connection to the natural world and garden friends all over the world.
There is just one thing I want you to know... I love when you ask me to help you identify wildflowers! You must never, ever worry that it is a bother It never is... I love the hunt and I especially love discovering the answer.
Mystery gaura at Couchville Cedar Glade is Gaura filipes
Besides, I almost always get to learn about a new wildflower that might be happy in my garden...So, maybe, I need to thank you!
xoxogail

PS All flowers are Gaura lindheimeri cultivars (native to Texas and Louisiana),  except the last which is Gaura filipes, a native toTennessee and a few other states.

Gail Eichelberger is a gardener and therapist in Middle Tennessee. She loves wildflowers and native plants and thoroughly enjoys writing about the ones she grows at Clay and Limestone. She reminds all that the words and images are the property of the author and cannot be used without written permission.

Friday, June 10, 2011

Woulda, Coulda, Shoulda...

Gaura lindheimeri

As a therapist I spend a good deal of time helping clients get away from asking "WHY?"

Liatris spicata

Whys are tail chasing exercises.  We get a hold of a why and can't let go.  As soon as you answer one why there are a dozen more.  Whys keep us stuck in the same old ways of doing and thinking.  
Hemerocallis 'July Gold'

Instead, I like them to focus on the what, when, who and how questions. 
It's a similar exercise when gardening. Forget the whys! We know why! Instead of "Why did I plant that plant there?" Which often leads to, "Boy, that was  fill in your favorite  critical inner voice!  Ask yourself some what, who, when and how questions.

  • What is working  in the garden?
  • What's not working?
  • What am I willing to do to make changes?
  • How much money, time and energy do I have for this project?
  • When can I implement these changes?
  • Who am I trying to please?

Hypericum frondosum with a fly
 The point is that whys keep us spinning our wheels and the who/what/where/how questions get us moving.  Try it and  see if you notice any changes?  I am pretty sure your relationship with  your garden will change dramatically. 



 It's a similar issue with  the woulda, coulda, shoulda  thoughts that plague many a gardener!

Sleeping Bee

Let them go! Trust me on this~regrets are a big energy waste.

xxoogail


This post was written by Gail Eichelberger for my blog Clay and Limestone Copyright 2011.This work protected under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Please contact me for permission to copy, reproduce, scrape, etc.