Showing posts with label Iris Bucharica. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iris Bucharica. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

A final bit of Spring Planning


One of the fun things about spring bulbs is that you get to start the gardening season with a fresh color  scheme that does not necessarily have to relate directly to the bulk of annuals and perennials that follow. That makes color choice a bit liberating. 

Do you have a favourite color scheme when it comes to spring bulbs?

I can never seem to limit myself to just one! It just seems to leave so much unsaid.

Traditionally at the front of the house, I have always had yellow daffodils and red tulips. Then two years ago voles destroyed most of my collection of bulbs in this part of the garden. This fall I need to rebuild it. 

Here was my initial inspiration: 


Edwards Gardens in Toronto

Tulipa 'Cayenne' and black-colored Tulipa, 'Queen of the Night'

I also really liked this combination that I saw at Edwards Gardens. Now I am wondering if this might actually work better with our house's burgundy shutters. 

Adding to my movement in this general direction is the fact that I spotted some very affordable Queen of the Night tulips at the local grocery store. Hmm...should I change my original thinking and re-create this look instead?


The private fenced backyard means that I feel free to change my color scheme up a bit. 

Just inside the gate there is a little courtyard that is my favourite part of the garden. The area is fairly shaded, so I am thinking of putting the snowdrops I ordered in here and adding in white daffodils and tulips. 



What do you think? 

Will the change be a nice surprise or a shock in comparison with the brights in the front garden?


In the main area of the back garden, I have pink hyacinths and tulips, and white and yellow daffodils.

David Tomlinson's garden Merlin's Hollow


One spring flower I hope to add into this part of the garden is Iris Bucharica, which I have admired in David Tomlinson's garden. In my opinion, Iris Bucharica are more impressive and showy than more common Iris Reticulata.

Leucojum aestivum 'Gravetye Giant'

One last item on my wish list for this part of the garden. Aren't these delicate white bells pretty?
 


In the very back part of the garden, (which is again separated from the main area of the garden with a fence) I have introduced a deep mauve into the existing planting scheme.


If I have any money left, I would like to add a few of these delicate Fritillaria and....



maybe a few yellow Erythronium. Erythronium like dappled shade and I have shade in abundance in this part of the garden.

Now I just have to plant them all...I guess I am going to be busy!

Monday, May 16, 2011

Merlin's Hollow, Aurora Ontario


When David Tomlinson first married, he promised his new bride he would create a beautiful garden for her. It was not until some years later, when they immigrated to Canada, and bought a house in Aurora, Ontario that he was able to fulfil his promise to her.

On their 3/4 of an acre, David set out to design series of gardens within a garden. First, he enclosed the property within a high cedar hedge. Then, he used more cedar hedges and a series of arched garden gates to partition the property into four distinct garden rooms: a Perennial Flower Garden, a Fragrant Garden (with a thyme lawn), a Rock and Water Garden (with a stream and pond), and a Winter Garden (with a formal knot garden). He named the garden he had created Merlin's Hollow.

1. Cedar Hedges   2. Sculpture   3. Long Arch   4. Herbs   5. Thyme Lawn   6. Gazebo   7. Fern Walk  8. Butterfly log pile   9. Dry bed   10. Compost   11. Acid Bed   12. Bog bed   13. Alpine bed   14. Frog pond  15. Stream   16. Snake Hibernacleum   17. Future aviaries   18. Woodland bed   19. Cold frames   20. Bat box   21. Bird house   22. Bird feeder   23. Deck vegetable garden   24. Mason bee box   25. Snag tree   26. Butterfly box   27. Lady bug box   28. Robin shelf

A landscape architect by trade, David designed each garden so that it would have its own distinct character. He included bog and woodland beds, a fern walk, an alpine garden, heritage shrub roses, and raised beds with stone walls. David also incorporated features that would encourage wildlife and insects to take up residence in the garden. He added a stream and pond, birdhouses and feeders, a bat box, Mason bee box and a snake hibernacleum ( provides garden snakes with a cool, dry place to shelter from weather extremes).

An avid collector, David Tomlinson's garden includes over 1500 different varieties of plants, many of them rare and unusual. Most impressive is the fact that he grew most of these plants himself from seed.

On the day of our visit, I took so many pictures that I am likely to try your patience by asking you to look at them all. So in this post, I have decided to concentrate on two of the gardens: the Perennial Garden, which is to the front and right of the house, and the Rock and Water Garden, which is at the back of the house.

A gravel path leads past the house and through a wooden arch into the Perennial Garden. The path sweeps around the perimeter of the garden and leads you past the expansive perennial borders. Tulips and daffodils were planted throughout.

Magnolia

The Perennial Garden also had a lovely assortment of different Primula.


Now, we are going to turn to the right and enter the Rock and Water Garden.


Primula polyantha

Spring Pea, 'Lathyrus vernus'

Spring Pea, 'Lathyrus vernus'

Double Bloodroot, 'Sanguinaria canadensis "Multiplex'

Checkered Lily, 'Fritillaria affinis'


Above left: Water cascades down a waterfall into the pond. Above right: a yellow-colored Asian Marsh Marigold dips down into the water of the pond. Above: The bridge over the little stream that runs into the pond.

The vivid, blue wooden bench by the pond. You can see white Iris Bucharica in the lower left foreground and patches of blue Brunnera macrophylla and pink lungwort to the right of the bench.

Iris Bucharica


Grape Hyacinth 'Muscari armeniacum'

Trillium


Primula denticulata


Each year, Merlin's Hollow is open to the public, free of charge, on the 2nd Saturday in May, the 2nd Saturday in June, the1st Saturday in July and 2nd Sunday in July. If you would like the address and driving directions, please feel free to email me.