"Autumn is a second spring when every leaf's a flower." Albert Camus (Nobel Prize for literature in 1957).
Friday, October 29, 2010
Sunny & Productive
"Autumn is a second spring when every leaf's a flower." Albert Camus (Nobel Prize for literature in 1957).
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Fantastic Fall Colors
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Have You Planted Your Bulbs Yet?

We will typically order our bulbs in a bulk by the thousands. We then count them out in to smaller groupings that will be planted as clusters out in the gardens. We consider this the "bouquet effect" with nice groupings that have more impact and are easier to plant in one large hole as opposed to many small ones. The mesh bags below are something that we save from year to year and as I left today, Marianne was bagging up the grape hyacinths in bags of 25 for planting very soon. Further below is a sample of a larger hole that we would use for tulips, daffodils or alliums. We typically cluster these larger bulbs in groups of 20 or 25 which will dictate a 6-8" deep hole with roughly a 20" diameter. We always sprinkle Milorganite (www.milorganite.com/) fertilizer in the bottom of the hole and over the top of the bulbs once the soil is placed back in the hole. The reason for this is twofold, we want to lightly fertilize the bulbs but this fertilizer also has a persistent odor that helps detract rodents (squirrels, chipmunks, etc.) from pawing thru your newly disturbed soil and locating potentially tasty bulbs. 
Directly below is a recent bulb planting of yellow tulips and wild hyacinths (Camassia leichtlinii 'Blue Danube') in one of our three center patio planters. Sue (lower left) and Bev (headless) planted these bulbs tightly (Oct. 9th work day) and the composition will be dynamite in spring. We also followed the Milorganite rule on this space and look forward to the final effect. Further below is a sample of what our tulips ('Sky High Scarlet) looked like this past spring with a similar planting approach and spacing the previous October (2009). We replant these circles every year to kick off our color scheme for the entrance garden. 
We love our bulbs (over 400,000) at RBG and visitors will time visits to catch peak tulips (mid-May) and alliums (late May/early June). Of course the weather is a huge factor and all of our bulbs were three weeks early this year. Below are some historic bulb images from RBG that don't exist anymore. Back in 2001, we planted 25,000 tulips representing 500 varieties (clumps of 50) and called the collection "Tulip Time". It was fantastic and the spring was relatively cool, thereby extending the show. We still have people coming back asking about the tulips. We left that collection in for two years but it began to peter out as excessive summer irrigation for the annuals that filled the spot later in the year began to rot out and affect the tulips. It was a fun collection that we hope to replicate if we ever have the funds....The bottom photo shows hyacinths planted to form our garden symbol at the time. Marv and Jim W. planted this and we had high hopes. However, the bulbs were so close (based on MY directions) that they collectively shoved the soil up and created a mess with variable bloom effect. To be honest, it looked better like this before they grew. I learned a lesson with hyacinths that spring. Anyway, get out there and plant/buy some bulbs! ALWAYS PATRONIZE YOUR LOCAL GARDEN CENTER FIRST!!! I become "cord boy" tomorrow and start the epic duty of running six miles of extension cords.. (is the enthusiasm evident?).

Tuesday, October 26, 2010
As Windy As They Predicted
Monday, October 25, 2010
Closure & Refocusing
Saturday, October 23, 2010
Thankfully Some Rain
Friday, October 22, 2010
Pictures Are Worth A Thousand Words
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