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Such a pretty combination!
Robert, I like the scenes from you garden, so full of flowers.Camassia with iris picture is beautiful! As it happens, just yesterday I got three Camassia leichtlinii bulbs from a friend, I hope they grow well also here. Mariette, your dark Corydalis cava is beautiful!
I especially enjoy the Corydalis cava and Fritillaria meleagris since they are species that have never grown well in our garden. [Jasmin]: Thank you for the opportunity to have the vicarious pleasure of these lovely plants!A vegetable garden…? This sounds interesting to me, but I have to admit that I have always enjoyed growing vegetables since I was a teenager.[Jasmin]: I enjoy good food, so that is a major incentive. However, one year long before Robert and I knew each other and married, I had planted a nice vegetable bed. I was particularly excited by my kale plants that year. One day, I looked out at my vegetables to see nothing in the distance! I looked again, shocked, and there was a rabbit finishing the last of my garden. It was a neighbor’s escaped pet too, so it was not something I could do anything about beyond capturing it and returning it. They were happy to have their rabbit, but I never felt they completely understood.
Leena,They are very hardy. Just make sure they have excellent drainage and dry summers.You may need to pot them and protect them from summer rain.
Ashley, Your orchids look breath-taking, making me sorry that I can´t grow them in my garden! I do agree, the same may be said for Robert´s irises! It´s a pity that one always desires to grow those plants which will grow better in other people´s garden.
Ashley, Your orchids look breath-taking, making me sorry that I can´t grow them in my garden! I do agree, the same may be said for Robert´s irises! It´s a pity that one always desires to grow those plants which will grow better in other people´s garden......
Mariette,Why do you think you can't grow Cypripedium? You get enough winter chill. Do you have many days above 95 F (35 C)? Grow them in 3 parts shredded pine needles and 1 part potting soil. If you get excessive Summer heat, grow them in pots and put them in an air conditioned room during hot Summer days. Grow them damp but not wet. If you need to cut them {i.e. to remove finished bloom stalks} use a flame sterilized cutter. They are very prone to viruses.Some California and Oregon natives will accept summer heat.
Camassia bulbs were an important food source for Native American people in the far western portion of North America. Rodents will be more than happy to eat the bulbs. They are quite tasty, especially when eaten in the autumn after frosty weather has started. If rodents are a problem I would recommend caging the bulbs in wire mesh. We divide our bulbs every 5 years or so. Many Camassia species grow in seasonally flooded meadows. Something like growing paddy rice, except it is not necessary to flood the plants. Just keep them moist. This is how they grow in the wild and what works well in our Sacramento garden. If you can keep the rodents away, they most likely will be very easy-to-grow. May it all go well.