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My replacement roses are doing great this year

by Tricia

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Welcome to all the new Green Thumb Sunday members that I finally got around to adding yesterday! I hope you enjoy our little group.

Earlier this week I went out into the garden with my camera and I took a number of great photos of the plants that were blooming and new ones that were growing, but I’ve had such a busy week I didn’t get around to transferring them from my camera to my computer yet. That’s the trouble with photos, especially if you take a lot of them at once – it takes time to prepare them for posting.

Anyway … I do have some photos to share that I took two weeks ago. Just imagine the plants being bigger or having more leaves now. 😉

This is the Climbing Iceberg Rose that I bought last summer to replace Antique ’89. Antique ’89 must have had too much winter damage in 2007 and died in late spring. Well as you can see Climbing iceberg is doing great:

IMG_3621

This rose is over 4 feet high already and I’m sure it will only get bigger in the next month. I have a standard iceberg rose shrub at the front of the house and once it gets going it’s covered in blooms all season so I expect that the climbing version will do the same.

I had replaced a few roses last year and all of the replacements seem to be doing well. The majority of the established roses (2 to 5 years in the ground) all have long green stems and seem to be ahead of themselves in growth compared to other years.

The Astilbe is also growing well. I have several clumps of it in shady areas of my garden. I think I’m currently growing three different types.

IMG_3610

Basically everything in my garden seems to be doing well this year with the exception of one rose – Dr. J H Nicholas – it’s struggling. Hopefully it makes it, but if it doesn’t I guess I’ll just replace it with a hardier rose.

Happy Mother’s Day to all the moms out there.

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, Photography, Recreation, The neighborhood Tagged With: antique, astilbe, bloom, blooming, blooms, camera, climbing iceberg, climbing rose, clumps, Dr. J H Nicholas, garden, gardener, Green Thumb, Green Thumb Sunday, grow, growing, GTS, Iceberg, iceberg rose, late spring, leaves, moms, my garden, nature, nature lovers, photo, photos, plant, plants, replace, replacements, rose, roses, shady area, shady areas, shrub, spring, stems, summer, winter, winter damage

Everything in the garden is growing as it should!

by Tricia

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It’s a beautiful day here in Toronto and I’m hoping to go outside shortly and get some gardening done. I still have to spring clean at least half of the back garden and all the roses need a trim.

With all the snow cover we had over winter I don’t believe that I lost any plants, but I should have a final tally later today. Well if my tum stops hurting long enough for me to do some work that is. My Crohn’s is acting up bad this week.The other day I went outside and took some photos of the garden. We have five established Peonies and they’re all coming up:

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Soon we’ll have beautiful peony flowers.

I expect that shortly after that we might have our first hydrangea blooms. The hydrangea that I planted in our of our backyard garden beds last year appears to be thriving:

IMG_3494

One of my favorite roses – Theresa Bugnet – is thriving in her planter by the front door:

IMG_3496

I can get away with growing Theresa in a planter since she’s hardy to zone 2 (I’m a USDA zone 5b or Canadian zone 6b). Most years we do put some burlap or another form of protection around her, but we didn’t this past winter. I’m happy that her planter had lots of snow around it for the coldest months.

I love this roses red branches. They stay red all year round, although they are most vibrant in the spring and fall.

How are your plants doing this week?

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, Garden Maintenance, Green Thumb Sunday, Photography, Recreation Tagged With: backyard, backyard garden, Beautiful, beautiful day, bloom, blooms, branch, bugnet, burlap, Canadian, canadian zone, Crohns, fall, flower, garden, garden bed, garden beds, garden roses, green leaves, grow, growing, GTS, hardy, hydrangea, hydrangea blooms, In The Garden, nature lovers, new leaves, peonies, peony, peony flowers, photo, plant, planted, planter, plants, protection, red branches, rose, roses, snow, snow cover, spring, tally, Theresa bugnet, Toronto, USDA, usda zone, week, winter, Zone5, zone5b, zone6b

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

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