There's nothing like a border of summer flowering shrubs to brighten up these sun saturated days. We often think of spring flowering shrubs but there are good choices for all seasons and here are some of the best shrubs for flowering NOW!
The border near the trolley stop of the Rock & Waterfall Garden is currently at peak bloom with hydrangeas and rose-of-Sharon; two of our most brilliant summer flowering shrubs.
The border contains our best display of Limelight Hydrangeas (Hydrangea paniculata 'Limelight'), which is just now transforming from lime green to white as the flowers mature. Limelight's flowers are mostly sterile, which gives it that full look but does not provide much for beneficial insects and wildlife like the fertile "lacecap" types. All paniculata hydrangeas are easy to grow in our climate and are very forgiving of bad weather and bad pruning. They bloom on new wood so can be cut back in spring for huge blossom stalks OR they can be allowed to grow into large shrubs; many can even be trained (pruned up) into delightful little trees.
The cultivar 'Quick Fire' is an early blooming and fertile lacecap cultivar (in full white bloom back on the solstice) and has already aged to a lovely rosy-pink, soon to deepen to deeper tones
--a quick fire indeed.
The cultivar 'Unique' is a spectacular white, fertile variety that attracts many beneficial insects to its pollen and nectar. What a spectacular choice for a white, evening or moon garden! This mass is in the Perennial Garden but it can also be seen in mass on the Island Garden.
Sunday, July 27, 2008
Powell Gardens' Spectacular Summer Flowering Shrubs
Posted by Kansas City's botanical garden at 1:37 PM 0 comments
Monday, July 21, 2008
Perennials Post-Solstice Peak at Powell Gardens
A stroll through the Perennial Garden, Island Garden and Fountain Garden areas will reveal a riotous array of blooming perennials. I would say now is the peak of color but we have great displays with masses of blooming perennials through fall.
This glowing mass of Missouri Coneflowers (Rudbeckia missouriense) has a few Orange Coneflowers (Rudbeckia fulgida) that really look orange when planted with the more yellow Missourians. This photo is from the Prairie Border in the Perennial Garden. Missouri Coneflower is a choice perennial "Black-eyed-Susan" that is just now becoming a valuable "mainstream" perennial. Orange Coneflower was made popular by its cultivar 'Goldsturm' even though the wild Missouri form is depicted here.
Sahin's Early Flower Sneezeweed or Helen's Flower (Helenium) is one of our longest blooming perennials. It is a hybrid of the native Sneezeweed (Helenium autumnale). Native Americans called the plant sneezeweed because they made a snuff out of it that would make you sneeze to rid your body of evil spirits. It does not cause you to sneeze otherwise!
Posted by Kansas City's botanical garden at 1:20 PM 0 comments
Labels: perennials
Containers in Color
We are a month past the Summer Solstice and the summer annuals and tropical plants are full sized and exuberant at Powell Gardens! Here's a brief show of some of our containers and plantings...
This container in the Perennial Garden (by former Senior Gardener Jay Priddy) is one of my favorite. It contains the three "classic" elements of container design: thriller, filler, and spiller. The thriller is hare's tail grass (Lagurus), the filler is a cultivar of black-eyed-susans (Rudbeckia hirta) and the spiller is Margarita Sweet Potato (Ipomoea battatus). The use of a grass and a cultivar of a native wildflower really speaks to our region of native grasslands.
The Chapungu Sales tent covers part of our terrace beds outside the Visitor Center but the remaining corner functions as a container. The dramatic use of a Variegated Fucrea (Fucrea)"thriller" and shocking 'Crystal Palace' red geraniums makes quite a composition. The crisp stone edging to the bed makes use of a "spiller" obsolete here. This design is by Horticulturist Anne Wildebor.
Posted by Kansas City's botanical garden at 11:33 AM 0 comments
Labels: annuals, containers, tropicals
Thursday, July 17, 2008
The Year of the Lily at Powell Gardens
The ample moisture and more reasonable temperatures have made the summer of 2008 the year of the lily at Powell Gardens. Lilies (Lilium spp.) are bulbs, most with exceptionally showy flowers and some with intense fragrance.
There are hundreds of species of lilies and the Easter Lily (Lilium longiflorum) is one of the most popular. Easter lilies are actually from Asia but forced into bloom for Easter sales. Hardy selections of Easter Lily bloom in midsummer and are pristine white with a very fine aroma. These were photographed in the Perennial Garden. The Madonna Lily (Lilium candidum) is the actual lily that is the symbol of purity and faith for Christians. Madonna lilies must be ordered now and planted by Labor Day because they must grow some foliage before fall.
There are thousands of cultivars of lilies but luckily they are assigned into several groups: Asiatic Lilies are some of the easiest to grow in our climate and come in a wide array of colors from white to yellow, orange, red and burgundy: this is the cultivar 'Savannah' in the Perennial Garden. Most Asiatic lilies are scentless and the flowers face upwards.
Tumpet lilies like this cultivar 'Golden Splendor' on the Island Garden are tall with trumpet shaped blooms that are also fragrant. This clump was hit hard by the Easter freeze of 2007. It languished all last year but we "let it be." This year it came back as if nothing had happened and seemed to make up for lost time!
Oriental Lilies are some of our most fragrant and require proper siting in our climate. These Stargazer Oriental Lilies were photographed in the Perennial Garden--in the afternoon shade of native trees. Oriental Lilies can literally bake in our hot afternoon sun so that the flower buds brown and never open.
Posted by Kansas City's botanical garden at 2:48 PM 0 comments
Labels: bulbs, fragrant flowers, summer flowers
Monday, July 7, 2008
Mimosa, Exotic Beauty or Garden Pest?
Posted by Kansas City's botanical garden at 3:09 PM 0 comments