Summer has hit with a vengeance! Temperatures have rapidly risen into the 90’s. Everything is bursting out in vivid colors. The meadow and rock garden areas are beautiful. Something new is popping out every day. Greens, yellows, blues, purples, pinks, and reds all are abundant. More to come …
Walking up the road past Heatherwood, this is what a stroller sees. Low profile shrubs and trees allow one to look into the garden. The remnant of our area’s history provides additional interest. We have tried to create perspectives of enjoyment both looking into and out from our garden. We like to share as well as have our own privacy.
The above image is a small vignette in front of a sitting area in Heatherwood’s Conifer Corner. The early morning sunshine softly flowed across the scene, popping out the various colors and textures of the various plants. Little vignettes like this are scattered throughout the garden. Their intent is catch a strollers eye and entice them to stop and take notice. Every time I walk through the garden, I see something new from a different perspective.
Purple and gold have always been one of my favorite color combinations. Purple and Gold were our Selah High School colors. And the same purple and gold were the University of Washington colors. Now the same combination permeates our Heatherwood garden. Some colors just grow on me!
Following a mild spring, our first week of summer is warming up. We are expecting the temperature to rise to the mid 90’s by this weekend. We will need to closely monitor our watering sequences to make sure we get enough, but not too much, water to our plants. In the meantime we will enjoy our early morning coffee and late afternoon wine in the garden.
As I say goodbye to spring with an abstract, I will welcome in summer with an abstract as well. We have been very fortunate to have had mild weather with adequate moisture this spring, while many parts of the country are in a severe drought and/or are having extremely high temperatures. Heatherwood’s trees, shrubs, and perennials are doing very well. I hope that the moderate weather will continue through the summer, so the new plants will get a chance to become well established.
My thoughts are with others as they face the harsh conditions across the country.
Today is the last day of spring. It is time to say goodbye to most of the flowering trees and shrubs and to say hello to the flowering perennials. We still have several shrubs (viburnums and nine-bark) that are in their last stage of bloom plus several hydrangeas that will bloom later this summer. Our perennials are just starting to display their summer glory.
This is the view from the roadside looking over Heatherwood’s front planting bed shown in my previous post. From here the tree plantings channel the viewers eyes up and then down through the lower yard then up to the hills separating Selah from Yakima. The feeling we are trying to impart is “Welcome to enjoy the view of the garden!”
We like to share the colors and textures of our garden with our neighbors as they stroll along the neighborhood road. It is a good place to take a break to stop and chat and exchange the neighborhood news.
This area is designed to have four season interest with various colors, shapes and textures. Plant heights are kept low to encourage the walker to look up and have a nice view through the garden. (I will show the view in a future post.) The challenge in encouraging one to look up into the garden is also to shield the view to the house and garage. To address this challenge, we have planted an informal border of trees and shrubs to shield the view to the house.
One way we separate parts of Heatherwood is to narrow a section of our lawn down to create a pathway between sections. We have placed various shrubs and trees to develop chute or tunnel-like divisions. For this “neck” we have planted a hedge of spirea which will mature at about 4 feet wide and high. In addition, we have added two Wireless Zelkova trees to anchor separation. When they mature, their top branches will flow over the lawn and meet, creating a tunnel like feeling. The two lawn areas will be shielded from each other. A garden stroller will move from one open lawn area through the tunnel to a new surprise as the the view again opens up to a different part of the garden.
It will take years for Heatherwood’s plantings to reach the mature state that is described above. I close my eyes and smile as I dream about my vision of what the garden will be. But most important, I open my eyes, take a deep breath and enjoy the moment of the wonderful surroundings and search for what is around the next bend.