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It's Spring! What's Happening?
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jnnwyman On The Way Up

 Joined: 09 Mar 2006 Location: Texas Posts: 98
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| Posted: Sat Apr 15, 2006 10:41 am Post subject: It's Spring! What's Happening? |
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Yipppeee, it's spring! What's happening in your gardens??? Are you trying anything new this season?
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eileen Moderator & Resident Taxonomist

Moderator
Joined: 07 Feb 2005 Location: Scotland (Map) Posts: 10355
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| Posted: Sat Apr 15, 2006 10:46 pm Post subject: |
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Yes I'm going to try one last time to grow wisteria and if it doesn't work this time I'm going to go for some new clematis instead.
The garden arch I bought last week is going up this week, hopefully, and then in go the wisteria - wish me luck as it's about the only plant I've had trouble growing but I'm stubborn and I'll resort to almost anything to make 'em grow for me.
_________________

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Pinkiered The Rose Queen
 Joined: 02 Jan 2006 Location: Lawton, Ok (Map) Posts: 927
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| Posted: Sun Apr 16, 2006 1:45 am Post subject: |
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IM putting up new fencing around my vines because they are growing so fast now. Its a work in progress! HAA!
My vines
Wisteria (mine is growing fine!)
Honeysuckle
Passion vine
Blue Morning Glory
Red Morning Glory
I have to get a tiller. But is it too late to get the rest of my seeds in the ground?
_________________ I do not have a green thumb
My plants just have the will to live.
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iris Just Arrived

Joined: 01 Apr 2006 Location: South Carolina, USA Posts: 8
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| Posted: Sun Apr 16, 2006 2:48 am Post subject: |
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Eileen, if you want to grow wisteria, you should live in South Carolina. It grows everywhere whether you plant it or not! We have some woods lining the backside of our property, and they are so covered in purple flowers that you can't even tell there are trees underneath. As far as my garden this year, I'm planting parsley, basil, thyme, cilantro, lavendar, and chives (all of which have already sprouted). My son is growing sunflowers which have just started to come up.
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jubabe296 Official Garden Fairy
 Joined: 18 Mar 2006 Location: south central Texas (Map) Posts: 1180
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| Posted: Sun Apr 16, 2006 5:01 am Post subject: |
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Good luck with your wisteria Eileen, I hope it does good for you this time!! I'm trying to grow bleeding hearts this year. I have a fernleaf one and a vine that I just bought. Has anyone you else grown these before? If they do good I will buy more. I have alot of shade so I plan on finding more shade plants this year also
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"Cat's motto: No matter what you've done wrong, always try to make it look like the dog did it."
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dooley Official Garden Turtle
 Joined: 03 Jul 2005 Location: Arizona, U.S.A (Map) Posts: 3102 PlantStew: 2 |
| Posted: Sun Apr 16, 2006 5:37 am Post subject: |
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I had bleeding heart bushes in Wisconsin but it's too hot and dry here. I really like them, too. I'm going to plant Hosta's under the mulberry tree where the daffodils are now. Actually I'm leaving the daffodils around the edge and filling in the middle space with the Hosta's. DR ordered some mixed plants from a catalog. I hope the grow. Ones I ordered last year didn't come up. Dooley
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Primsong Flower of the Shire
 Joined: 15 Apr 2006 Location: Oregon (Map) Posts: 1765
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| Posted: Wed Apr 19, 2006 11:07 pm Post subject: |
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I love bleeding-hearts, I was just looking at them at the nursery trying to think of where I could put some. My springtime treats are a new variegated azalea, and a gorgeous porcelain vine. I'm putting peach-colored "peach flambe" coralbells at its feet along with some chocolate-chip bugles for groundcover. It's all so pretty together! The coralbells are gorgeous - the leaves are a lovely clear peach, like gentle fall color all year.
Last spring I was still trying to reclaim the yard from previous neglect, but I did put in some native plants for this NW area, trumpet vines and sword ferns. There's an odd trellis made of pipe here and it had the dead remains of clematis on it - I cleared the clematis and put the trumpet vines in their place, hoping that as a native it might not need so much tending. The vines look great but the ferns are struggling - I may have put them too close in to the doug firs and I think they're too dry.
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