Self-Planting Garden Residents

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This self-planting willow shades our pond and makes sitting beside it more comfortable.

Plants of various types rub shoulders in my garden — perennials, annuals, small trees, veggies, and vines. Most of these I planted. A few self-planting plants, however, I did not. Or in two instances, I planted the plant where I wanted it, and it moved to where it wanted to be. Here are brief descriptions of my uninvited or pushy, self-planting garden residents.

Willow Tree

The biggest example among my self-planting plants is the willow (salix) tree beside our pond. The seed of this tree floated in on the air and planted itself where it still stands. For several years, we cut it way back to keep it small. It, however, as willows do, wanted to grow big. Today, it is about 15 feet tall, and it shades the pond beautifully, making the chairs beside it much more comfortable to sit in throughout the day. We prune it rather severely each year to keep it at this size. ... Read More

An Encounter with a Hummingbird

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Hummingbird looking

While I did not take this photo, the hummer looks very much like the one who looked at me.

Encounter With a Hummingbird

I attend a writing class that meets every other week. At the last meeting, our facilitator, a poet, provided the class with a template to help them write poetry. Then we each wrote a poem using his method.

My poem turned out to be about an encounter I had with a hummingbird. Here it is:

Encounter with a Hummingbird

Walking down my garden path,

Brushing aside tall pink anemones that tickle my cheek,

So I can watch an ecstatic bee

Rubbing its belly across an anemone’s pollen, ... Read More

Trees: Five Fabulous Facts You Need to Know

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The canopy of trees

Trees offer great beauty. For instance have you ever looked at a tree from this angle?

Five Fabulous Facts about Trees

Perhaps you remember the old poem about trees that I learned when I was in elementary school, written by Joyce Kilmer, an American writer and poet born in the 19th century and living through World War I. Critics generally did not think much of Kilmer’s work, calling it too simple, yet I and many others remember at least the first two lines of the poem:

“I think that I shall never see,

A poem as lovely as a tree…”

Even as I think about this poem, I am sitting in my swing, leaning back to look up into the canopy of the maple tree under which the swing sits. Bright green leaves contrast with a spring-blue sky. Black branches and twigs make an intricate pattern. The leaves sway in the wind. A couple of woodpeckers are visiting the two bird feeders that hang on the tree’s branches. All in all, it is a beautiful sight. ... Read More

Thimbleweed: Native Plant Review

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Thimbleweed blossom.

Thimbleweed: Native Plant Review. In this image, a single thimbleweed blossom stands tall on a stem that allows it to sway in the wind.

Going Partly Native

Two years ago, we started a new bed that was all native plants, including a button bush and a thimbleweed that we purchased at the annual native plant sale at Matthaei Botanical Gardens. You may be able to find similar plant sales near you.  (To read about the all-native collection of plants in Serendipity Gardens, see Planting a Native Garden.)

Many references tell us that native plants are the best to plant for a number of reasons. Here are some of them:

According to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Department, plants native to your area will attract more native pollinators. They note that “native plants can [also] serve as larval host plants for some species of pollinators.” ... Read More

The Orchestra Tunes Up in Serendipity Gardens

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Hellebores

Hellebore brightens an early spring landscape.

Garden Music Is about to Start

It’s almost time for the new gardening season to begin. I am excited.

Last spring, I was away from my garden. I did not see a single plant emerge from the soil — and I missed it terribly. Fellow gardeners will know how exciting it is to see the first snowdrops; to cut back the messy, winter-worn hellebore leaves and see the lovely flowers hidden beneath; or to see spring flowering bulbs pushing their way out of the earth. I always think it’s rather like an orchestra tuning up. A bit of horn here, a bit of violin over there, then various instruments becoming gradually louder and  more coordinated, and then, in May — the symphony begins in earnest! ... Read More