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Growing Monkshood

by Tricia

It’s amazing how many plants are coming up in my garden. Every time I either look outside or go outside to look at the garden I notice how much the plants have grown or new green shoots coming up in areas that were barren the day before.

The monkshood is already making an appearance:

monkshoodshoots

This is Monkshood Aconitum Arendsii Azure Blue.

The new leaves are coming up amid the old stalks that I still have to remove! Usually I tidy up the garden beds in the fall, but I didn’t really do that last year. Even when I clean up the garden in the autumn I’ll often still leave a few plant stalks or a leaf or two so that come spring I can remember where the plant is planted.

I do have plant markers in the garden, but most have been there for four or five years now and they are barely legible or they’ve snapped in the cold so there’s only half of the plants name.

I grow another kind of Monkshood at the back of the garden near the holly shrub. It’s a bicolor Monkshood and I’ve forgotten it’s full name.

Now I know I have several photos of the Azure Blue Monkshood but I can’t find any of them right now. Odd. I do have a photo of the BiColor Monkshood as it’s beginning to bloom though.

Monkshood Aconitum

The bicolor Monkshood usually blooms twice a season. Often once in July and then in Mid to Late September. The Azure Blue only blooms once in late August through into September.

Monkshood is very easy to grow, but you must remember that it’s a poisonous plant. I’m a little nervous about growing it now that we have a Labrador Retriever puppy, but I don’t think she’ll be allowed in the backyard very often and certainly not unsupervised.

Monkshood can be grown in shade or bright sunlight. It does best with at least 6 hours of bright sunlight each day. Depending on the species it grow from 30 inches to approx. 36 inches in height.

This plant does best in rich, moist, humusy soil. It doesn’t like being disturbed once it’s established but it can be propagated through division.

There are several species and hybrids of Monkshood. Some will rebloom if the flowers are removed shortly after they’ve finished blooming as with my bicolor monkshood and others are of the fall blooming variety.

Monkshood is a beautiful plant that adds a lovely touch of color to the garden bed. Even it’s foliage is attractive. Just remember that all parts of the plant are poisonous!






Filed Under: Garden Buzz, Garden Tips, Home and Lifestyle, Perennials, Photography, Toronto Tagged With: Aconitum Arendsii Azure Blue, autumn, Azure blue, Azure blue monkshood, backyard, Beautiful, Beds, bicolor monkshood, bloom, blooming, blooms, color, easy to grow, flower, flowers, foliage, garden, garden bed, garden beds, green, grow, growing, growing monkshood, height, holly, hybrid, July, leaves, moist soil, monkshood, photo, plant, planted, plants, poisonous, propagate, puppy, rebloom, September, shade, shrub, species, spring, stalk, stalks, sunlight, tidy, variety

My twisted garden

by Tricia

Grab the Photo Hunt code.
Photo Theme. Visit participants.

This weeks theme is Twisted

clematis hybrid Seiboldiana seed heads and flower

Isn’t it funny how strange some plants look either as they are developing or after they’ve bloomed?

The photo above is of a seed head from a Hybrid Seiboldiana Clematis.

I grow several types of clematis and this is the only one with a strangely twisted seedpod. Most of the rest of the clematis develop seed heads that look more like this:

Clematis seed head

Do you have any plants in your garden who’s leaves or flower buds look strange at the beginning or end of their life cycle?

Filed Under: Garden Buzz, Home and Lifestyle, Perennials, Photo Hunter, Photography, Recreation Tagged With: bloom, bud, buds, Clematis, clematis hybrid Seiboldiana, developing, flower, funny, garden, grow, hybrid, image, leaves, life, PH, photo, Photo hunt, photohunt, photohunter, photohunters, photos, plant, plants, seed, Seed head

Great Garden Combinations

by Tricia

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Japanese maple and Hosta Gold Standard

The year after we landscaped our backyard and created our raised garden beds we purchased a lovely Tamukeyama cutleaf Japanese maple. As you can see from the photo above it’s branches cascade downward, it’s leaves are narrow and delicate and bright burgundy – red most of the growing season. It’s absolutely gorgeous.

It will never be a very big tree. I believe at most it will be five feet tall. At this point it’s only about three feet tall and because it’s branches create a shady area below the tree I decided to grow shade loving plants like the Hosta Sum and Substance that you see growing beside it in the above photo.

The Japanese maple and the light green hosta leaves make a lovely combination don’t they?

I think this year I’m going to try to move a few of my plants around to see if I can create a few more stunning displays of plants that compliment each other beautifully.

What are your favorite plant/color combos in your garden?

Gardeners, Plant and Nature lovers can join in every Sunday, visit As the Garden Grows for more information. GTS participants remember to check in at As the Garden Grows each week so that we’ll know you made a new post!

Filed Under: Garden Buzz, Green Thumb Sunday, Home and Lifestyle, Landscaping, Perennials, Photography, Trees and Shrubs Tagged With: backyard, Beautiful, Beds, branch, burgundy, color, color combination, cutleaf, cutleaf japanese maple, delicate, downward, Favorite, garden, garden bed, garden beds, gardeners, green, Green Thumb, Green Thumb Sunday, grow, growing, GTS, height, Hosta, Hosta Sum and substance, japanese maple, landscape, leaves, light, narrow leaves, photo, plant, plant combination, plants, purchase, round, shade, shady, shady area, Sum and Substance, Tamukeyama, Tamukeyama cutleaf japanese maple, tree

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